[OSList] OS & graphics - longish, get yourself a cup of your favorite drink

Michael M Pannwitz mmpannwitz at gmail.com
Wed Jun 18 00:27:25 PDT 2014


Dear Arno,

when I reflect on my work and role as an os-facilitator I feel that I am 
looking at an experiment, my personal experiment. Since 1996, when I 
joined the os-experiment, I am surprising myself to this day with what I 
experience in that experiment. And some of the observations became more 
and more predictable as I moved in this experiential experience... but 
surprises still abound.

Another way of putting this for me is that it is an ongoing journey in 
an experiment that a constantly increasing crowd is involved in.
But as far as the experience is concerned, it is my experience.

That also means that I dislike making generalizations about the "right" 
way and try to stick to my experience, my impressions of what works for 
my practice... and enjoy the exchange with other os-facilitators as on 
this list or in Learning Exchanges or in (W)OSonOS gatherings and 
especially at Stammtisch gatherings...

To your points:

1. Arriving at a topic is the task of the client and especially the 
clients "Planning Group" to which he belongs and which is authorized to 
work on this task. In this context I try to avoid the word 
"responsibility" because it is an extremely complex concept... focusing 
on a task is work enough and simply consumes all my energy.

So, as facilitator, I take no responsibility at all for the "Theme" or 
the "Content". My contribution to the work of the "Planning Group" is to 
back the Group in focusing on the task at hand without myself being 
attached to any particular outcome.
(I wish you could have seen me watching the game Brazil/Mexiko: without 
my comments and beliefs on what every player and the referee and the 
spectators should have done, it would have never ended in a draw which 
is exactly what I felt would be the proper result... it drives my dear 
wife crazy!)

2. Yes, thats definitely been my experience AND it has freed me to focus 
more on the design and interventions in the course of the 3.5hr Planning 
Meeting. One result is that I never hurry the Planning Group which 
often,seemingly paradoxical, speeds up the process... and sometimes 
(rarely) the Planning Group decides to postpone the decision and meet 
again OR (not so rarely) (and this I then take as a sign of the groups 
strength, delegating the finalization of the Theme to a smaller subgroup 
of the Planning Group which then also fashions the final draft of the 
invitation which often is circulated among the members of the Planning 
Group).
One element in the Planning Group process is also to spend time on 
exchanging ideas on who all should be invited and who they feel is 
essential for the gathering. This also results in an exchange on 
specific ways specific groups or specific individuals should be 
invited... and also gets members of the Planning Group to come forward 
and take charge for inviting a specific group or a specific individual 
in a specific way... keeping in mind that an invitation is an 
invitation, it can be either accepted or not.

My reading on this is that the Planning Group enables itself for these 
kinds of actions not so much because they found a terrific eyecatcher 
Theme but because they have grown into a group working on something 
together that they have become commonly attached to.

3. Well, first of all, "additional operators" distracts or tend to 
distract me, especially when they are really entertaining.
But it does not support me in being "completely present and utterly 
invisible" ... a stance I have painfully learned over the years: To be 
non-controlling (my "nature", mind you, is to control, control, 
control). This stance appears to be conducive for the selforganisation 
force to do its thing (not to be confused with people selforganizing 
which, however, I cherish when I notice it...)... but referring to that 
force thats been active since the Big Bang.

I am not so sure that it "distracts the attention of the participants 
from their main focus of gathering". It simply opens space for 
"non-participants" to do things the participants could do and do and are 
perfectly capable of doing. Put differently, it reduces the space for 
participants to do what they are able to do and robs them of the 
experience of being able to actually take things into their own hands. 
Its simply one field of practice they dont usually get involved in: 
Practicing and experimenting with independent, self-initiated action... 
often these are simple actions to practice and gather experience in 
preparation for the much more complex and difficult actions they want to 
embark on after the "event". The opportunity to do such stuff in the 
"event" is a rare opportunity to play and experiment in a "relatively 
safe space".

