![]() ![]() ![]() If we want to change big things, we can start small and let our largest values show up in our small, day-to-day interactions, especially through our relationships. Likewise, the small can shape and change the large. We often live in patterns: The small mirrors the large. Today, I’d like to share a quote about fractals. The book opens up analogies to us through biomicry, inviting us to learn from nature-inspired innovation and organize our human living, loving, and changing through these patterns of nature. This week, I’ve been listening to Emergent Strategy: Shaping Change, Changing Worlds on audiobook, read by its author adrienne maree brown. ![]() This partial view of the Mandelbrot set, possibly the world’s most famous fractal, shows step four of a zoom sequence: The central endpoint of the “seahorse tail” is also a Misiurewicz point. WOLFGANG BEYER/(CC BY-SA 3.0) ![]()
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