This workshop aims to visualize our everyday use of time; to analyze the material condition of our activities; and, finally, to rethink what are the value and values that those activities bring to the whole context.
This workshop can be conceived as a stand-alone session, however, we suggest to take a second collective moment in order to organize the workshop ![](session:unproductiveresistance.md).
Tables, Chairs, Pen, Print-outs of [Map 2-1](/topic/commoningcare/radicalredistribution/tools/2.MAP-01.jpg) and [Map 2-2](/topic/commoningcare/radicalredistribution/tools/2.MAP-02.jpg)
Split participants in smaller groups if necessary and ask them to fill [Map 2-1](/topic/commoningcare/radicalredistribution/tools/2.MAP-01.jpg) by unpacking their everyday rhythms. Involve them in adding categories where necessary, and in defining different categories with specific actions, by writing inside the slices of pie.
Put the completed maps at the centre of the room and ask participants to report back on what they have noticed while compiling the 24-hour clock. Guide a collective discussion asking questions around the balancing of everyday life. For instance, “Are you resting enough?”; “Is travelling to work taking too much time?”. Take a photo of all the maps.
Split participants again and ask them to fill out [Map 2-2](/topic/commoningcare/radicalredistribution/tools/2.MAP-02.jpg) by rebalancing their everyday rhythms in a way that reflects their ideal scenario.
Put all second filled maps at the centre of the room and ask participants to explain the reasons for their choices. Guide a group discussion on the rebalancing of the 24-hour clock maps. This should lead to a collective exploration of values beyond value. Take a photo of all the second maps.
Ask participants how they feel about the workshop and to imagine collective strategies in order to balance their life more accordingly to the second map. Send them the two photos of the maps.
- Aranda, Julieta, Brian Kuan Wood, and Anton Vidokle. Are You Working Too Much?: Post-Fordism, Precarity, and the Labor of Art. Sternberg Press, 2011.