Opening space 24X7 --Wave Riders Unite!

doug os at footprintsinthewind.com
Tue Dec 22 18:44:57 PST 2009


Suzanne--

And now you sound like Lisa Heft, with her "found poems." You certainly
found a great one!

Wanna join our poets laureate circle?

			:- Doug.




On Sun, 2009-12-20 at 07:31 -0500, Suzanne Daigle wrote:
> From Harrison's posting and the replies, I see pieces of a puzzle, so
> like the picture in my mind which ebbs and flows between clarity and
> confusion, theory and action, thinking and doing in this journey of my
> life.  
> 
> 
>       * Open Space 24 X 7...oh the dream of it!
>       * Invitation is where it all begins
>       * Letting go to let be
>       * One less thing to do
>       * May not be perfect 
>       * Magic happens (perhaps because we suddenly realize this
>         important fact that none of us and nothing is perfect and this
>         more than anything releases us to be and do)
>       * Oh what fun 
>       * The party has been going on for 25 years
>       * Reaching back to bring forward
>       * Helping people notice (others)...or experience what can be?
>       * From the core...the "coeur" i.e. the heart
>       * Invitation is where it all begins
>       * But does it really begin there or in the conversations we have
>         every day, opportunities to nourish and seize
>       * How can we exponentially grow what we do as a collective
>         because we all feel and know that the timing now feels
>         different somehow
> 
> And then finally, is Open Space about speaking less (not pressing the
> send button)  and listening more...or speaking now because there is so
> much work to do and we have this opportunity to nudge but never force
> an awareness of consciousness that happens when we open space.
> 
> So I decide again to press send with gratitude for others who do
> too.  
> Suzanne
> 
>  
>  
> On Wed, Dec 16, 2009 at 2:14 PM, Michael Herman
> <michael at michaelherman.com> wrote: 
>  
>         yes, exactly, about 'fails'.  guess that should have been in
>         quotes.  it's same as we always say about posting an issue and
>         nobody comes.  it can't fail.  there's always information in
>         it.  and several choices about what could do next.  
>          
>         reminds me too, that i've often described the process of open
>         space as a cascade of invitation.  part of the power, i think,
>         is that a leader or leadership groups somehow launches the
>         "invitation" to a meeting, then he or she take the first three
>         minutes of the meeting to share what i always suggest to them
>         is "the story of how we got here."  
>          
>         sometimes it's the short form of the history of the whole org,
>         other times it's a quip about how we all made it here in the
>         middle of this snow storm.  then, the invitation is for each
>         person to do what the leader has already done... make an
>         invitation, name and issue, pick a place and a time, and then
>         kick off the conversation with three minutes (i always bow to
>         michael pannwitz for '8:00am to 8:03' sponsors introduction)
>         about why the issue they posted is important to them... how
>         they got to here, to caring about this issue.  
>          
>         so the first bit in the cascading is that the leader invites,
>         and then invites everyone else to invite.  great power, i
>         think, in asking folks to do what they themselves have already
>         done.  (for this same reason, this is why i always hand-write
>         my posters, cuz i'm about to ask participants to scribble
>         their own issues, so i figure that mine should be scribbled
>         too.)  
>          
>         next part of cascade is that particpants capture and process
>         their notes, which i often refer to as 'an invitation to
>         action, or at least an invitation to others who weren't part
>         of the conversation to get involved.'  and many times some of
>         the actions will be 'have another meeting.'  and so i point
>         out that the invitation to those next meetings don't need to
>         be hardly anything more than the scribbles that made the
>         breakout meetings possible.  
>          
>         so the coherence and integrity that come from a leader
>         modeling what he/she is asking others to do, and then
>         supporting the relative ease of convening a breakout or
>         followup meeting, are two important dimensions of 'being
>         inviting' as a leader.  implicit in these the first is some
>         stablility or confidence in the value of their own example,
>         their own presence, and a comfort with who they are and what
>         they can and can't do or control personally.  and the wisdom
>         to support in the simplest ways possible, like tape, markers,
>         circle, for everyone else to pick up and do their own part.
