Nick Buckley (London)

I heard about Street Wisdom quite a long time ago, and I understood the idea, but I didn’t get the opportunity to try it until March this year [2014] when I joined a Sunday morning session put on in Holborn for the Sunday Assembly.Street Wisdom meets Sunday Assembly

This was a shortened version, ‘one time around’, where we issued onto the streets to carry out our missions as individuals and then met up back at the pub to share and decode our experiences.

The exercise splits into two parts – the first is about doing things to heighten your awareness and open you up to new experiences. The second invites you, once in that zone, to tackle a question you brought with you.

For the first stage I focussed on the instruction to “slow right down”. This resonated quite a lot with the Mindfulness techniques I’ve been teaching people, but the extra dimension is in interacting with your live surroundings. Holborn on a Sunday morning is a quiet place and I imagine that the experience would have been different again on a bustling weekday. Down Chancery Lane I did start to slow physically and to take more in, reading the notices which give clues to the business going on behind each door. But I also became aware of the age of the buildings and imagined them visibly changing in a world where we come and go as blurs. Even mature street trees became upstarts as I saw myself as a transitory phenomenon in the life of the city.

Thus armed, I moved on to my own question. It was about the order in which I was going to tackle making improvements to my health and making changes to my work. I couldn’t do both at the same time. So which first?

BastionLooking around I had a sense that I would supply the narrative, but that I would be influenced by what was in this place around me. I know that we make the world, through the way that we select what to see, and what significance to give it. I was ready for a dialogue with these gardens and walls, offices and alleys. But what I didn’t expect was a barrage of cues and clues in such a short space of time and small circle of distance. I have my answer, by a short head, and even the process of decoding the more ambiguous clues gave me insights into how I had framed my question in the first place.

I don’t view this in a mysterious way – some external power sending me messages – even though so many of the things I noticed were words… street signs, company notices and placards. But I am happily mystified by how much this process was an experience rather than a process of analysis or deduction. The set-up and brief are crucial.

So, yes, the Streets are full of Wisdom even if some of it is our own, rediscovered and reflected back to us. Get down there and see for yourself.

Nick Buckley, SoShall Consulting

Sunday Assembly meets Street Wisdom

Street Wisdom meets Sunday Assembly

Most people think of the street as just a way of getting from A to B. We hurry along, avoiding contact, screening out the city with our iPhones, blanking strangers, heads down and thoughts turned inward. Street Wisdom sees it differently. We think the street is an amazing place if you are curious and willing to break the rules of ordinary life.

So it was a thrill for us to discover Sunday Assembly – a whole tribe of people who basically think the same way as us. And even more of a thrill to be invited by the Sunday Assembly team to hold a Street Wisdom event in London last weekend when their normal venue wasn’t available so the street was, by happy coincidence, the venue anyway.

We’ve been experimenting with Street Wisdom for years, refining the experience to the point where we can now give it away as shareware to anyone who’s interested. It’s free, it’s simple and it’s surprisingly transformational.

The Sunday Assembly event forced us to simplify the experience even more as we had more people attending and less time than usual. We gathered at 11am for a bit of a briefing and a mingle. There was no real ‘ice’ to break as Sunday Assemblers seem to arrive pre-warmed up. (“You’re one of us” said a smiling lady on the street as I arrived for the set-up. “I can tell by your smile”. Sweet.) Then 200 people spilled into London’s streets to first “tune” their senses and then “ask the street a question”.

After an hour everyone was invited back to share their tales what they learned.

“Bizarrely amazing!…The thinkiest I’ve ever been…It was AMAZING…a very tangible hour of meaningfulness… I started off with quite low expectations of what I would get from this hour, but I can now say it was a revelation!”

Tweets went out:

V positive experience on my 1st @Street_Wisdom walk: seeing London afresh & thinking differently

Particularly wanderful @SundayAssembly today! Recommend everyone tries @Street_Wisdom.

One person told us “I didn’t arrive at a definite answer, but that’s ok. Doors have been opened, more wanders will be had.”

And that’s the point. There are many streets out there. And many Sundays. And now more people able to gain some Street Wisdom. Altogether it’s a wander-ful life!

Héloise, SCA

I believe that people who come to Street Wisdom don’t expect anything from it, they don’t have any pre-conceived judgements about what’s going to happen and that’s the beauty of it.

I felt myself, step by step, being guided by the architecture, the sounds of people talking, walking on the street, various colours…The Street Wisdom experience enables you to listen to yourself, realize what’s around you and be guided by this energy within you. If there is one thing which is important is to let go.

We all come with a question, which can be anything and you’ll realize that throughout the day you’ll be able to answer it yourself.

This adventure let you discover another part of yourself , that you’ll be able to nurture throughout your life. (specially if you live in a big city) It brings back the importance of our surroundings and the powerful impact that it can have on us.

Héloise Jutteau, Creative at School of Communication Arts

Louise, Mindfulness at Work

I derive so much pleasure from my business training Mindfulness in the Workplace, but recently I have been experiencing depletion due to an aspect of my business that has not sat well with my over-arching purpose – to help enable people to achieve their full potential and to flourish in all areas of their lives.

Street Wisdom very quickly enabled me to see that actually I needed to just be myself and have confidence that this is good enough. I noticed nature just ‘being’ – birds flying effortlessly, flowers flowering without trying, leaves crinkling at the edges (but still with a purpose – ahead of being shed and making way for new growth in the spring). I noticed a caged tiger depicted in a shop window and felt a strong affinity with the creature. I then saw a street sign with an arrow and a heart reminding me to move in the direction of my heart’s wisdom at all times. Followed by lots of circles that reminded me that although we come back to the same issues, we can always move on if we embrace the evolutionary imperative.

Feeling free of old constraints, the SMS arrived ‘open the space ahead’. Standing in Shaftesbury Avenue, with not a vehicle in sight, I looked up at a building on the corner of China Town. An enormous tiger on the side of the building looked down on me. An incredible moment of grace seemed to permeate through my very being. And the next text then asked me to meet at Grace in Great Windmill Street. Coincidences? I think not.

The street was communicating its wisdom to me. And I have listened and taken action. Watch this space!

Louise Cox Chester, Mindfulness at Work

Rebecca, SCA

Street Wisdom was an intriguing and illuminating experience allowing me to connect with my surroundings in a new way. Practising mindfulness and spending the day in a relaxed, meditative state left me feeling rejuvenated at an otherwise stressful time.

There were many things weighing on my mind at the start of the day; asking the street for answers made me realise I hadn’t given myself a chance to properly think about them and I felt I left with a greater sense of clarity.

Rebecca Arthur, Creative at School for Communication Arts

Chris, ‎ITV

Firstly, it was just a wonderfully indulgent day… like a spa treatment for the old noggin; a chance to consciously slow the pace, and just notice things – to simply stop for a second and realise how unfamiliar our supposedly familiar environment actually is. I saw Covent Garden in a totally new light, and it felt as if I was viewing it through a brand new filter. And it was this freshness, and my concentration on newly discovered details, that provided the spark for ideas and thoughts.

In terms of my own ‘quest’, I set out with a personal challenge around which I wanted some answers. When we came back as a group after the exercise on the street, I had a much more specific question. I initially found that disappointing… but then quickly realised that how I’d articulated this question actually held the key to my answer!

It’s a relatively gentle creative technique on the face of it, and oddly solitary, but I think it’s actually pretty powerful. There’s inspiration everywhere, and Street Wisdom helps you see it in new ways, as if your very eyeballs had been replaced!

Chris Goldson, Sales Director at ITV