Relational Fieldwork
Training in how participation organizes power
- and how to stay human inside systems that quietly train us to dominate, withdraw, or disappear

laura geiger

Relational Fieldwork offers training and practice environments for people who hold groups, shape learning spaces, or take seriously how power moves through everyday participation.

Most relational approaches focus on what people think, feel, or communicate. This work attends to a different layer: how participation itself organizes what becomes possible, often before anyone decides what they intend.

By working with timing, attention, responsibility, and response, practitioners begin to recognize how power moves through ordinary interaction and how to participate with greater awareness inside it.

These patterns rarely shift through insight alone. They require environments where participation can be studied as it unfolds.

What is participation?

Participation is more than speaking or contributing. It includes how we enter moments, where we direct attention, what we stabilize without noticing, and how we respond to tension, uncertainty, or responsibility.

It is the ongoing process through which interaction organizes itself.

Communication skills help us express. Somatic work helps us regulate. Therapy helps us understand. Participation work helps us see how interaction shapes power and how to move differently inside it.

Many people who find this work already hold strong values around justice, care, and relational integrity.

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.
Not because they lack ethics.

Because power organizes participation faster than intention can.

Most of us learned these participation habits long before we had language for them, and they continue to shape what becomes possible in the spaces we care about.

Systems reproduce through everyday participation habits, which means they can be interrupted there, too.

What This Work Trains

Relational Fieldwork is professional training in how participation patterns shape power, responsibility, and possibility inside groups. This work does not ask how to behave better. It asks how interaction is already behaving - and how to participate with awareness inside it.

Rather than focusing on techniques or communication strategies, participants practice inside structured live environments where participation dynamics become visible while they are happening.

Participants begin noticing:

• where they intervene too early
• where care turns into control
• where authority concentrates without consent
• where silence becomes disappearance
• where restraint opens new relational possibility

Over time, practitioners expand their range of ethical participation under pressure.

In a time when institutions are under strain and relational complexity is increasing, the ability to recognize how participation organizes power is becoming a core professional capacity.

Participants often describe shifts like this:

“Our weekly classes affirmed the importance of working with uncertainty. They highlighted the value of collaborative space as a place for sharing and exploring unformed thoughts and reflections. I am learning to embrace moments of stillness, absence, and tenderness. My learning edge lies in letting go, getting lost, and allowing the material to lead.”
- Julia Tribe, Expressive Arts Therapist and Community Arts Facilitator


Why This Work Exists

Tools and insights are often necessary, but they operate within existing conditions.

This work focuses on how those conditions form through participation and where small shifts can change what becomes possible structurally.

Many professionals working in justice, therapy, education, and community leadership hold strong ethical commitments and still find themselves repeating relational patterns that feel difficult to interrupt.

Hierarchical and colonial systems persist not only through policies or beliefs but through everyday participation habits such as:

premature resolution
loss of shared responsibility
care turning into management
discomfort being absorbed instead of distributed

When participation shifts, something structural shifts with it.

This work exists to create practice environments where those shifts can be felt, studied, and practiced.

Primary Training

Designed for experienced practitioners ready to work at the level where participation itself shapes outcomes.

Advanced Training in Power-Aware Facilitation

Six-week professional cohort

This training supports facilitators, educators, therapists, organizers, and group leaders in recognizing and interrupting domination patterns as they form through participation.

Participants work inside structured relational laboratories where:

• facilitation reflexes become visible
• authority shifts can be studied in real time
• intervention timing becomes a professional skill
• disruption can be practiced without collapsing relational trust

Especially relevant for practitioners who:

• already hold responsibility for group environments
• sense subtle dynamics others miss
• feel existing training does not address power formation deeply enough
• want expanded ethical range rather than additional technique

Small cohort: 8–12 participants
Next cohort begins April 11
Cohorts typically fill before enrollment closes.
Applications are reviewed on a rolling basis.

Deadline for applying is March 21

additional ways to enter the work

Relational Field Session

90-minute live practice laboratory

A short group experiment exploring how participation organizes itself in real time.

Often the clearest first experience of relational fieldwork.

School of the Small and Imperfect

Ongoing relational practice environment

A weekly group space focused on staying present through awkwardness, mismatch, and unfinished relational moments without rushing toward repair.

Deep Puppetry™

Material-based relational training

An object-based practice that develops sensitivity to power, care, dependency, and participation through embodied interaction.

how this work is different

Rather than working primarily at the level of individual skill or insight, this work focuses on the participation patterns through which groups organize themselves.

This is not therapy, coaching, or performance training.

Participants are not asked to rely on self-interpretation as the primary learning method.

Instead, training environments use:

• structured participation conditions
• distributed authority
• constraint-based relational experiments
• limited premature interpretation

Learning happens through participation first, conceptual integration second.


Who This Work Tends to Support

This work attracts professionals responsible 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 inside institutional or collaborative complexity

Many participants arrive already sensing subtle group dynamics but without places to practice working inside them.


About Laura Geiger

Laura Geiger is a relational fieldwork practitioner and creator of Deep Puppetry™. She designs training environments where practitioners can study how power moves through everyday interaction and how to participate with greater integrity inside complex systems.

Her work develops ethical improvisers: people able to stay responsive in moments of uncertainty without defaulting to control, over-functioning, or withdrawal.

Rather than offering prescriptions, she creates conditions where relational patterns become visible through lived experience, allowing practitioners to notice how timing, attention, and response shape what becomes possible in groups.

Her work is grounded in a commitment to interrupting patterns that reproduce domination in ordinary relational life.


Entering This Work

You do not need theoretical background or prior exposure to this work.

You do need willingness to participate inside environments where outcomes are not predetermined and ethical complexity is engaged through practice.

Explore Power-Aware Facilitation

Join School of the Small and Imperfect

Participate in a Relational Field Session

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