posted 11 years ago
Hello All,
I do appreciate the efforts and knowledge many have experienced this far into their adventures into "natural and sustainable architecture," and the views they share with many on these varied topics. I still must share publicly my perspective as a seasoned and experienced facilitator (over 35 years) that many have less than half of the recommend 10 to 15 years of experience to "solo facilitate" such architectural workshops. As of late, this has crossed my desk more and more often. Most recently, with "I have six years..." and that followed by an explanation why that is enough.
I know many feel otherwise, and that is more than their prerogative, and that personally feel comfortable with what they teach, and think its o.k. to do so without any specialized training, oversight, mentorship, or general peer feedback. I am also sure many are sharing some valuable information. Yet I must share that each year I see more and more folks like this coming to the "permaculture world" thinking they are "qualified" to teach all manner of things...and charge money for it...often a lot of money. So I have started pushing back on folks to really evaluate the funds they spend on these "experiences" and vet the qualifications, and backgrounds of the folks that are going to be the lead facilitators of the classes they are considering. Buyer beware...in other words.
I am but one voice on this matter, and I am sure there are many others that feel as I do...and some do not. It's funny how most that don't have less than the recommended 10 to 15 years of experience and/or specialized training-technical experience in the construction-design arts. I will, regardless, continue to "warn" folks to be cautious of information that is not sourced from at least a decade's worth of active years in working, guiding, research, book reading-reviewing, and facilitating, the different modalities of topics that they intend to teach others about. Sometimes it is just a matter of "quality of the knowledge" and yet at others (like in architecture) it is a matter of safety, good practices in engineering and intimacy in materials, which takes decades to acquire...not just "I really love this topic", taking a few classes, doing a couple projects, or reading 5 or 10 books on a subject...it take dedicated application, mentoring, and dare I say it..."paying your dues" under the guidance of senior practitioners...this is the only way to really develop and nurture the deep understanding and enlightenment that is required to honor these different Arts and Crafts well. Apprenticing and working hard has been the way of it for a very long time, and I am not suggesting 20 to 30 years of grueling and tortuous apprenticeships as is found in some cultures, or "one shoe fits all," yet I am strongly suggesting that this "new age" and "instant gratification" mentality has no place in the "arts, crafts, and life skills," that so many are too rapidly embracing...then thinking they can go out and teach it to others...very few actually can, and only see this after they can actually look back over that 10 to 15 years and realize just how little they knew...and still have to learn. As I said, I have been doing this "permaculture" stuff a long time...and I am still amazed... almost daily... at how much more I can (and should) still learn...
Regards,
j