Wisdom traditions remind us that if we drop into deep contact with ourselves, we are extraordinarily resourced for being able to navigate the complexity of life. When i look at the complex that we live in human relationships, it's a call for these virtues, right? Yes. It's also, in some cases, a call for a new technology. We fail to be able to recognize that, in fact, there's something that we are innately that it's actually a call for.
Steve March is the creator of an integrated ecology of practice and founder of Aletheia Coaching. In this episode we get into the history of coaching, depth and the fourth generation of coaching, going from self-improvement to self-unfoldment, Heidegger’s view on technology and attunement, depth ontology, eclecticism to integration, parts conflict in ecologies of practice, four depths of self-contact, internal family systems.
Aletheia Coaching: https://integralunfoldment.com
Steve's Paper on the Neuroscience of Transformation: https://libraryofprofessionalcoaching.com/research/brain-behavior/the-neuroscience-of-enduring-transformation/
[0:02:36] Introducing Steve
[0:09:00] First, Second, Third Generation Coaching
[0:13:43] Aletheia and the Fourth Generation of Coaching
[0:18:10] What if we are already whole?
[0:18:47] Reservations about the term “coaching”
[0:20:38] Exploring Unfoldment
[0:24:57] Technological Attunement and Poetic Attunement
[0:44:53] Invoking Poetic Attunement
[0:53:20] Deeping eclecticism into integration
[1:37:00] Scaling Psychotechnologies