Grace & Gratitude | October 2015 Newsletter

Grace & Gratitude | October 2015 Newsletter

“Happiness cannot be traveled to, owned, earned, worn or consumed. Happiness is the spiritual experience of living every minute with love, grace, and gratitude.”—Denis Waitley

We have been enjoying reading your stories of gratitude and appreciation for Whidbey Institute Senior Fellows Larry Parks Daloz and Sharon Daloz Parks, both of whom will be honored during this weekend’s Gratitude Gala dinner auction. We are eagerly preparing for this weekend’s festivities . . . erecting the reception tent, making plans with our fabulous volunteers, and anticipating Chef Christyn’s mouth-watering gourmet meals!

Click here to read our October Newsletter.

October 14, 2015

The Meaning of Home | September 2015 Newsletter

Walking the Chinook trails with Larry Daloz is a humbling experience. Where I see a dozen trees, Larry sees a dozen striving lives—evolution and circumstance, strategy and fortune, chance and design steering every tree’s growth as each plays its part in the drama of a maturing forest. Under his tutelage, a centimeter of soil reveals a century of ecological history. As I stand beside him under the canopy, my human lifespan shrinks to a single paragraph in a slowly unfolding, planetary biography—and I realize, in a grander sense than ever before, the true meaning of home.

I am proud to call the Whidbey Institute a home for my work in the world, and I cherish Whidbey Institute Fellows Larry Parks Daloz and Sharon Daloz Parks for their guiding roles with this organization. During our Second Annual Gratitude Gala, October 10, we’ll have the honor of recognizing their ongoing commitments to Chinook. —Marnie Jones

This issue includes articles about board member Dale Schweppe; Dan’s reflections on a kayak-based mindfulness retreat with Inside Passages; reflections on the year in the garden from Margaret Pickoff; updates about upcoming fungi tours and a Buffalo Field Campaign concert; a Chinook Encounter story from Kimi Hoover; and more!

Click here to view our September newsletter and read on.

Photo by Justin Kern.

September 9, 2015

Change and Growth | August 2015 Newsletter

Life, in all its evolutionary wisdom, manages ecosystems of unfathomable beauty, ever evolving toward more wholeness, complexity, and consciousness.” —Frederic Laloux

This issue includes an open letter from Executive Director Heather Johnson to the Whidbey Institute; reports on Community Garden Leadership Training field trips, our recent BioBlitz, and Farmhouse and Sanctuary roof maintenance; a report and video from Women of Color Speak Out; and more! Click here to view the entire newsletter and read on.


Bill Koenig steps down as Whidbey Institute Co-Director; Heather Johnson named Executive Director 

Dear Community Members,

The Whidbey Institute at Chinook has served for over 40 years as a learning organization dedicated to the common good in a world of accelerating change. Today, our rich history continues to inspire us to be the change we wish to see—to evolve our practices, share our learning, and deepen into new and generative inter-relationships within the Whidbey Institute community and our regional and global networks.

Board and staff have worked closely together since May 2014 to evolve our organizational structure, evaluating and implementing the best principles of self-management from among many emerging and successful models. In this work, we’ve better aligned our internal policies and practices with our external mission, values, and purpose. The Whidbey Institute has moved into new strength—financially, programmatically, and in spirit, and the response from our community of donors, program leaders, and program participants confirms our belief that the new systems we’re putting in place truly enable our best possible work.

Bill Koenig joined the executive team in October 2014, and was formally introduced on January 1 as Co-Director alongside Heather Johnson. In his role as our designated champion of self-management principles, Bill helped evaluate and implement our systems of self-management; established methods for improving intra-organizational transparency; supported staff in defining clearer roles and accountabilities; and facilitated the learning of new, more efficient and empowering processes for meetings and decision-making. At this time, Bill has chosen to step down as Co-Director.

As a staff and board team, we wish to express our gratitude to Bill and his wife Carole for their support of the Whidbey Institute. We thank Bill for his recent service, as well as for his long history with the Institute as board member, board chair, advisory council member, and governance task force member. His contributions have helped shape the Institute in ways seen and unseen.

