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Thawing

 

 

Thawing begins with a change in the climate.

 

 

 All pathways leading to the canal are blanketed with a thick layer of white ice. The canal is a sheet of ice, from bank to bank. Long fractures can be seen threading through the icy sheet. Nothing is moving, not even the wind. Although this is a typical winter scene, something is different about today. The relentless gray cold has yielded to brilliant sunlight. There is a moist glisten on the surface of the sun-exposed ice.

 Points to Ponder . . .

Personal:

  • What has been your experience with freezing and thawing?
  • How do you know when the grip of winter's "relentless gray cold" is beginning to yield to your next self-renewing spring?
  • What can you do to attune yourself to the season of your own life? To the effects of those seasons on others?
  • How might you create a climate in your personal life, where the effects of winter are recognized and treated as a learning opportunity?

Organizational:

  • What has been your experience with organizations freezing and thawing throughout their winter season?
  • In your opinion, what causes changes in an organization's climate? When is an organization likely to undergo a winter season?
  • What could you do to help create an organization that is aware of its own climate and the effects of that climate on its employees?

 Illustration by Cindy Mueller; © by Wanda McGee, all rights reserved.

Posted by Wanda McGee - Sunday, 02/28/10, 09:16 AM - Comments - Category: Nature's Metaphors for Life

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