Learning About Invitations: Difference between revisions

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Invitations to trail-off may take different shapes and forms. They can look like giving someone a ride, playing bingo or staying around to drink a cup of coffee.  
Invitations to trail-off may take different shapes and forms. They can look like giving someone a ride, playing bingo or staying around to drink a cup of coffee.  


It is up to you to decide whether you want to accept these invitations or not. If you accept, they allow you to divert from previous trajectories and extend towards a practice of wayfaring and dwelling. Being receptive and open to such invitations is also the most effective way in this Knowledge-Land-Scape to attune to their corresponding insights. When it comes to better understanding how “ethical engagement” comes to matter in community-based polar bear research, I have found that the most insightful moments happened, through responding to unanticipated encounters and phenomena with attuned curiosity and attentive openness.
It is up to you to decide whether you want to accept these invitations or not.  


<div class="next_choice"> Sometimes invitations, consist of more than one event or encounter, and lead to their own trails. Keep following such side-trails until you run into a "dead-end". Once you reach one of those dead-ends, you are offered to return where you came from to find another way.
If you accept, they allow you to divert from previous trajectories and extend towards a practice of wayfaring and dwelling. Being receptive and open to such invitations is also the most effective way in this Knowledge-Land-Scape to attune to their corresponding insights. When it comes to better understanding of how “ethical engagement” comes to matter in community-based polar bear research, I have found that the most insightful moments happen through unanticipated encounters, attuned curiosity and attentive openness.


<div class="next_choice"> Sometimes, invitations consist of more than one event or encounter, and lead to their own trails. Keep following such side-trails until it fades out. Once you reach one of those "dead-ends", you can return to where you came from to find another way.


“Keep Going”, until you have to find another way. </div>
“Keep Going”, to see what happens when the trail fades out.  
 
to return to the instructions-track</div>


<span class="return to instructions link" data-page-title="Instructions: Ways to Navigate this Space" data-section-id="3" data-encounter-type="return">[[Instructions: Ways to Navigate this Space#Redirectives: Ice Pressure Ridges|Return to instructions]]</span>
<span class="return to instructions link" data-page-title="Instructions: Ways to Navigate this Space" data-section-id="3" data-encounter-type="return">[[Instructions: Ways to Navigate this Space#Redirectives: Ice Pressure Ridges|Return to instructions]]</span>

Revision as of 10:19, 24 January 2025

Invitations to trail-off may take different shapes and forms. They can look like giving someone a ride, playing bingo or staying around to drink a cup of coffee.

It is up to you to decide whether you want to accept these invitations or not.

If you accept, they allow you to divert from previous trajectories and extend towards a practice of wayfaring and dwelling. Being receptive and open to such invitations is also the most effective way in this Knowledge-Land-Scape to attune to their corresponding insights. When it comes to better understanding of how “ethical engagement” comes to matter in community-based polar bear research, I have found that the most insightful moments happen through unanticipated encounters, attuned curiosity and attentive openness.

Sometimes, invitations consist of more than one event or encounter, and lead to their own trails. Keep following such side-trails until it fades out. Once you reach one of those "dead-ends", you can return to where you came from to find another way.

“Keep Going”, to see what happens when the trail fades out.

to return to the instructions-track

Return to instructions