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When is good aloneness better than bad togetherness?

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Ed W. and Lisa J.
When is good aloneness better than bad togetherness?

Details

POSTPONED.
Unfortunately, we have recently learned that due to illness, we will have to postpone the session.
We'll let you know what the new details are when it is organised.
In the meantime, if you are Free Member of LAST Club (Spark the Change Melbourne is part of LAST), you can login to and access some of the most recent sessions that are inthe Free Library. Full Members get access to everything in our archive, which has almost 100 hours of sessions.
You can join LAST Club for free.

For more info and more detailed joining instructions, please go to the LAST Club site. This session is part of LAST Club's current online series.

The Zoom joining link will be provided upon free Registration in the LAST Club site.
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As we packed our desk and moved to an unprecedented uptake of WFH with varying degrees of enthusiasm, some were left with a nagging feeling that we might had left something behind. Among this concern is the loss of community and water-cooler innovation promoted by “analogue togetherness”. As we rush to mimic those serendipitous interactions in virtual environments, we might overlook the advantages that being alone can bring to the individual and organisations, not to mention the downside of bad togetherness - you know the one, the “I'd rather not be at this try hard Zoom drinks” type of togetherness.

Join Dr. Agustin Chevez and Dr. Franz Wohlgezogen on a conversation about when to be alone, when to be together and what aspects of both are best supported by analogue and digital environments.

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