Along with 599 other Cantabs, yesterday was spent getting a crash course in urban planning, architecture, community engagement and sustainability, thanks to the wonderful speakers at TEDxEQChCh.
I got something else I wasn't expecting: an emotional roller coaster ride that time me completely by surprise.
The calibre of the thinking, the presentations and the ideas that were put in front of us yesterday were like nothing I have seen before. The experience was like no other conference I've been to before, either. There was minimal sitting back in your seat, doodling on your pad, wondering if the next session is the one you should skip in favour of a spot of shopping. This was a full-on, in-your-face wallop that grabbed the room by its collective heart and somehow managed to hold it for an entire 8 hours.
Partly it was the format. Short, sharp, 20 minute presentations from people who truly do have something to say that is of value to the audience. Only one seemed to have taken the opportunity to really plug his organisation and its wares (name withheld to protect the misguided). Still, the NZ timber industry and my bank manager can thank him for giving me 20 minutes to work out the mortgage payments on a new office in the back-yard. Watch this space. And that space. Oh - and how ironic is this: my bank sponsored the event!
But the level of engagement couldn't just be explained by expert speakers, a snappy format and a finely tuned programme. Every single person in tat room had a personal stake in the issue - their lives, livelihoods and those of their children and grandchildren will be irrevocably impacted by what happens to/in our city next.
I wish the whole city could go through the TEDxEQChCh experience. I really do.
I know there are expos and community consultation plans and websites and opportunities to put things on a post-it note, but we also have a need to hear from people who have been there before, and who are just ever so slightly on the outside looking in.
I wish the whole city could have the chance to go through what we went through yesterday.
I wish our own Mayor would take the time to go through it. Two ex-Mayors gave up their Saturdays to take part in this extraordinary event. Yet our current Mayor had barely spoken his last stirring sentence of his opening remarks before bouncing off the stage and out the door. His loss.
What a stark contrast to the moment that ex San Francisco Mayor wrapped up the final presentation of the event by having six hundred people stand, and in true American style, repeat after him, an oath to the city of Christchurch.
I don't even remember what it was I swore allegiance to - a bunch of things, including leaving the city safer, better, more hopeful that I found it. It was pure US politics in all its finest. But it was just what that room needed. And what our city needs, too.
At a time of so much uncertainty, mistrust and anxiety about the motivations and drivers of those steering the critical next-moves for our city, I want to lock Art Agnos up in a room with all of the movers and shakers of this 're' business (re-build/re-covery/re-imagination etc etc) and making them solemnly swear to all that stuff, too. Call me an idealist, but if the sentiments stick with even one of them, something incredibly powerful will have happened.
More to come. In the meantime let's not forget that TEDx may be an international organisation, but this was a truly local event. Press Editor Andrew Holden had it pitch perfect, all day. We owe an enormous debt to the amazing Kaila Colbin (how come I have only just heard about this woman?), the many, many volunteers who gave of their time to help make it happen, and the organising committee - Mark Prain, Dairne Poole, Raf Manji, Greg Urquhart, Dr Barry Law, Michael Henstock, Ben Kepes and Louis Brown.
They'll be live streaming the presentations athttp://tedxeqchch.com/. And I'll have loads more to say about this. Til then, as my friend Robyn would put it, I have a smiley feeling in my tummy. The first real smile it's had since Sept 4. Long may it last.
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