Encounters
What are Encounters?
To me, encounters are carefully designed situations in which people are invited to step outside familiar ways of seeing, thinking and relating.
Unlike a workshop, lecture or performance, an encounter does not aim to teach, persuade or entertain. Instead, it creates conditions for exploration. Participants are invited into a temporary space where everyday assumptions can be suspended and where new perspectives may emerge.
Encounters often combine symbolic objects, ritualised actions, guided visualisations, conversation and collective reflection. Their form varies, but they share a common intention: to make visible the invisible agreements that shape our experience of reality.
The outcomes are never fixed in advance. Some encounters lead to personal insights, others to collective reflection or unexpected conversations. Sometimes the shift is profound; sometimes it is barely noticeable. Both are equally valuable.
What matters is the creation of a space in which alternative possibilities can briefly be experienced, not as abstract ideas, but as lived experience.