laura geiger

What if the way you care is part of the problem?

Relational Fieldwork
Practice environments for studying how moments become defined and how that shapes participation, power, and possibility

something happens before you can choose

You’re in a conversation. Someone says something slightly off, unclear, or unexpectedly real. And almost immediately, you respond and make sense of it. Yes, the interaction continues, yet something is gone.

What if care is part of what closes the moment?

We’re taught that connection means understanding, empathizing, and making sense of each other, but these responses do something subtle. They make the moment coherent - quickly.

And when that happens? Difference is reduced, and meaning is decided, often before anything new can emerge.

Most of this happens too fast to notice

Before you decide what to do:

  • meaning is already forming

  • the moment is already closing

  • participation is already organizing

What feels like instinct is often timing.

The shift happens earlier than you think. The work is in the moment where something is still open, before it settles into what is known.

Witnessing Without Colonizing

a live, two-hour relational practice on Zoom

Most of us have never learned how to be with another person without interpreting, explaining, or making sense of them.

Even our care can:

  • define

  • stabilize

  • take over the moment

This workshop is a space to practice something else. We aren’t practicing withdrawal, silence, or detachment but staying in contact without immediately defining what is happening.

In this workshop, you will practice:

  • noticing when meaning begins to form

  • tracking how moments land without turning them into interpretation

  • staying with what you don’t fully understand

  • responding without closing the interaction

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

Instead, it is a relational practice, an ethical orientation, and a way of being with others without reducing them to what you understand.

why this matters

We are taught that empathy and understanding are forms of care, but they can also be ways of taking over the moment. The instant you decide what someone means, you begin to organize their experience. The interaction becomes coherent and moves forward, but it moves forward on your terms.

This is how power organizes in real time and how domination reproduces: subtly, continuously, inside ordinary interaction. It isn’t always through force but through care that stabilizes too quickly for anything else to emerge.

This is why teams can value equity and still reproduce the same patterns.

what this work develops

Perceptual literacy: the ability to notice when meaning begins to form and the moment starts to become defined

Participation literacy: the ability to remain in contact without immediately stabilizing what is happening

other ways to work together

school of the small and imperfect

A 13-week relational practice for studying how participation shapes interaction over time.

Participants practice staying inside moments that usually pass too quickly to notice:

  • hesitation

  • responsibility shifts

  • coordination pressure

  • refusal

  • offering

This process happens between people and too quickly to track on your own. That’s why it’s practiced inside a group.

relational field labs

Experiential labs for organizations that want to examine how participation patterns shape their collaboration and decision-making.

Teams observe how coordination pressure distributes:

  • authority

  • responsibility

  • silence

  • urgency

Rather than learning facilitation techniques, teams study how interaction organizes power and responsibility.

About Laura

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

She designs environments where the moment before meaning forms can be perceived and explored.