The Reconciliation of Desire
Overview
We live in a culture that treats desire as something to exploit—a resource to mine, monetize, or manipulate. Organizations often unintentionally mirror this pattern, reducing people to productivity inputs and rewarding leaders who can extract more, faster, with less. The result is predictable: burnout, disillusionment, stalled teams, and misaligned priorities.
The Reconciliation of Desire reframes desire not as a problem to control, but as a powerful force that can be clarified, aligned, and redeemed. Drawing on mediation practice, leadership psychology, and narrative theology, this talk helps leaders understand how desire drives conflict, fuels ambition, and shapes the emotional architecture of their teams.
When desire is reconciled—within leaders, within groups, within systems—organizations gain clarity, resilience, and sustainable momentum.
Ideal For
Executive and senior leadership teams
Nonprofits and mission-driven organizations
Churches and faith-adjacent communities
HR directors & culture architects
Schools, colleges, and student life professionals
Municipal / community leadership groups
Organizations facing burnout, turnover, or cultural drift
The Geometry of Reconciliation
Overview
Most leaders treat conflict as a disruption. In reality, conflict is information — a signal that something important is emerging, shifting, or misaligned. The Geometry of Reconciliation reframes conflict from something to avoid into something leaders can work with, learn from, and even leverage.
This talk introduces a simple but powerful geometric framework that helps teams identify where they are stuck, understand the forces acting on them, and chart a practical, grounded path toward clarity.
Ideal For
Executive teams
Boards & committees
Municipal and regional leaders
Nonprofits & churches
Schools, healthcare teams, community organizations
Professional associations (HR, ADR, governance, leadership)
Kenotic Leadership
Overview
Most leadership models reward control, certainty, and charismatic performance. But in environments defined by pressure and complexity, those approaches quickly reach their limits. Kenotic leadership offers a different path — one rooted in clarity, grounded presence, and the disciplined emptying of what gets in the way of wise leadership.
This talk reframes leadership not as something to project, but as a posture to embody. Jared equips leaders with practical tools to reduce reactivity, hold authority without overreaching, and cultivate the kind of steady presence that makes teams feel safe, focused, and aligned.
Ideal For
Senior leadership teams
Executives and directors
Boards & governance bodies
Nonprofits, churches, and community organizations
HR and organizational health professionals
Mediation and conflict-resolution practitioners
Against Such Things
Overview
Most organizations talk about values, but few know how to operationalize virtue in moments of real pressure. Against Such Things reframes the classic virtues — patience, gentleness, self-control, and others — as practical technologies for navigating conflict, reducing escalation, and fostering healthier team cultures.
This talk helps leaders and teams move beyond personality-based approaches to conflict and toward shared practices that shape how people show up under strain. Jared offers a fresh, grounded framework for cultivating virtue not as moral idealism, but as a measurable, repeatable set of habits that transform the way groups handle tension.
Ideal For
Leadership teams and staff retreats
Nonprofits, churches, and faith-adjacent organizations
HR directors and culture-builders
Community organizations and board development sessions
Mediation and ADR training environments
Schools, colleges, and values-based institutions
Centre-Set Mediation
Overview
Most conflict processes collapse not because people are unreasonable, but because the system holding the conflict is too rigid, too positional, or too unclear. Centre-Set Mediation offers an alternative: a design philosophy that keeps people gathered around shared purpose rather than fixed demands.
This talk equips leaders, boards, and organizations with practical tools for designing conflict pathways that hold under emotional, organizational, and political pressure. Jared shows how centre-set thinking creates more durable agreements, lowers defensiveness, and restores movement where conversations have stalled.
Ideal For
Boards & governance bodies
Condo boards & housing organizations
HR professionals & workplace leaders
Municipal / regional staff teams
Nonprofits & community organizations
Mediators and ADR practitioners

