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When I was invited by Marlou de Rouw over a year and a half ago to join the facilitation team for a blended SALT-CLCP course with the ASEAN Institute for Health Development (AIHD) in Thailand, I gladly accepted the invitation and looked forward to co-facilitating the course which would combine face-to-face learning events with online coaching, with 2 long-time friends who were highly-experienced Constellation coaches: Marlou herself and Sirinate Piyajitpirat. I knew it would be quite a challenge because we would have to work together across a triangle of 3 different time zones as Marlou was based in Europe, Sirinate was based in Thailand, and I was based in the US, but I trusted that together we could make it work and just took a leap of faith to join in.
Then Covid-19 happened and plunged the whole world into turmoil. And our nicely-designed plan was tossed in the air.
Because of travel restrictions, Marlou and I could not travel to join Sirinate for the first planned face-to-face 3-day learning event. Fortunately another friend and highly- experienced Constellation coach, Jean-Louis Lamboray, happened to be in Thailand at the time, so together we scrambled to have Jean-Louis join Sirinate for a one-day mini-event to introduce the participants to a taste of SALT-CLCP instead. The bulk of the course’s learning and sharing would have to be carried online, with materials available in the online platform, plenaries sessions on Zoom for each step of the process, and small-team coaching meetings on Zoom before and after participants’ practice of step in-between the plenaries. But Covid surge caused the delays in some steps because our participants were not allowed to go and practice the step in their respective communities. The delays extended the length of the process and our contract, and we lost some participants along the way. During a brief pause in Covid surge, Sirinate could manage to join a follow-up visit with some teams, to support the teams as well as to demonstrate in-person how a key step could be facilitated. However, Covid re-surge led to travel restrictions which again caused us to cancel the last planned face-to-face 3-day knowledge fair, and had to do all our discussion and conclusion online.
Indeed because of Covid-19 challenges, our blended course ran the serious risk of becoming a rival of the popular “A Series of Unfortunate Events” that would cause everyone to lose heart and produce nothing but doom and gloom. But, as we were believers and practitioners of SALT, we looked for strengths rather than problems and just adapted our strategies every step of the way. And gratefully our participants adapted with us to the end. Together we learned and shared as best we could in the circumstances. In fact, I was impressed with some of the participants’ reflections.
Here are some of my favourites:
What did we learn about SALT-CLCP?
What have we learned about working with communities?
What changes did we see in the community?
What changes did we see in ourselves - the way we engage with people and groups?
What I’ve found equally impressive is that 2 communities already started taking their own action towards their dream, and the participants -- who have worked together in 3 facilitation teams-- are still committed and keen to continue to visit and accompany their respective community on their journey towards their dreams. In addition, some participants already started applying SALT-CLCP in their own contexts. Aj. Vijj, for instance, has already started applying SALT in his teaching at the university, training, and research. Aj. Oum has started to use some of her new skills with her students, and Aj.Hong believes she can apply it in her work with patients.
So, despite many challenges, the course has managed to achieve its objectives. Several factors have contributed to the success:
Overall, the experience has been very rewarding for me. My most important takeaway from this experience is that we have to trust the approach, the process, and our team mates, and just look for strengths as we go along. The journey was challenging, but it was possible. Both the adventure and the outcomes exceeded my expectations, because we believed in the process and kept practicing SALT in all our facilitation and interactions. Covid-19 didn’t manage to ruin the course or beat us. We beat it. With SALT :-)
Comment
What a wonderful testimonial ! Thanks for sharing.
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