>         self-organizing.  this comfort, clarity, integrity,
>         confidence, i thikn, lets the caring come through, and
>         suddenly they are "being inviting", not just "doing it".  
>          
>         practice implies doing it  again and again until we can 'be'
>         it without the props of the doing.  and over time controlling
>         leaders become inviting leaders.  i was saying just the other
>         night at my neighborhood association, talking about
>         invitation, and pointing out that if we bring more and more
>         invitations to the fore, if this is how we do neighborhood,
>         then what we get over time is a more and more inviting
>         neighborhood. 
>          
>         so this gets to my last point about invitation (at least for
>         the moment!) ...if we live in open space and open space is
>         inviting... then we must live in the midst of invitations, a
>         whole bunch of things just trying or waiting to happen.  at
>         the neighborhood group, it's common to bemoan the lack of
>         volunteers to do things... but that's really a lack of
>         volunteers to do what a few board people think should be done.
>         meanwhile, people are convening all kinds of little things
>         that could benefit greatly by being supported with a community
>         bulletin board.  on bowen island that bulletin board is what
>         chris corrigan calls "invititation corner", a vacant little
>         piece of land just off the ferry, where posters of all sorts
>         go up and invite gathering.  
>          
>         and i always go back to your very first words to me, ever,
>         harrison... when i asked in the kickoff of my first open space
>         breakout session about how to, in a word, organize
>         people/work/organization... you said "i don't.  i go in and
>         ask what's working and then ask how to grow more of that."
>         what's working is inherently inviting.  "working" and
>         "inviting" are not separate.  and i've always found this to be
>         true... when i look for what's working, that's where i always
>         find the bits of language, story, structure, action that are
>         the fodder for inviting more of what works.
>          
>         so the only failure possible might be a failure to notice
>         what's really working and why? 
>          
>         m
>          
>          
>          
>          
>          
>          
>         --
>          
>         Michael Herman
>         Michael Herman Associates
>          
>         http://www.michaelherman.com
>         http://www.ronanparktrail.com
>         http://www.chicagoconservationcorps.org
>         http://www.openspaceworld.org
>          
>         312-280-7838 (mobile)
>          
>          
>          
>         
>         On Wed, Dec 16, 2009 at 9:48 AM, Steve Cochran
>         <scochran305 at gmail.com> wrote: 
>          
>                 Thanks for opening this dialogue, Harrison.
>                  
>                 I'm wondering how any invitation can be regarded as
>                 failing if we enbrace the 'whoever comes...'
>                 principle? 
>                  
>                 Best to All - Steve 
>                  
>                  
>                 
>                 On Wed, Dec 16, 2009 at 10:15 AM, Harrison Owen
>                 <hhowen at verizon.net> wrote: 
>                  
>                         Good Stuff Michael and Denise -- And I wonder
>                         about "failed" invitations. If failure means
>                         that we didn't get precisely the folks we
>                         wanted to come -- there could be a number of
>                         reasons for that, not all of them bad. For
>                         example it could be that the issue we were so
>                         excited about really didn't have all that much
>                         going for it. And all those folks who failed
>                         to respond positively were just brighter than
>                         we were. Our "failed" invitation simply saved
>                         a lot of time and energy which might better be
>                         applied to something else. And just suppose
>                         all those folks did come out of some sense of
>                         "should" or "ought" -- and the whole affair
>                         turned out to be just as flat as they thought
>                         it might. Now -- how happy are the folks? And
>                         what do you think would be the likely response
>                         the next time you offered an invite?
>                         
>                          
>                         
>                         Harrison
>                         
>                          
>                         
>                         Harrison Owen
>                         
>                         7808 River Falls Dr.
>                         
>                         Potomac, MD 20854
>                         
>                         USA
>                         
>                         Phone 301-365-2093
>                         
>                         www.openspaceworld.com
>                         
>                         www.ho-image.com (Personal Website)
>                         
>                          
>                         
>                         From: OSLIST [mailto:OSLIST at LISTSERV.
