Learning from Nature

Observe living systems to inspire your innovation practice and build resilience

Introduction

In today's increasingly complex and volatile business environment, nature can be a powerful and unexpected source of inspiration. By observing natural systems, leaders can gain insights into agents, relationships, dynamics, and underlying patterns. Often this experience can have a ‘fractal’ quality to it. What we see outside is also happening inside: inside our organizations, our teams, or even within ourselves. Besides the fact that spending time in nature has a calming effect on our nervous system, it can also help us build a more expansive and refined awareness of what is going on around us.

When to use this practice

Learning from Nature is particularly valuable when:

  • Addressing complex, interconnected challenges that require holistic solutions;
  • Seeking sustainable and regenerative approaches to innovation;
  • Aiming to foster adaptability and resilience within teams and organizational structures.

How to develop this practice

Pale Blue Perspective has created a card deck called "Cards for Life." It is a simple, aesthetically appealing and intuitive tool for learning and applying Learning from Nature, or Living Systems Thinking, as they refer to it. This card deck of regenerative principles fosters a vocabulary to more effectively perceive and communicate natural phenomena and recognize how they are reflected in ourselves, our teams and our organizations. The deck consists of three suits: Being, Doing and Dynamics. In this tool we cover an exercise that uses the Dynamics suit. 

You can download a sample of the Dynamics suit of the Cards for Life deck here

Exercise: Seeing Systems

Seeing Systems offers a practical and effective approach to developing a more intuitive understanding of living systems thinking. This exercise can be done alone, but it becomes even richer if you gather a small group of people and do it together.

To do this exercise effectively, you will need access to some outdoor space. This could be a forest or woodland, but it could also just be a city park or garden. Before beginning the exercise, take a few moments to do a check-in and tune into your surroundings. This could be through a short meditation, or by simply asking people to notice what they see, hear, smell, and feel in this natural setting.

Each person draws a card from the Dynamics suit of the deck. Take a few minutes to become acquainted with the phenomenon on your card, and then spend 20 to 40 minutes observing the environment around you and try to find examples of that phenomenon in the natural setting you are in. After finding some examples in the natural world, reflect on how these same dynamics show up in your own life or work.

Finish the exercise by journaling (if you are on your own) or coming back together for a conversation (if you are in a group) around the following questions:

  1. What did you notice, observe, perceive?
  2. What did you learn from that observation?
  3. What does that mean for you in practice?

Benefits of this practice

Integrating Learning from Nature into your leadership toolkit offers several advantages:

  • Informed innovation: Nature-inspired solutions often lead to creative breakthroughs that are both effective and sustainable.
  • Increased resilience: Integrating natural dynamics in the way our organizations operate makes us more resilient, enabling organizations to better navigate change and uncertainty.
  • Sustainable growth: Emulating nature's regenerative processes promotes long-term organizational health and environmental stewardship.

How to take this further

To deepen your engagement with Learning from Nature:

  • Attend the Cards for Life Practitioner Training: Thinking Like Gaia 
  • Attend nature-based workshops & courses: Engage in programs that immerse leaders in natural settings to observe and reflect on ecological principles.
  • Collaborate with biomimicry experts: Partner with organizations like the Biomimicry Institute to explore how nature-inspired design can be applied to your business challenges.

By embracing the practice of Learning from Nature, leaders can cultivate a mindset and behavioral repertoire that supports responsible innovation, leading to more adaptive, resilient, and life-centered organizations.

This Leadership Practise is filed under:
Business

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