Relational Fieldwork
Training in how participation organizes power
- and how to stay human inside complex relational systems
laura geiger
Most of the forces shaping group life appear before anyone decides what they intend.
They emerge through timing, attention, responsibility, and participation habits.
Relational Fieldwork creates practice environments where these dynamics become visible while they are happening, allowing practitioners to study interaction in real time and expand how they participate inside it.
This work develops relational field literacy: the ability to perceive how participation shapes power and to respond with awareness inside it.
Many people encounter this work after noticing that even well-intentioned groups often reproduce the very dynamics they are trying to change.
How This Practice Develops
The work unfolds through three interrelated capacities that deepen over time.
Perceiving relational fields
Learning to sense how influence, tension, care, and authority move through interaction before they become explicit.
Participating with awareness
Expanding the ability to stay present when responsibility, uncertainty, and difference are unfolding.
Intervening responsibly
Recognizing when participation patterns are organizing harm and responding without collapsing trust or taking control.
Different training environments focus on different parts of this arc.
Most people encounter this work through a live relational experiment, where the dynamics shaping interaction become visible within minutes.
relational field practice Environments
Relational Field Practice takes place in several distinct environments.
Deep Puppetry™
Material field practice
Participants develop perceptual sensitivity by working with simple objects that slow interaction enough for relational dynamics to become visible.
Because the object cannot explain, justify, or persuade, relational dynamics that usually remain hidden in conversation become visible through movement, timing, and contact.
Focus: perceptual field sensitivity
School of the Small and Imperfect
Human relational laboratory
Participants practice working directly inside human relational fields.
Moments that normally pass quickly (hesitation, offering, withdrawal, responsibility shifts) are slowed down and explored through live participation rather than discussion.
Participants experiment with conditions such as:
• staying with moments before they resolve
• offering without pre-approval
• receiving without control
• noticing responsibility movement
• allowing refusal to remain visible
Over time, participants develop the capacity to remain present inside relational complexity without defaulting to control, over-functioning, or withdrawal.
Many participants enter School after Deep Puppetry, when the dynamics first noticed through material practice begin appearing in human interaction.
Focus: participation
Advanced Training in Power-Aware Facilitation
Professional application
For practitioners who already hold responsibility for group environments and want to work more consciously with how participation organizes power.
Participants practice inside live relational laboratories where:
• facilitation reflexes become visible
• authority shifts can be studied in real time
• intervention timing becomes clearer
• disruption can occur without collapsing trust
Focus: responsibility
Relational Field Sessions
Short entry laboratory
A 90-minute live relational experiment where participants experience how participation organizes itself in real time.
Rather than discussing group dynamics, participants enter a simple shared task where patterns of responsibility, influence, hesitation, and coordination become visible as they unfold.
Often the clearest way to experience the work for the first time.
Focus: entry
Participants often move between these environments as their perception and participation deepen.
Why This Work Exists
Many professionals working in education, therapy, organizing, facilitation, and cultural work care deeply about justice, care, and ethical practice.
And still, inside meetings, classrooms, collectives, therapy rooms, and organizations, they notice themselves:
• stepping in too quickly
• carrying responsibility that was never assigned
• smoothing tension that needed time
• shaping outcomes without meaning to
• keeping groups coherent at personal cost
Not because they lack skill or because they lack ethics.
But because power organizes participation faster than intention can.
This matters far beyond individual meetings or facilitation choices.
The ways participation organizes responsibility, authority, silence, and urgency are also the ways institutions, movements, and collaborations reproduce power. Even spaces committed to justice, care, or inclusion can quietly recreate hierarchy through everyday interaction patterns that no one intended.
Most of us learned these participation habits long before we had language for them. Those habits continue to shape what becomes possible in the spaces we care about.
Relational Fieldwork creates places where those habits can be seen, studied, and practiced differently.
What Happens In This Work
Most relational training focuses on communication, emotional awareness, or leadership technique.
This work attends to an earlier layer: how interaction organizes itself.
Participants work inside structured relational experiments where they can observe:
• how responsibility concentrates
• how urgency reorganizes authority
• how care turns into control
• how silence becomes disappearance
• how participation stabilizes hierarchy
These patterns are not studied abstractly. They become visible through experience.
Learning happens through participation first, understanding second.
Who This Work Tends To Support
This work attracts people who hold responsibility for relational environments, including:
• facilitators and group leaders
• educators and curriculum designers
• therapists and relational practitioners
• artists and cultural organizers
• movement and community organizers
• people working inside institutional complexity
Many participants arrive already sensing subtle group dynamics but without places to practice working inside them with others who see the same layer.
About Laura Geiger
Laura Geiger is a relational fieldwork practitioner and the creator of Deep Puppetry™.
She designs structured practice environments where practitioners can study how participation organizes power in real time and develop greater range inside moments of relational complexity.
Her work focuses on the participation layer where collective dynamics begin forming, often before communication, intention, or leadership decisions become visible.
Through constraint-based relational experiments and live group laboratories, participants learn to perceive how interaction shapes authority, responsibility, and possibility.
Entering This Work
You do not need theoretical background or prior exposure.
Participants enter live relational environments where interaction itself becomes the material of study.
Explore Power-Aware Facilitation
Join School of the Small and Imperfect
Participate in a Relational Field Session
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