The Five Elements & The Elemental Environment
We all have experienced, and intrinsically know, when energetic misalignments and disturbances arise by and between members of a team, or on a larger scale, within a larger organization confronting significant challenges on a systemic basis. The greater the adverse disruption, blocking, or misalignment of energetic flows by and between those charged with co-creating, the more targets, goals, projections, and outcomes fall short of intended outcomes, or fail entirely.
“Reality” is by its nature based on five experiential sensing and sense-making dimensions, physical, emotional, energetic, mental, and spiritual. The ancient Five Elements wisdom and traditions offer a means to reawaken consciousness of these existential dimensions, and restoration of full cognitive, emotional, sensory, and energetic connection to and awareness of others and our world.
The Five Great Elements, derived from ancient Chinese Buddhist tradition are: Earth, Water, Fire, Air, and Space (with some naming variations depending upon source). Each of these elements reference multiple expressions, energies, and attributes of our lived reality and way of relating to and co-creating with each other. The energetic flows and alignment are in a constant state of change, individually, and in relation to and in combination with each other.
Realizing the greatest generative potential in a given moment by and between a group of people co-creating together involves each individual, on an elemental level, being conscious and aware of their respective internal alignment and responsiveness to energetic states, across all dimensions of being-- physical, emotional, energetic, mental, and spiritual.
“Reality” is by its nature based on five experiential sensing and sense-making dimensions, physical, emotional, energetic, mental, and spiritual. The ancient Five Elements wisdom and traditions offer a means to reawaken consciousness of these existential dimensions, and restoration of full cognitive, emotional, sensory, and energetic connection to and awareness of others and our world.
The Five Great Elements, derived from ancient Chinese Buddhist tradition are: Earth, Water, Fire, Air, and Space (with some naming variations depending upon source). Each of these elements reference multiple expressions, energies, and attributes of our lived reality and way of relating to and co-creating with each other. The energetic flows and alignment are in a constant state of change, individually, and in relation to and in combination with each other.
Realizing the greatest generative potential in a given moment by and between a group of people co-creating together involves each individual, on an elemental level, being conscious and aware of their respective internal alignment and responsiveness to energetic states, across all dimensions of being-- physical, emotional, energetic, mental, and spiritual.