Self-Organization is What Consciousness (Spirit) Does

kenoli Oleari kenoli at igc.org
Wed Jan 2 21:01:44 PST 2002


Responding to Peg.  And what is space and what is a boundary or
container?  Whether we fall into a group out of the "marketplace", as
a result of an assigned group with a task, by attending a workshop or
training, or even at a lecture or organized discussion, the
experience can feel exapansive, contractive, bounded or unbounded.  I
suspect it is not the external structure that creates the experince,
but more the intention, the energy and the quality of engagement.  I
think that what we have found is that as we clarify and expand our
goals and realize that the possibilities are way beyond what we have
come to expect, that process and structure arises to begin to
manifest those possibilities.  When we reach for transformation it
becomes a possibility.  As we seek self-organization, tools for
supporting this arise. When we envision change at a "systems" level
this becomes an option.  I suspect that as we expand our perceptions,
the possiblities arise to meet them, as we dare to accomplish what
has only been a dream we discover the means to approach that dream.
We often then get distracted thinking the means we have used to get
to a new plateau is the end we set out to achieve.  And we have to
keep re-doscovering the possiblities and moving from the known into
the unknown.  And discoving and re-doscoverin old paths.

Kenoli

>>From Harrison:
>
>>Specifically in terms of other large group interventions and the place that
>Open Space may hold
>>  amongst them -- we might ask, how much space does each intervention offer?
>I
>>  can't say that I have been through all 18 (if that is the magic number),
>but I
>>  can say that some of those 18 which i have experienced make me feel
>absolutely
>>  claustrophobic, and others less so.
>
>And Ralph:
>
>>It's not only the 18(?) so-called large group interventions I'm referring
>>to.  How about therapy or other one-to-one interventions?  In my
>experience,
>>these can thwart as well as free folks.
>
>
>Similar to Ralph and Harrison, I have run screaming (to myself) from the
>room when observing/participating in several large group interventions that
>made me feel closed in.  At the other end of the spectrum, I had a
>conversation with someone, a deeply experienced practitioner of another
>whole system method, who spent a week in Open Space.  She wasn't at home in
>it, spending much of her time in her room.  A perfectly valid choice, of
>course.  Did she get value from the experience?  No question.  Would another
>"method" with more closely held boundaries allowed her to get even more
>value?  I don't begin to know but believe that it might have.
>
>I think Harrison hit the critical questions with:
>"How Much Space? Can you stand. Can you create. Can the "client" tolerate?
>And choose your weapons accordingly."
>
>I recently was given a gift of an image around this that I've found quite
>helpful.   A Buddhist priest attended Spirited Work (a learning community
>that gathers quarterly in OS).  He used an image of hands for holding space.
>Actually, here are Master Chang's words:
>
>>Since I left Whidbey Island, I've constantly thought of OS and its
>spiritual manifestation in earthly conditionings. It's dawn[ed] on me that
>>we constantly create mental boundaries and then transfigure them into
>organizational rules, etc., which we call containers. Thus, there are
>>levels upon levels of containers, depending on levels of minds that we
>have. What OP[OST] methodology attracts me is the way it can
>>facilitate and accommodate multi-levels of containers by very few simple
>rules of gathering and interaction. The challenge for me in >creating an
>OP[OST] organization is to be able to make available (and to promote)
>evolutionary & consequential levels of
>>unfoldment ... so one can evolve from "container/2 hands cupped, facing
>each other" to "supporter/2 hands open, facing upwards" to >"being/handless
>gesture" ...
>
>
>I LOVE this picture of hands reflecting the evolution of space, perhaps
>because it mirrors my own growing comfort with space.  (While I aspire to
>it, I'm not sure I'm ready to hang out in the space of "look ma, no hands!")
>It reminds me that we are all at different places of comfort with openness.
>I may go screaming from the room when the space feels too closed and someone
>else go running to their room because the space is too open.
>
>Ain't our diversity great?
>
>Peggy
>
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--
Kenoli Oleari, Horizons of Change, http://www.horizonsofchange.com
1801 Fairview Street, Berkeley, CA  94703   Voice Phone: 510-601-8217,
Fax: 510-595-8369, Email: kenoli at igc.org (or click on: mailto://kenoli@igc.org)

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