>                         
>                         BOISESTATE.EDU] On Behalf Of Michael Herman 
>                         
>                         Sent: Wednesday, December 16, 2009 12:09 AM
>                         To: OSLIST at LISTSERV.BOISESTATE.EDU
>                         Subject: Re: Opening space 24X7 --Wave Riders
>                         Unite!
>                          
>                         
>                         oh this is fun. 
>                         
>                          
>                         for me, this business of inviting has long
>                         been the center of the ongoing practice of
>                         opening.  what i noticed some time ago is that
>                         "inviting" is something that we can *do* as a
>                         business practice, somethign we can try and
>                         repeat and refine.  but it's also something
>                         that we can, as individuals, *aspire* to *be*.
>                         the practical inviting is essential for
>                         performance.  but the latter, the aspiring, is
>                         where spirit shows up.  if we are a space for
>                         that.  
>                          
>                         as for the accepting or not.  being trained in
>                         economics and finance, straight through a
>                         rather serious mba program, i have always
>                         understood invitation in terms of markets and
>                         prices.  any invitation is just like a bid or
>                         offer in any market.  the text of an
>                         invitation is like a price.  it's got to be
>                         stated, announced.  but it also might need to
>                         be adjusted.  i like what denise says about
>                         getting to "core" because core is from french
>                         coeur, heart.  when an invitation fails, it's
>                         usually because i've started from something
>                         other than heart.
>                          
>                         the way i think of markets, despite the
>                         financial training, i mostly think in terms of
>                         farmers markets.  the guy who brings tomatoes
>                         or blueberries or whatever has poured some
>                         chunk of his life energy into tending and
>                         harvesting that crop.  it's him. it's his
>                         care.  his responsibility in those baskets.
>                         it's what he has to offer.  so invitation is
>                         the same.  it just has to be offered.  the
>                         danger is not that an invitation might be
>                         declined.  the danger is in caring, in being
>                         full of somethign, and not sharing it, letting
>                         it go to waste.  
>                          
>                         so the invitation to a meeting or simply into
>                         relationship in a passing smile on the street,
>                         is about being a space that doesn't know what
>                         will happen next, but shows up anyway.  alive.
>                         ready.  enough.  and inquiring.  
>                          
>                         anyway, these are some first thoughts that
>                         didn't want to rot.
>                          
>                         m
>                          
>                          
>                          
>                          
>                         --
>                          
>                         Michael Herman
>                         Michael Herman Associates
>                          
>                         http://www.michaelherman.com
>                         http://www.ronanparktrail.com
>                         http://www.chicagoconservationcorps.org
>                         http://www.openspaceworld.org
>                          
>                         312-280-7838 (mobile)
>                          
>                          
>                         On Tue, Dec 15, 2009 at 9:59 PM, Denise Tennen
>                         <denisetennen at comcast.net> wrote:
>                         
>                         Harrison
>                         
>                          
>                         
>                         
>                         For me, when an invitation I extend is
>                         refused, I take another look at the invitation
>                         (especially when I think the person and
>                         project would be a good fit).  In some ways it
>                         feels like my whole life is about learning to
>                         extend vibrant, inspiring invitations (this
>                         often helps me get to the core of what I'm
>                         trying to accomplish), as well as receiving
>                         the response with acceptance and love.  
>                         
>                          
>                         
>                         
>                         I also notice that it is useful to reconnect
>                         with my own sense of inspiration about the
>                         project - that seems to make a difference in
>                         the whole interaction around the invitation -
>                         whether or not the invitation is accepted.  My
>                         being centered and inspired helps retain the
>                         relationship regardless of the response.  I am
>                         always thankful for a clear no...
>                         
>                          
>                         
>                         On Dec 15, 2009, at 3:32 PM, Harrison Owen
>                         wrote:
>                         
>                         
>                          
>                          
>                         Denise --
>                         
>                         
>                          
>                         
>                         
>                         So this is all great! And my question is how
>                         can you do the same thing every day with every
>                         project, organization start-up, whatever…
>                         
>                         
>                          
>                         
>                         
>                         I think you are hinting at the problem of
>                         making a REAL invitation… Not the sort that we
>                         all have received knowing full well that we
>                         will be shot at dawn if the invitation is not
>                         accepted. Or at the very least -- FIRED!
