Agreements — What They Are, Why They Are Important, and How People Work with Them — A Dialog with Orland Bishop

Agreements are a fundamental element of being human — it is how we interact with our own self, each other, groups, nature, and spirit.  In this dialog, our colleague Orland Bishop describes the deeper nature of agreements and why they are so critical to the human experience.  Click here to listen to this dialog.

For an in-depth look at how agreements influence your experience, and how to see those agreements, check out the Ecosynomics book-course.

14 thoughts on “Agreements — What They Are, Why They Are Important, and How People Work with Them — A Dialog with Orland Bishop

  1. Pingback: Experiencing Abundance in the Periphery – Meanderings through My Recent Reading [Focus by D. Goleman] « Jim Ritchie-Dunham

  2. Pingback: You Know Whether Your Experience Low or High Vibrancy « Jim Ritchie-Dunham

  3. Pingback: How “Compliance Practitioners” Choose Your Agreements For You — Recommended Reading « Jim Ritchie-Dunham

  4. Pingback: Seeing Your Agreements in 37 Words — Choosing Them in < 3 Tweets « Jim Ritchie-Dunham

  5. Pingback: Why Agreements Are Hard to See or Why Agreements Are Like Sauerkraut and Bread « Jim Ritchie-Dunham

  6. Pingback: The Science of What You Know — Featureless Noise or Featureful Signal « Jim Ritchie-Dunham

  7. Pingback: Differentiating and Integrating the “We” — What We Share and Why We Work Together « Jim Ritchie-Dunham

  8. Pingback: Guest post — Consciously Choosing Abundance-driven Agreements « Jim Ritchie-Dunham

  9. Pingback: Guest Post — Co-hosting a National Conference on Healthy Community « Jim Ritchie-Dunham

  10. Pingback: Clarity on Your Deeper Shared Purpose: A Matter of Life and Death — Really! « Reflections of a Pactoecographer

  11. Pingback: Clarity on Your Deeper Shared Purpose: A Matter of Life and Death — Really! – ISC

  12. Pingback: Your Unique Contribution « Reflections of a Pactoecographer

  13. Pingback: Your Unique Contribution – ISC

  14. Pingback: It Is Yours to Do « Reflections of a Pactoecographer

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.