SV: A question about OS listserv

Eva P Svensson eva at epshumaninvest.se
Thu Jan 13 09:52:56 PST 2005


Lisa,
Couldn't say it better!
And one more thing - I remember my first step into the list and the
amazement when I saw Harrison's name - "hold your hat" - but I had a feeling
that it was kind of talking to "Freud" or however you had heard about from a
long distant but never thought to meet.

Windy greetings from a stormy west coast of Sweden
Eva




Basta halsningar


Eva P Svensson
...................................................................

EPS Human Invest AB
"Verksamhetsutveckling genom manniskor skapar
langsiktigt valmaende foretag och organisationer!"
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439 34  ONSALA
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eva at epshumaninvest.se
www.epshumaninvest.se

-----Ursprungligt meddelande-----
Fran: OSLIST [mailto:OSLIST at LISTSERV.BOISESTATE.EDU]For Lisa Heft
Skickat: den 10 januari 2005 03:24
Till: OSLIST at LISTSERV.BOISESTATE.EDU
Amne: Re: A question about OS listserv

Thanks for asking these marvelous questions.  And my warm regards to you,
Juanita, whom I finally got to meet at the (US) National Dialogue and
Deliberation Conference in October.  I LOVED experiencing World Cafe through
your kind and thoughtful facilitation.

Here are my answers to add to this rich mix of questions and answers:

What has enabled the Open Space listserv to flourish?

I am thrilled to say that it reflects the principles and law of Open Space
and I suspect that our individual understanding of these principles and law
help us to thrive on this list and help this list to thrive.  And the fact
that we all share this same knowledge and repeat it may indeed help us
collectively hold space for this list.  No moderator (one of the most
fabulous parts of this list) - all is welcome because one can always
exercise the Law of Two Feet (played out here as the Law of Delete).
Passion bounded by responsibility.  Again, Open Space has named these things
and we all hold these things and many of us live our lives in these ways.
So this community, as diverse as it may be, does hold a common language, as
it were.

Speaking of that (in any tongue), any language is welcome.  Periodically
someone pops in with a message in non-English and answers spring forth.

Any level is welcome.  From 'gee this is my first help me breathe' to folks
who have done many and diverse Open Spaces, all asking for wisdom from the
group / all offering wisdom to the group.

It's free, with open membership.

It offers instant gratification.  Voices in the dark, wee hours of the night
get heard by one or some of us somewhere in the world.

It's loving.  Really in the truest sense: folks are generous with ideas,
materials, support.  People demonstrate open hearts and minds.

It doesn't break a lot (rare that it has technical problems).

It helps one connect to one's tribe...

I don't suspect that anyone feels that it's their 'job' to keep the
community going - so that it's up to everyone and has ebbs and flows,
breathes in and out with whatever anyone wants to put into it.

In what ways has the listserv helped the Open Space community of practice to
evolve?

New ideas are written out clearly - experiments are shared - so it's easy
(with a deep breath sometimes) to try (for example) different forms of
convergence, or action planning through reopening space towards the end of
an event, or doing OS with people who are more oral (who have greater
challenges reading), or documenting OSs in different ways, and so on.

Folks generate new ways to gather information, ask new questions, share new
information (OS and Appreciative Inquiry, researching the impact of OS on
organizations, and so on).

Folks get a bit of a sense for each other, so perhaps that helps when some
folks want to collaborate with others they've not worked with before -
still, they have a sense for style, approach, values they may share (or
which may nicely contrast with each other).

As we're as experienced as our 'on-the-ground' experience *plus* our shared
stories, an OS practitioner of any level or with any specific experience can
say to a potential client not 'gee, I've never done OS in that
industry/setting/culture/etc.' but instead own the collective experience of
the group and say 'yes OS has been done in that
industry/setting/culture/etc.' and therefore be invited into a new
experience but with client faith and a while tribe of people sharing wisdom
if/as needed for that particular instance/variation/approach/situation.  So
individual practitioners evolve and share stories and learnings with each
other, thus evolving the whole OS community of practice.

As a means of communication it's also a means for sharing materials, lesson
plans, designs and more.

Any question can be asked into cyberspace and answers just come floating in
in delightful ways.

In what ways has it affected you and your own practice to evolve?

I've found (and been found by) event partners, gotten (and given) materials
translated into different languages, announced my workshops, met new people
who share the same heart, learned about different cultural approaches,
wondered out loud, asked, answered and in answering have learned more, built
a library of materials and resources to share with others, become a
specialist and a member of a world community of professionals, friends,
homestay hosts (!), play partners and more.  I am an independent and like
Peggy and others mentioned, feel I have the power and support of an
international consulting group behind me.  I can refer people to clients if
I cannot do a job and know that those clients are in great hands.  I've been
able to teach learners of OS and potential clients of OS about this method
through the words and pictures of others so that the 'voice' is global and
diverse and speaks to everyone.

What wishes do you have for the list's future?

I would love to see more people sharing their toughest OSs, largest,
smallest, strangest, most surprising, what you tried that didn't work and
what you learned for next time - I LOVE when you all do that and I learn so
much.  I promise to do better at sharing my own stories in the near future -
I promise you the story of my toughest OS ever (so far), by the way.  Coming
soon to a computer monitor near you...

I look forward to it continuing to be loving, changing, rich, diverse, open,
shifting.

I hope the people who get the Digest form have an easier time of it (seems
as if it's awkward at sporadic times for some of you on Digest with lengths
of combined messages or switching in or out of Digest, from your periodic
emails...)

I hope the archive is a bit easier to navigate in future (such as links
changing color after you explore them and go back to the list of links) - I
build a lot of papers out of our combined words to share with you on my
website and elsewhere and it's a challenge during the research phase of
these papers.

I hope it lives and breathes as nicely as it is and has been doing with
co-created community.

I hope those of you who listen and do not post feel just fine doing so - any
communication has the partnership of voicing and witnessing and both are
precious.  I also love it when I see a new voice and hear familiar folks pop
back in when they've been gone for awhile.

I love the poetry 'contests' (hmm...non-competitive name possible? 'flurries
'?)

I love all the ways that we continuously hold the principles and law to
heart even as we read and write or emails to each other.

I love the trust that folks share their thoughts with an unseen community of
and with faith toss out butterflies of thought into cyberspace without
having to own them.

- - -
I love that you're so patient with my long messages - or maybe you have
already used the Law of Delete !

Take care, all, and thanks for asking, Juanita and Peggy.  Cheers to all
from rainy Berkeley, California,

Lisa
________________________________

L i s a   H e f t
Consultant, Facilitator, Educator
O p e n i n g  S p a c e
2325 Oregon
Berkeley, California
94705-1106   USA
+01 510 548-8449
lisaheft at openingspace.net <mailto:lisaheft at openingspace.net>
www.openingspace.net <http://www.openingspace.net>


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