>                         
>                         
>                          
>                         
>                         
>                         So what would happen if all our invitations
>                         were real? Which means they could be refused.
>                         And then what?
>                         
>                         
>                          
>                         
>                         
>                         Harrison
>                         
>                         
>                          
>                         
>                         
>                         Harrison Owen
>                         
>                         
>                         7808 River Falls Dr.
>                         
>                         
>                         Potomac, MD 20854
>                         
>                         
>                         USA
>                         
>                         
>                         Phone 301-365-2093
>                         
>                         
>                         www.openspaceworld.com
>                         
>                         
>                         www.ho-image.com (Personal Website)
>                         
>                         
>                          
>                         
>                         
>                         From: OSLIST
>                         [mailto:OSLIST at LISTSERV.BOISESTATE.EDU] On
>                         Behalf Of Denise Tennen 
>                         
>                         Sent: Tuesday, December 15, 2009 2:17 PM
>                         To: OSLIST at LISTSERV.BOISESTATE.EDU
>                         Subject: Re: Opening space 24X7 --Wave Riders
>                         Unite!
>                          
>                         
>                         
>                         Harrison
>                         
>                         
>                          
>                         
>                         
>                         Thanks for these thought-provoking words.
>                         
>                         
>                          
>                         
>                         
>                         As far as invitiation - in my work as an
>                         artist supporting large groups to come
>                         together to create collaborative works of
>                         "permanently" installed art for their (the
>                         participants') communities - Invitation is the
>                         only thing that works.
>                         
>                         
>                          
>                         
>                         
>                         My underlying belief is that engagement in
>                         artistic endeavors is a useful piece in the
>                         puzzle of creating a peaceful world.  I've
>                         found that eople creating art together
>                         generally aren't engaged in fighting
>                         
>                         
>                          
>                         
>                         
>                         here are the ingredients of invitation, for
>                         me, that I believe contribute to good flow:
>                         
>                         
>                          
>                         
>                         
>                         1) getting the word out is critical, 
>                         
>                         
>                         2) the "stickiness" (see Malcolm Gladwell and
>                         more particularly, the brothers Heath in their
>                         book Making It Stick) of the invitation and
>                         project description heavily affects the
>                         outcome in terms of participation and
>                         engaged-ness of participants.
>                         
>                         
>                         3) having the setting ready before the
>                         participants arrive so I'm not distracted by
>                         DOING and can keep my attention on BEING
>                         PRESENT with the participants
>                         
>                         
>                         4) having a structure in mind and at the same
>                         time being willing to let it go at any moment
>                         
>                         
>                         5) keeping participation voluntary (a bit
>                         tricky when I am operating in a classroom
>                         setting where the children are basically in
>                         the position of being "sitting ducks")
>                         
>                         
>                          
>                         
>                         
>                         As far as the invitation, my on-the-ground
>                         work is lots of word-of mouth, who knows who.
>                          Increasingly via internet - helps spread the
>                         word quickly, although in the end, nothing
>                         beats the realm of the personal, one by one
>                         invitation.
>                         
>                         
>                          
>                         
>                         
>                         Different age groups respond to different
>                         methods (snail mail/flyer vs internet etc)
>                         
>                         
>                          
>                         
>                         
>                         my beginning thoughts on this for now...