As a result of our organizational evolution, the full team is accountable to the whole in new ways: sharing facilitation of decision-making processes; stewarding our budget; and holding our guest services, our program engagement, and our care for Chinook and our community to the highest standards of excellence. In May 2015, staff members crafted a Statement of Our Mutual Commitment in order to name the deeper purpose of this shift toward self-management.

The board and staff have full confidence in Heather Johnson’s continuing leadership as she moves into the Executive Director role. She embodies the deep purpose of this place, has held and nurtured many of our most valuable program and community relationships, and works every day to expand our reach and financial strength. As a result of Heather’s work with our program partners, we have a rich, full calendar of mission-aligned offerings in the coming year and beyond, and we are confident that both our learning and our organizational effectiveness will continue.

Finally, we so appreciate the ongoing support of the Whidbey Institute community. You make this organization what it is and enable our collective accomplishments. Thank you for being with us in this work.

Sincerely,

Gabriel            Kate
Gabriel Shirley                Kate Snider
Board President              Board Vice-President

August 6, 2015

Vitality | July 2015 Newsletter

Our July 2015 Newsletter is here!

“What you can plan is too small for you to live.
What you can live wholeheartedly
will make plans enough
for the vitality
hidden in your sleep.”

—David Whyte, from What to Remember when Waking

This issue includes articles about board member Dorothy Baumgartner and Appletree Garden steward Mara Grey, plus articles about parenting in the face of climate change, improvements to our guest lodging in Granny’s, Community Garden Leadership Training updates, wildlife sightings at Chinook, and more!

Click here to view the full issue and read on.

 

July 7, 2015

Purpose & Passion | June 2015 Newsletter

P U R P O S E  &  P A S S I O N

Our Thriving Communities program leader, Jerry Millhon, walked the Camino de Santiago in Spain this April. He found the experience deeply life affirming in many ways. He told us that as he walked, he became even more certain that his passion for the Thriving Communities work was a deep, lifelong commitment.

We’ve had the opportunity to connect with staff, board, program leaders, and community members this month. Familiar themes have emerged throughout the course of our interviews: shared purpose, deep passion, and a commitment to working on behalf of the common good.

Look in this issue for a Thriving Communities Conference Highlight video, interviews with Chris Clark, Dan Mahle, Kris Carlson, and Jill Sheldon, Spring notes and photography from Robert Mellinger and Thomas Arthur Anderson, and news from our land and programs.

Click here to view the whole issue and read on.

June 4, 2015

Loving the World | May 2015 Newsletter

“My work is loving the world . . . which is mostly standing still and learning to be astonished . . . which is mostly rejoicing, since all ingredients are here, which is gratitude, to be given a mind and a heart.” —Mary Oliver

We have been loving the world this spring at Chinook! We are surrounded by the beauty and bounty of an awakening forest, flourishing gardens, compelling conversations, and deepening partnerships. From our thatching ants and our nesting chickadees to our board members and our program partners, we are busy working in service to the common good. We are steeped in optimism.

And yet . . . the world’s pain hangs close. With events in Nepal and Baltimore weighing heavily on us, and with the loss of our friend Roger Harrison still fresh in our minds, we  at Chinook are acutely aware of our fortune. To be here, today. To spend our days doing work we believe in, for the good of the people, creatures, communities, and planet which we love. To have each other, and to have each of you. To share an unwavering trust that the world we are creating together will be one full of more good than harm.

With joy comes sorrow—with sorrow, joy. The limitless complexity of the world will never cease to amaze us. And what are we left with? The work of loving the world, and of loving each other. The work of bearing witness, and of speaking up. The work of being astonished, and of rejoicing.
Click here to view our May Newsletter and read on!

Chickadee photo by Andrew Reding.

May 7, 2015

Leading from Within | April 2015 Newsletter

Our April 2015 Newsletter is now available.

