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Self Awareness

Noticing what's happening inside you — before it starts affecting the work.

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Self Awareness Summary
You treat tough moments as a test — not a failure — and you look for the information in them so you can adjust. You notice the “test” readings in your body and tone, and you catch when pressure starts speeding you up or tightening your communication with the crew. You’re aiming to protect your capacity instead of just muscling through long days and shifting plans, building in quick resets so decisions stay clear and safety stays front and center. Success, for you, is turning those tests into fast check-ins that keep you steady and your crew aligned, even when the block or the season throws curveballs.

Responding vs Reacting

A practical decision-making sequence for high-pressure moments.

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Responding vs Reacting Summary

Influence

How leaders build crews that are self-directed — not dependent.

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Influence Summary

Communication

The communication habits that make people more willing to speak up, stay engaged, and follow through.

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Communication Summary

Leadership Field Guide

Your own leadership system — designed by you, for the crew you actually run.

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Field Guide — Container Building
Field Guide — Instructions and Plans
Field Guide — Running Meetings
Field Guide — Preventing Issues
Field Guide — Dispute Resolution
Field Guide — Upset Conditions
Field Guide — Skill Development
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© WFCA 2025

Members of the Cache project team are grateful to live, work, and be in relationship with people from across many traditional and unceded territories, covering all parts of the land known as British Columbia, Canada. We thoughtfully offer this acknowledgement recognizing that reconciliation with Indigenous Peoples' is a commitment we all share as Canadians. We are grateful to live on this land and are committed to reconciliation, decolonization, and building relationships in our communities and workplaces. Land acknowledgements are one small step towards reconciling the relationships between settlers and Indigenous Peoples, in Canada. Reconciliation is a current and ongoing process. Being mindful of our participation is another step on the path of healing. Learn more about land acknowledgements and moving beyond them here: https://native-land.ca/resources/territory-acknowledgement/

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