In a world in which the neo-liberal globalising project robs us of our
creativity and our souls, a book titled Creating Us is worth checking
out. So it is with Peter Westoby’s latest offering. The sub-title -
community work with soul - suggests that this is a book worth more than
checking out – it is a book worth relishing.
For decades, centuries even, community workers and social justice activists
have sought a better world. We have sought that world in the mountains of
idealism and the peaks of activism. Community work has been redolent with
visions, goals – an ever upward striving.
Westoby, in this book, encourages us to divert our gaze (at least
occasionally) from the mountain tops towards the valleys and dales where soul
resides. He succinctly notes that “soulful energy within community work
practice is … oriented towards gravity and earth, thereby implying a depth
perspective.”
Why is it important, or useful, for community workers to descend towards
soul? Westoby offers a number of answers to this question.
Soul allows us to experience life in greater quality. Much of our socialised
life is quantity driven – the need to get results and to make things happen.
Soul, Westoby claims, wants us to let go and “invites an embracing of
community work as a responsive dance.” Perhaps tragically, community
workers can become so locked into making things happen that we forget the
meaning of what we are doing. That is what, he says, is what bringing a
soulful approach to community work can guard against.
Looking around the world we can see the dominance of ego. The ego, Westoby
suggests, “wants control, domination and an unified story.” Soul
however, is more comfortable with “multiplicity and complexity,” and
seeks these out, if we let it. Increasingly it is becoming obvious that we must
recognise and understand the realities of complexity. Soul allows us to do
this.
The reader of this short book (it is only 140 A5 pages long) will not be
disappointed by Westoby’s more detailed musings on these and other answers to
the question as to the importance or usefulness of soul in community work.
It is foremostly, a book of reflections. It is a soulful book. It is
a enchanting book. Westoby colours in theoretical outlines with stories from
his own practice and pertinent quotes from soul thinkers – e.g. Rabindranath
Tagore, James Hillman, Mary Watkins, and Thomas Moore. Adding to the colour and
poetic quality of the book are ten delightful Leunig cartoons.1
For those of us seeking a soulful approach to community work, social justice
advocacy, or anyone desiring a better world, Creating Us is an
excellent place to begin that journey, or indeed, be reminded of that journey if
one has already begun.
To watch a 13 minute clip of Peter Westoby discussing the concept of soul in
community work click here.
Notes:
1. Michael Leunig is an Australian cartoonist known for his wonderful, and
sometimes cynical, yet always whimsical, commentaries on life and the human
condition.
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