>                         
>                         
>                          
>                         
>                         
>                         Denise
>                         
>                         
>                         On Dec 15, 2009, at 7:26 AM, Harrison Owen
>                         wrote:
>                         
>                         
>                          
>                         
>                         
>                         Several days ago I sent a note to what I
>                         thought was going to be a small group of
>                         friends, inviting thinking about opening space
>                         every day, what that might mean, and how to
>                         accomplish all that in specifics. In effect, I
>                         was taking off from my book "Wave Rider" which
>                         is my best shot on the subject to date -- with
>                         the expectation that there is much more "out
>                         there" in terms of ideas and actions. Along
>                         the way I did suggest that OST (as the meeting
>                         approach) might be getting in the way of the
>                         larger discussion. Even worse, I facetiously
>                         (jokingly) invited everybody to join "The
>                         Imperial Society of Wave Riders!" Well you can
>                         imagine the uproar this caused. Here I am
>                         suggesting that we eliminate OST and become
>                         imperialists! Not a good day -- but I do think
>                         the proposed discussion has merit. In fact
>                         from where I sit it may just be the most
>                         important discussion we could have.
>                         
>                         
>                          
>                         
>                         
>                         Given the state of the world (no need for
>                         detailed analysis) superior human performance
>                         achieved in a peaceful fashion seems like a
>                         very good idea. Or put another way how do we
>                         find the intelligence and energy to deal with
>                         the massive issues we face without killing
>                         each other? I believe that the 25 year Open
>                         Space experiment has clearly shown that
>                         superior performance in a peaceful manner can
>                         be achieved any time we open space. It may not
>                         be perfect, but it works better than just
>                         about anything else, and for sure it is a lot
>                         less work. The reason for all this is that we
>                         are not really doing anything. Rather, we are
>                         inviting the system (business, family,
>                         organization) to do what it can do all by
>                         itself. Self organize. We are just helping
>                         people to notice that -- and when they do
>                         magic seems to happen. Peace and high
>                         performance show up. If we are honest about
>                         it, I think we might realize that OST is in
>                         some real ways a fraud and a joke, at least it
>                         becomes all that if we take credit for the
>                         power and effect of the process, and the
>                         special way that we might "do" it. Rather like
>                         taking credit for the power and effect of
>                         gravity -- which will continue no matter what
>                         we do!
>                         
>                         
>                          
>                         
>                         
>                         Anyhow, I believe the community that gathers
>                         here online (and anybody else who cares to
>                         join us) is uniquely positioned to engage in
>                         this discussion not just at a theoretical
>                         level but at a very solid practical level. We
>                         have the shared experience of hundreds of
>                         thousands of Open Spaces. And we have
>                         something else -- the shared experience of
>                         life in our community. As the world might see
>                         it the "Open Space Community" is a pretty
>                         strange thing. It has no boundaries, no formal
>                         organization, leadership, or corporate status.
>                         Membership is pretty much whoever shows up --
>                         and the party has been going on for 25 years.
>                         Odd but very effective. Indeed there are
>                         multiple formal organizations in the world who
>                         with might greater effort have accomplished
>                         substantially less. Think about it! Multiple
>                         Global and regional meetings. A world wide
>                         reach. More training programs than you can
>                         name. And absolutely nobody is in charge.
>                         There has never been a Business Plan, and if a
>                         budget exists it has never been found. Is it
>                         all just a gossamer dream, a fanciful
>                         delusion, or something much deeper and more
>                         important? I vote for the latter. I think this
>                         is a conversation that needs to happen, not to
>                         the exclusion of all others, but this is where
>                         my passion is.
>                         
>                         
>                          
>                         
>                         
>                         Anyhow I invite you to share and think about
>                         our common experience -- and let our
>                         experience be our guide. As a starting point
>                         we might just begin with invitation. What
>                         would happen if all our projects began with
>                         invitation as opposed to assignment?
>                         
>                         
>                          
>                         
>                         
>                          
>                         
>                         
>                         Harrison  
>                         
>                         
>                          
>                         
>                         
>                          
>                         
>                         
>                         * *
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>          
>          
>          
>         -- 
>         Steve Cochran
>          
>         Sustainability Strategies LLC 
>         National Center for Sustainability
>         US Partnership for Education for Sustainable Development
> 
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>  
>  
> -- 
> Suzanne Daigle
> NuFocus Strategic Group
> 7159 Victoria Circle
> University Park, FL 34201
> FL 941-359-8877;  CT 203-722-2009
> www.nufocusgroup.com
> s.daigle at nufocusgroup.com
>  
> 
> 
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