"Each one of us needs to discover the proper balance between the masculine and feminine energies, between the active and receptive"
Ravi Ravindra, Ph.D. in Physics, University of Toronto, post-doctoral fellowships in Physics, History and Philosophy of Science.
Ravi Ravindra, Ph.D. in Physics, University of Toronto, post-doctoral fellowships in Physics, History and Philosophy of Science.
What do we mean when we refer to anything as feminine or as masculine? Most everyone has a picture that forms and perhaps it carries judgment. We all think we know what is feminine or masculine. Is it a case of, you know it when you see it or when you experience it? How many of our notions are based on how we were socialized? What can we learn from the experience and the stories of others?
At FeMasCon we intend to unravel the traditional ways of thinking about and judging what is feminine and masculine. By turning it on its head and examining it together, we hope you will begin to see and to experiment with accessing all aspects of the spectrum of your inherent potential. Expand options and discover new modalities to increase effectiveness and collaboration while changing the culture of your organization.
At FeMasCon we expand and mix the feminine and masculine in the way we engage and discuss the challenges we experience in a world that for centuries has defined and assigned strict limitations and standards related to each “box”.
Join us for exploration, dialog and idea sharing to see how, by listening to different perspectives, we can inform each other and be better, together, as a result.
"Male and female represent two sides of the great radical dualism. But in fact they are perpetually passing into one another. Fluid hardens to solid and solid rushes to fluid. There is no wholly masculine man no purely feminine women."
Margaret Fuller, American journalist, editor and women's rights advocate
Margaret Fuller, American journalist, editor and women's rights advocate