A facilitated online inquiry and supervision space for people working with complexity, change, and uncertainty
Practice Circles: Holding Complexity has been designed particularly for those who have participated in systemic constellations training and wish to continue developing their practice through ongoing inquiry, play, supervision, and peer learning. If you have experience of systemic practice, systems sensing, or related approaches you are very welcome to join these sessions.
Blending reflective supervision, embodied inquiry, systems sensing, and peer learning, these circles provide a grounded and relational environment where participants can bring live questions, tensions, experiments, and emerging challenges from their practice. The emphasis is not simply on problem-solving, but on deepening perception, strengthening capacity, and learning how to work with uncertainty, emergence, and complexity with greater clarity and care. From there we can widen our perspective on challenging situations and can make more informed, meaningful and long-term viable decisions serving regenerative and whole systems actions.
Within online sessions, participants will engage in a live facilitated process that includes:
- sharing stories of application and lived practice
- sounding-board conversations around current challenges and opportunities
- practice wisdom, guidance, and collective reflection
- somatic sensing and embodied inquiry
- skills practice in small groups
- experimentation and prototyping of new approaches
- systemic and relational insight
- the possibility of one extended 2-hour single case study session for deeper exploration
The practice circles are designed to support participants to:
- gain clarity in complexity
- strengthen systemic awareness and relational intelligence
- access embodied and intuitive ways of knowing
- avoid isolation and over-responsibility
- deepen confidence, presence, and practice
- experiment with new responses and approaches in live contexts
Structure
- 1.5 hours per session
- group format for depth, trust, and meaningful participation
- facilitated live via Zoom
- 6 online sessions
Booking Options
Participants may:
- book individual sessions or
- six sessions at a time for greater continuity, trust-building, and learning integration
- we will release ongoing packages of six sessions for those who prefer this approach
Block bookings are encouraged for those wishing to deepen relationships, sustain reflective practice, and engage in a fuller arc of shared learning and inquiry.
DATES
- Wednesday 22 July
- Tuesday 15 September
- Tuesday 20 October
- Tuesday 8 December
- Wednesday 20 January
- Wednesday 24 February
TIMES
All sessions are 6.30pm – 8pm
COST – single sessions:
Self funding – £40 use this code – SELF (for individual sessions) at the checkout using the link below
Organisation funded: £70
All session:
Self funding – £200 use this code – SELF1 (for all 6 sessions) at the checkout using the link below
Organisation funded: £350
Facilitator: Luea Ritter

Luea Ritter is a systemic coach, transformative process steward, and action researcher dedicated to supporting collective transformation across sectors and place. With more than two decades of international and cross-cultural experience, she works across personal, organisational, and cultural development to help groups and organisations create resilient and regenerative ways of working together.
As co-founder and steward of Collective Transitions, Luea designs processes and holds spaces that raise systemic awareness and strengthen collective capacity, supporting groups to navigate complexity with greater ease, presence, and care while enabling meaningful and regenerative change. She also plays a central role within the World Ethic Forum, guiding strategy and participatory action research processes through the Firekeeper Circle, and supports young leaders through the Youth Negotiator Academy connected to the UN Rio Conventions.
Luea is also co-founder and chair of Nile Journeys, focusing on regenerative collaboration across the Nile Basin. Across her international work, she is committed to fostering dialogue, bridging perceived divides, and cultivating greater alignment in response to the challenges of our times.
Her work, which includes PhD research and collaborations with organisations such as the World Future Council and the Global Ecovillage Network, focuses on fostering coherence in socio-ecological systems and helping individuals, organisations, and communities navigate complexity with resilience, wisdom, and care.