Adaptive but also intentional, like migrating birds who know how to get where theyâre going even when a storm pushes them a hundred miles off course.
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Birds donât make a plan to migrate, raising resources to fund their way, packing for scarce times, mapping out their pit stops. They feel a call in their bodies that they must go, and they follow it, responding to each other, each bringing their adaptations.
There is an art to flocking: staying separate enough not to crowd each other, aligned enough to maintain a shared direction, and cohesive enough to always move towards each other. (Responding to destiny together.) Destiny is a calling that creates a beautiful journey.
(Brown, âEmergent Strategiesâ, p.50)
In a successful Ruckus action, the visions and solutions are deeper and more compelling than the injustice. (We are calling for a movement-wide shift away from action that isnât grounded in a vision of deep systemic change, as that ultimately is a misuse of our time and energy.)
Hereâs how it works in a murmuration/shoal/swarm: each creature is tuned in to its neighbors, the creatures right around it in the formation. This might be the birds on either side, or the six fish in each direction. There is a right relationship, a right distance between themâtoo close and they crash, too far away and they canât feel the micro-adaptations of the other bodies. Each creature is shifting direction, speed, and proximity based on the information of the other creaturesâ bodies.
There is a deep trust in this: to lift because the birds around you are lifting, to live based on your collective real-time adaptations. In this way thousands of birds or fish or bees can move together, each empowered with basic rules and a vision to live. Imagine our movements cultivating this type of trust and depth with each other, having strategic flocking in our
playbooks.
Adaptation reduces exhaustion. No one bears the burden alone of figuring out the next move and muscling towards it.
There is an efficiency at playâis something not working? Stop. Change. If something is working, keep doing itâlearning and innovating as you go.
As an individual, developing your capacity for adaptation can mean assessing your default reactions to change, and whether those reactions create space for opportunity, possibility, and continuing to move towards your vision.
What is easy is sustainable. Birds coast when they can.
As an individual, get really good at being intentional with where you put your energy, letting go as quickly as you can of things that arenât part of your visionary lifeâs work. Then you can give your all, from a well-resourced place, when the storm comes, or for those last crucial miles.
âNature has taught me that if humans donât figure out what revolution really means, nature will make the revolution despite us.â
âTawana Petty