laura geiger

What if the way you care is part of why nothing changes?

Relational Fieldwork
Practice environments for working with the timing of interaction

before you decide what to say

  • meaning is already forming

  • the moment is already closing

  • participation is already organizing

What feels like care (understanding, empathy, making sense) often stabilizes the moment too quickly.

When that happens:

  • difference is reduced

  • roles are fixed

  • some voices disappear

  • power reproduces

The same patterns repeat, even when your intentions are different.

This work is about timing: when meaning forms and how that shapes what becomes possible.

We practice staying in interaction before it settles - so participation can reorganize instead of repeat.

If you’ve ever sensed something happening in a moment but couldn’t stay with it long enough to see what it was, this is that work.

this usually happens too fast to notice

Someone says something that doesn’t quite land.

You step in, soften it, and explain what they meant.

The conversation continues, yes, and something just got decided.

These moments become coherent, but they become coherent quickly and on specific terms.

Relational Fieldwork creates real-time conditions where these moments are:

  • slowed down

  • perceived as they form

  • worked with directly

This is something you can’t think your way into. You have to experience it.

Witnessing Without Colonizing

A live, zoom practice in staying with moments before they are defined

Most of us have never learned how to stay in interaction before interpreting or making sense of what is happening.

In this workshop, you will be in live interaction where:

  • the impulse to explain or respond becomes visible

  • pauses last longer than usual

  • coordination pressure can be felt directly

  • responses that normally happen automatically can be delayed

You are not asked to withdraw, stay silent, or detach.

You practice remaining in contact without closing the moment prematurely

In this practice, you’ll work with:

  • noticing when meaning begins to form

  • sensing coordination pressure: the pull to make things make sense

  • staying with what is not yet clear

  • responding without immediately stabilizing the interaction

This is not therapy, a communication skills workshop, nor a space for processing personal content.

It is a practice-based training in how interaction organizes and how its timing can shift.

why this matters

Power doesn’t only exist in systems. It is continuously produced in interaction, moment by moment.

The instant meaning settles:

  • participation organizes

  • roles settle

  • some contributions move forward

  • others disappear

This happens quickly, often unnoticed.

This is how patterns persist. It’s not only through systems or beliefs but through repeated moments of rapid stabilization.

When moments close too quickly, interaction follows familiar paths.

When closure is delayed, even slightly, participation can reorganize.

what this work develops

This work builds capacity inside real interaction.

Perceiving stabilization
Noticing the moment where interaction begins to close

Staying under coordination pressure
Remaining in contact without immediately resolving what is happening

Shifting the timing of response
Acting without collapsing what is still emerging

These are not conceptual skills. They develop through repeated practice in live interaction.

other ways to work together

school of the small and imperfect

A 13-week relational practice

A longer-term environment for studying how interaction organizes over time.

Participants work inside moments that usually pass too quickly to notice:

  • hesitation

  • coordination pressure

  • responsibility shifts

  • refusal and offering

Patterns that feel individual become visible as interactional.

This work requires a live group. It cannot be done alone.

It also cannot be understood from the outside. It has to be experienced.

relational field labs

For organizations

Experiential labs for teams working inside real collaboration and decision-making.

Teams observe, in real time, how interaction organizes:

  • authority

  • responsibility

  • silence

  • urgency

Rather than learning facilitation techniques, teams work directly with how coordination pressure shapes participation in real time.

This makes visible how patterns of power and decision-making are reproduced and how they can shift.

About Laura

Laura Geiger is a relational practitioner whose work focuses on how interaction becomes coherent in real time and how the timing of that process shapes participation, power, and possibility.

She designs structured environments where moments can be slowed down, perceived as they form, and worked with before they stabilize.