This much is clear to me. If I can’t change my own life in response to the greatest challenge now facing our human family, who can? And if I won’t make the effort to try, why should anyone else? So I’ve decided to start at home, and begin with myself. The question is no longer whether I must respond. The question is whether I can turn my response into an adventure.” —Kurt Hoelting, The Circumference of Home

This issue includes articles from Whidbey Life Magazine, the South Whidbey Record, and Whidbey ECO Network as well as upcoming event highlights and a Chinook Encounter. Click here to view the entire issue and read on!

Shell photos by Thomas Arthur Anderson

April 7, 2015

Callings | March 2015 Newsletter

Vocation does not come from a voice out there calling me to be something I am not. It comes from a voice in here calling me to be the person I was born to be . . .” —Thomas Merton

We lost a dear friend and beloved community member when Wilma O’Nan passed away, on February 4, at the age of 82. Today, we’re reflecting on her life of love, compassion, and service, and on the vital role she played in the early days of Chinook.

Wilma moved from California to Whidbey Island in 1978 to get involved with the Chinook Learning Community—now the Whidbey Institute. Chinook Co-Founder Vivienne Hull remembers Wilma’s arrival with vivid clarity and humor.

“Back at the very beginning, when we didn’t have a clue about what we were doing at all, I got a letter from this woman who wanted to know what she could do to help. I didn’t even know how to answer it, so I didn’t. It was one of the only letters to which I didn’t even write back,” Vivienne said. “Just a few weeks later, this VW bug drove down the road. It was Wilma. She said, ‘you didn’t answer when I wrote, so I figured you needed secretarial help.’” Wilma worked for Chinook as an employee in varied capacities, including secretarial, for the next six years.

Click here to view the March Newsletter and read on!

March 10, 2015

Feather & Stone | February 2015 Newsletter

Look deep into nature, and then you will understand everything better.“—Albert Einstein

Members of our Chinook family—founders, staff, supporters, neighbors, and board members both current and past—gathered in January with Jerry Millhon to honor his extraordinary leadership over the last five years, and to entrust our shared purpose to new Co-Directors Heather Johnson and Bill Koenig. View photos from the event here!

Among other highlights of the evening, a brief ceremony was held to entrust symbols of leadership to Heather, Bill, and Board Chair Gabriel Shirley. Each was given a stone and a feather.

The smooth, heavy stones, formed up to 2 billion years ago and sourced from present-day Iona, represent the long view—a vital perspective which includes the past, present, and future of the organization, and of the world to which it is of service.

The feathers, dropped by barred owls, represent the view from above—a perspective removed from day-to-day matters, from which one can gaze with owl-like wisdom upon the full landscape and all those therein.

In addition to these sacred and lovely items, Jerry loaned to Heather a favorite talisman of his own—a jester’s hat, for the handling of challenges through humor and a light heart. We could not hope for a more genuine gesture of goodwill from Jerry, our past Executive Director, current Thriving Communities program leader, and forever friend.

Click here to view our February Newsletter and read on!

February 6, 2015

Reverence for Life | January 2015 Newsletter

The requirements for our evolution have changed. Survival is no longer sufficient. Our evolution now requires us to develop spiritually—to become emotionally aware and make responsible choices. It requires us to align ourselves with the values of the soul—harmony, cooperation, sharing, and reverence for life.” —Gary Zukav

Here at the Whidbey Institute, we’re embracing the new year with optimism and excitement. Our calendar is full of mission-aligned work for the year to come, and our Co-Directors Bill Koenig and Heather Johnson have settled into their new roles with ease. Former Director, Jerry Millhon, remains an essential part of our team as Program Leader of the Thriving Communities Initiative. Our land and facilities team has taken advantage of a lull in activities to spruce up our indoor and outdoor spaces, including beautifully refinishing the concrete floors in our Thomas Berry Hall dining room and hallways. We’re even hard at work making plans for a season of vegetable gardening!

Click here to view our January Newsletter and read on.

January 9, 2015