What’s Gone Well Today? ®

Imagine making good connections in every conversation you enter into!
Shifting thinking about your own day to focus on What’s Gone Well Today? ®, becomes life-changing.
In the larger picture our tools help organizations become more empathetic. < See our deliverables>
Learn more about WGWT and the tools and training we offer.

Our next Collaborative Board is on  Monday, February 20th. Contact me if interested.

We would love to hear from you!  Please share an experience that’s gone well in your day. Just click on ” Add your comment” of visit our Facebook Group

846 comments

  1. Do you have a favorite question to ask people? Or what are your top three questions? I love what you are doing…..

    • Christopher says:

      They all depend on who the person is ( appears to be), and the situation.

      WGWT is often the one.
      For students: Where are you in your education?

      All 18 metaphors have a place in a day. Check out the sample deck and see which ones you’d like to practise.

  2. Ryan says:

    I had a ball at GD the other night. I was inspired to complete a book that I was reading about streamlining my business. It”s called “The 4 Hour Workweek”. The message that I take from it is to let myself be out of the way of the flow in my business… open handed love and prosperity. The result is that I looked at the machining and production of my bed and simplified a few things so that the young guy who is working on them can be independent in building them. This allows me to take on other projects. I am going to Cedar to do some work on a luxury home for three days a week for the next month.

  3. Over the decades of singing on many continents here’s one moment that stood out

  4. Christopher says:

    A remarkable day. Came up with the idea of the ‘Story Card.” Most people know it as a bus transfer or monthly pass. I saw it as a ticket to explore the human spirit/ experience. I balance out my passion for story and curiosity with a respect for privacy. I think carefully about which question to ask, and often preface it with a setup. “Do you have time for my question of the day” .. or ‘…my question’. Then you’ve got their attention for a minute and the quality of the question and body language does the rest.

    What I noticed yesterday that the process is often so engaging and unique that others around were interested and even wanted to be included. They wanted to seize the moment even though theirs was the next stop. ( So I accommodated them)

    I was amazed at the depth of story that came out — sometimes almost therapy as intentions , regrets, tragedy, vision, obstacles, and victories were shared.

    With one fellow we discovered a multitude of commonalities even shared experiences ( he was in a play we’d seen in Victoria) and a couple of outstanding people. Sharing some stories from each of us about them was inspiring in itself.

    The story card is a distinct benefit to public transit.

    Perhaps we’ll add an unofficial story card to the on-line deck — so those wantint to use it can get a flavour of the magic and power of the process. It would be just a beginning, a starting point. Anyone with a full deck can choose almost any card and apply it.. There is an art but it can be learned.

  5. Christopher says:

    Great visit with JB. Included some food at Paul’s Omelettes. A nap. Good listening and then met a good friend. Lots of walking, listening. Loved how it all fit together.

    The next day busing gathered some wonderful stories. Remarkable decisions, and intentions are shared within a few km.

    Every bus , or bus stop yielded wonderful stories with so many common denominators.
    From there I walked home, found no one home so bussed to meet G and J

  6. Christopher says:

    A day on the road yields some wonderful examples of WGWT.

    1. meeting a highschool wrestling champion at the bus stop with a real passion and appreciation for his coach ( see video interviews below)
    2. a 20 something woman who left a career in screen make-up, to being a server. Her insights into the role that relationship can add to our work day, one that compensates for a lower cash income. She also loved being an adult and now able to take control of the conversations/ encounters she enters into.
    3. A woman on the bus who had time for a WGWT question and burst into an energetic exchange about her own moment ( alarm being reliable) to an instant grasp of the power of that WGWT brings to any conversation.
    4. A community networker inviting 4 outstanding teachers to apply for Teacher As Hero.

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