Alone on the ice,
surrounded by mountains and snow in the darkness. The faintest sliver
of moon is barely brighter than the thousands of stars overhead. A cold,
clear sky on a windless night, -16C/3F outside. I am dressed warmly but
a small shiver escapes me.
Feeling very, very small indeed.
I am standing in
the middle of Lightning Lake, British Columbia, Canada. The light of the
stars is bright enough for me to easily see the contrast of light and
dark - brighter, actually than I thought it would be. An igloo stands a
ways back, off to my left.
I check my watch. Time to go in.
I turn and walk
in silence, a hundred paces back the way I came - where I join the rest
of the scout troop I am leading. They have retraced their own steps back
to the circle.
Technically I was
not really alone - however with everyone separated and facing away from
each other, looking only at the sky, the lake and the mountains, it was
very easy to imagine you were indeed alone out there.
In absolute stillness.
We waited for the
last few to join the circle and then we quietly shared observations of
the experience. Most felt small, insignificant, alone in the vastness -
but also not alone, either. They were not talking about the other
members of the troop hundreds of feet from them - they were feeling
small, but also part of their surroundings. Maybe the start of a sense
of belonging to nature, and a few did not feel as cold standing there as
they did on the walk out onto the lake.
The interesting
part of the whole exercise was that from being and feeling quite alone
out on the ice, we walked back to camp with a deeper connection from the
shared experience of being alone in the universe - together. And I am
quite sure that each of them will remember the experience as long as
they live.
...
There is no one prescribed way to build a team, but the common thread in all successful methods is in doing things together.
Whether you are leading and developing the youth who will be the
leaders of tomorrow, or working with already-grown-ups, the principle is
the same.
Teams grow and bond (and sometimes break apart) through challenges and the shared experience of building or accomplishing things - together.
Listen to the podcast, or read the full article on Gazza's Corner blog.
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