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The hidden architecture of change
Why lasting development begins beneath the visible behaviour. In the winter of 2016, I proudly ticked an item off my bucket list that had been there for the better part of a decade. With the sponsorship of my employer, Bendelta, I flew to Boston and spent a week studying under Professor Robert Kegan, who held the chair in Adult Learning and Professional Development at Harvard Graduate School of Education. Kegan’s work had been shaping the way I thought about adult development

Kellie Sulway
May 285 min read


The bigger frame of motherhood
On matrescence, identity, and the developmental change women are rarely given language for. There is a particular kind of silence that can settle around a woman after she becomes a mother. Not a literal silence, in fact, usually quite the opposite. There is noise everywhere. The baby, the washing machine, the appointments, the messages, the endless small logistics of keeping a life moving. What I mean is the silence around what is happening inside her. People asked me whether

Kellie Sulway
May 276 min read


A space to become
Why confidence, agency and authority need more than advice. They need a room to be practised. I have spent much of my working life inside organisations that genuinely wanted to see more women in leadership. I have sat in the rooms where the intentions were set, the programs designed, the talent conversations held and the investment decisions made. I have seen the care that goes into that work and I have also seen its limits. Mentoring programs, leadership cohorts, promotion r

Kellie Sulway
May 255 min read


Why reading together changes us
How books become more powerful when they are read, reflected on and worked through together. I read a lot. I always have and for most of my reading life, I have done it alone, which is, for most people, how it goes. A book, a comfy chair, a quiet hour if you’re lucky. I have also spent most of my professional life offering books to people. Reading lists have turned up in almost every leadership program I have facilitated, in most coaching relationships I have held, and in the

Kellie Sulway
May 254 min read


What 17th-century Paris can teach us today
On the women who built Salons, held the standard of conversation, and helped shape the idea behind Kith Salon. Catherine de Vivonne was twelve years old when she was married into the French nobility. She was Roman-born, educated well beyond what most women of her era were permitted and by all accounts thoroughly unimpressed by what she found in Paris. The French royal court in the early 1600s had its own machinery of gossip, political manoeuvring and social performance. Cathe

Kellie Sulway
May 254 min read
Essays, reflections and reading notes on the books, ideas and conversations behind Kith Salon.
Salon Notes
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