
Who is Taylor Barratt? | Practice, Theory & the Ethics of Facilitation
Dr. John Vervaeke
Intro
Episode opens with sponsor read and hosts introduce the three-part series and Taylor Barratt as the featured guest.
What does it mean for practice to become "really real" - and how does theory help keep that experience honest?
In this episode - the second in a live-recorded three-part series with Taylor Barratt, Ethan Hsieh, and John Vervaeke - the conversation centers on Taylor as he reflects on the movement between practice and theory. Taylor describes how different vocabularies can converge around a shared sense of rightness, how moments of deep practice can feel lucid, beautiful, and more real, and why theory became meaningful for him only after he had spent enough time inside practice for the novelty to settle. John and Taylor compare their opposite trajectories: Taylor moving from practice toward theory, and John from theory into practice. Together with Ethan, they examine collective intelligence, practice design, and the need for mutual correction between theory, practice, and other people. The conversation deepens into the ethical responsibility of facilitation: designing for people not yet in the room, balancing explanation with experience, and learning to bring the whole self without becoming self-involved. Taylor explores how facilitation transfers into parenting, family life, trust, and ordinary relationship, and why facilitator training is not simply about learning structures, but about supervision, mistakes, cleanup, self-leadership, and getting out of your own way. The episode closes on service: the difference between doing a practice and being practiced by it, such that the orientation carries into life when it matters most.
Taylor Barratt is the Director of Practice and Education at the Vervaeke Foundation. He has over a decade of experience in relational leadership through Authentic Relating Toronto. LinkedIn X
Ethan Hsieh is the Director of Community Development and Partnerships at the Vervaeke Foundation. He comes from an acting background focused on character development. LinkedIn
00:00 Welcome to the Lectern 01:30 Introducing Taylor - the second conversation in the series 02:10 John and Taylor's new collaboration 02:20 What stayed alive from the previous conversation 03:00 Different languages, shared truths 04:30 Rightness, right proportion, and right orientation 05:10 Practice, salience, and moments that feel "really real" 06:20 The VIA intensive and following the moment 08:10 Beauty, lucidity, and being carried into reality 09:40 Movement between theory and practice 10:20 Calling, voluntary necessity, and practice 10:40 Taylor's path from software development into authentic relating 11:30 Chaos, ownership, and being more fully oneself 12:00 Why theory became useful only after practice matured 13:00 States, structures, and shadow work 14:40 John's opposite trajectory: theory calling into practice 15:40 Theory as a guard against self-deception 16:20 Collective intelligence and checking our work 17:00 Returning to theory with new eyes 18:30 Practice design as the lab of theory and practice 19:20 Mutual correction between theory, practice, and people 20:30 Designing practices for people not yet in the room 22:00 How do we know we are not fooling ourselves? 24:00 Shared orientation and collective sense-making 27:00 Balancing experience, explanation, and ambiguity 30:00 Maintaining the developmental band of a practice container 33:00 The challenge of leadership in transformational practice 36:00 Practice as something that teaches the facilitator 39:00 When structure supports experience 42:00 What participants need in the moment 45:00 Holding theory lightly while serving the room 48:00 The difficulty of maintaining balance as a facilitator 53:40 Does facilitation transfer into daily life? 54:50 Service, participants, and ethical orientation 56:00 Parenting, co-parenting, and tracking multiple needs 57:00 Bringing authentic relating into family life 58:40 Whole self vs. self-involvement 01:01:20 Getting clear on your "why" 01:02:00 Why facilitator training takes time 01:02:30 Self as instrument in transformation 01:03:20 Self-leadership before influence 01:04:20 Wake up, grow up, clean up, show up 01:05:40 Rapid proposals and learning not to be precious 01:06:40 Orientation toward service 01:07:00 Practicing vs. being practiced 01:08:30 Closing and invitation to the live practice room 01:09:20 Newsletters, future recordings, and upcoming trainings 01:10:20 Practical notes for joining the practice session
The Vervaeke Foundation is committed to advancing the scientific pursuit of wisdom and creating a significant impact on the world. Become a part of our mission.
Join Awaken to Meaning to explore practices that enhance your virtues and foster deeper connections with reality and relationships.
Follow John Vervaeke: Website | Twitter | YouTube | Patreon
Thank you for listening!


