Preparing for the inquiry
Preparing for the inquiry
Q'um Q'um Xiiem scholar and educator, Jo-Ann Archibald (2008) asserts that preparation is needed to engage and have relationships with stories. This relationship involves knowing the proper protocol to engage with the teller while also knowing how to listen. Listening to stories requires us to acknowledge that our head, heart, body, and intuition are interacting with the telling and are being affected by listening. The story’s impact is dependent on what we need to understand in that moment and the circumstances of our life. Often, we may not immediately know what we are to ascertain however, the impact will reveal itself when we need it (for example, this is evident further in the work as illustrated in this video of coming into the analysis process). Connecting to the stories and knowing we may not recognize the lessons straight away requires trust in the unknown. Grahams Andrews, my Michif teacher, shared at one research gathering, “when you do things in the right way it will come to you” (personal communication, February 2019). Enacting practices and protocols with the intent of goodness and respect does not mean you immediately get what you need, there’s patience and trust in things will happen when they’re supposed to happen. Being prepared for the inquiry and while the process unfolds requires one to let go of control and not try to make situations happen. Moreover, being prepared does not mean that processes might go awry but it means that when they do, we will flow with them, instead of against them. Through my doctoral research, I have had to rely on trust to move through the work, it has not been easy, particularly when you feel you have so much at stake. This was a lesson for me that I had to learn from the onset of the inquiry, I had to trust the work, myself, and creation.