

Its proselytizers see resilience as an organizational capacity that can be designed and fostered as a protective shield against the apocalyptic turbulence and uncertainty of the contemporary business environment (Mallik, 1998 Hamel and Välikangas, 2003 Sheffi, 2005). Although its definition is elusive (Cho et al., 2006) and its utility contested (even in seemingly well-entrenched terrain),2 the concept has gained recent prominence in the management literature, especially among the enthusiasts of ‘positive psychology’ (Luthans, 2002). Folke et al., 2002) to child welfare (Newman and Blackburn, 2002). Resilience is a cosmopolitan idea, encountered in many disparate domains, ranging from ecological policy (e.g. Renewal is the theme of this paper, but in the more mundane context of organizational resilience. Something of a Jungian archetype, the Phoenix symbolizes the universal cycle of birth, death and re-birth, figuring widely in religious and secular imagery, and in classical and popular culture. My deckbuildings have consistently got me to High Legendary every month, so I don't take disrespect lightly.Every 500 years (or 540, 1000, 1461, even 12,994, depending on the cultural context!), the legendary and beautifully plumaged Phoenix1 self-cremates in its nest of cinnamon twigs, rising again to embalm its predecessor in an egg of myrrh. Would probably add a small Secret package instead of those crappy One drops (like Broomstick, Armor Vendor and Meeting Stone)Įdit: Downvoted your post because someone downvoted me, and I don't know if it was you, so perdon if that's not the case. Kazakus for Cariel, and I think Lothraxion the Redeemed is kind of a Must in Dude Paladin. Mysteries of the Phoenix: Druid and HunterĮxport to BBCode Export to Cockatrice Export to MarkDown Export to Html Clone this deck


Mysteries of the Phoenix: Warrior and Rogue

Duels Advanced Guide - With Deck Lists and Treasure Tiers
