The notion of technology colonizing everything has caused us to understand ourselves in technological terms. We see ourselves as technology when we exchange our capacity for money, and even when we interact with grocery store cashiers who are essentially pieces of technology. To counteract this, poetry serves as an antidote by reminding us of what it means to be human. It allows us to shift our perspective and attune to the world in a different way.
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