Relational Fieldwork
Practice environments for studying how participation organizes power
- and how to stay human inside complex relational systems
laura geiger
Participation organizes power before anyone decides what to do.
Often the people who notice relational dynamics most clearly are the ones who end up carrying the interaction.
Relational Fieldwork creates practice environments where the coordination of interaction becomes visible in real time.
Most group dynamics organize themselves long before anyone intentionally takes a role.
In meetings, classrooms, and everyday conversations, people often notice themselves:
absorbing awkward moments so the conversation can continue
smoothing tension before it spreads
stepping in to keep things moving
carrying responsibility that was never assigned
realizing afterward that you shaped the outcome
These are not personality traits.
They are participation roles that emerge as people coordinate interaction, often when coordination pressure rises and someone steps in to stabilize the moment.
Once those roles become visible, participation becomes a place of practice rather than habit.
These patterns don’t just shape individual conversations; they are also the mechanisms through which groups reproduce power.
start here
Participation Roles Lab
90-minute live session · small group
A short live lab where participants see participation roles form in real interaction.
Roles that often appear:
shock absorber
breacher
witness
translator
Instead of discussing group dynamics, participants enter a simple shared task and watch how coordination pressure begins organizing participation in real time.
ongoing practice
School of the Small and Imperfect
A weekly relational practice for studying how participation shapes interaction over time.
Participants practice staying inside moments that usually pass too quickly to notice:
hesitation
responsibility shifts
coordination pressure
refusal
offering
Many people return to School for multiple cycles as their perception and participation deepen.
for teams
relational field labs
Experiential labs for organizations that want to examine how participation patterns shape their collaboration and decision-making.
Teams observe how coordination pressure distributes:
authority
responsibility
silence
urgency
Rather than learning facilitation techniques, teams study how interaction organizes power and responsibility.
About Laura
Laura Geiger designs relational practice environments where practitioners study how participation organizes power in real-time interaction.
Through structured relational experiments, participants learn to see how interaction distributes responsibility, authority, and possibility.
If you’ve ever sensed subtle dynamics in groups but lacked a place to study them directly, these environments were created for that purpose.