Reciprocity In Action: What the Three Sisters Teach Us About Real Partnership cover art

Reciprocity In Action: What the Three Sisters Teach Us About Real Partnership

Reciprocity In Action: What the Three Sisters Teach Us About Real Partnership

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Most organizational partnerships and coalition storytelling efforts fail because they're modeled on extraction, not reciprocity. The Three Sisters give us the antidote.

The Three Sisters is a traditional Indigenous agricultural system developed primarily by the Haudenosaunee, at least 3,000 years old. Corn, beans, and squash planted together in the same mound. Corn grows tall and provides structure. Beans climb the corn and fix nitrogen in the soil that feeds everything. Squash spreads along the ground, protecting the soil and deterring pests. Together they're more space-efficient, drought-resistant, and nutritionally complete than any one crop alone.

In this episode, we talk about what strengths-based collective leadership looks like when each partner contributes what they're built to contribute. We make the case for reciprocity in storytelling: the process of gathering stories should also build trust, surface strategy, and strengthen the community's own narrative capacity. And we talk about why sequence matters, because you can't plant everything at once and expect your garden to grow.

IN THIS EPISODE

Why different contributions beat identical efforts in coalition work. The difference between extractive storytelling and ethical storytelling that returns something to the soil. Why the Story Lab comes before the strategy and the listening comes before the design. How the same framework travels but always adapts to place.

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