To your wish to try the mind-map approach for formulating a Theme:
This idea was not something I brought into the process but was 
originated in a Planning Group where participants added their various 
notions to the "Theme" on the large flipchart paper I supply for the 
group to take notes on while they are working on the Theme.
Also, in Germany, mind-mapping is well known and used in a broad variety 
of learning settings... I "taught" it all our kids during their school 
days several decades ago and hundreds of groups in my old job as 
community organizer and consultant for organisational development in my 
time with the protestant church. Thanks to Tony Buzan.

Greetings from Berlin
mmp


On 18.06.2014 00:07, Arno Baltin wrote:
> Dear, Michael!
>
> I hope I got your points:
> 1. Designing the topic of OS and the invitation is the duty of client.
> And OS facilitator can arrange the space for them without taking too
> much responsibility for the content.
> 2. The form/content of the main theme of gathering is not so decisive as
> it seems at first glance.
> 3. Additional operators and actions around OS distract the attention of
> the participants from their main focus of gathering.
>
> Thank you for the "topic on the mind map" idea, I would like to try it.
>
> Be well!
>
> Arno
>
> **
>
>
> 2014-06-17 21:58 GMT+03:00 Michael M Pannwitz <mmpannwitz at gmail.com
> <mailto:mmpannwitz at gmail.com>>:
>
>     Dear Arno,
>     my experience has been that every additional person next to me (or
>     when I was present in events I did not facilitate) tended to reduce
>     the focus of the participants on their own devices.
>     This has been true for co-facilitators, translators, visual
>     facilitators, facilitators in breakout session, special folks for
>     recording the ongoings in breakout sessions, etc.
>     These roles probably are of their own of value in many other kinds
>     of gatherings but seem to reduce the self-organized action
>     orientation that I think is an essential characteristic of os events.
>
>     In my practice, I have always given a lot of attention to
>     participants of the Planning Group to do the work required by
>     themselves. This has almost always led to them finding their
>     "Theme"--- and I remember a couple of incidents where the groups
>     vision of the theme was so wickedly complex that it took the form of
>     a group mindmap which appeared not only in the invitation but also
>     on the cover of the documentation.
>
>     Focusing the work of the Planning Group in this way has always been
>     a robust way to get into the "os-mode", even though the Planning
>     Group work is not an "os-event".
>
>     What I also noticed is that while the final form of the "Theme" is
>     sometimes funny, interesting, deep, shallow, insignificant, totally
>     to the point, passionate, mind boggling, or boring (this is all from
>     my point of view on which I progressivly paid less and less
>     attention). To put it briefly, the form or content of the Theme as
>     such appears to be of little consequence to the os-event, who all is
>     attracted, on the outcome or on what actually grew into action.
>     It seems, that the process of the Planning Group participants (of
>     which the client is one, of course) of carefully going through all
>     the various notions and collectively planning  the event all by
>     themselves is an important ingredient to transform the Planning
>     Group intoa a group of passionate invitors.
>
>     This, mind you, does not prevent clients (rarely) to snake up to me
>     at the end of a Planning Group process and ask:
>     "Do we really have to use the Theme that the group came up with?"
>
>     Greetings from Berlin
>     Got to run for the match Brazil-Mexico
>     (they do have a referee!!!)
>
>     mmp
>
>
>
>
>
>     On 17.06.2014 08:24, Arno Baltin wrote:
>
>         Dear Open Minds and Hearts!
>
>         I had wonderful experience to open Space with friends, graphic
>         facilitators.
>         As the client was a bit in trouble to state the Question/Problem
>         in one
>         sentence (the invitation included about 5 sentences which called
>         invitees
>         to share they thoughts on how, where and why should we (Tallinn
>         University)
>         move on keeping in mind year 2020. The results should become the
>         input for
>         mid-range strategic plan. So as there was no consensus on this "one
>         sentence" I asked my friend to draw the Question.
>         You can see the results via the link
>         <https://www.dropbox.com/sh/__28eb3vo70k5izep/__AAD3cPzFMxRIrcTGcibpf0Bca
>         <https://www.dropbox.com/sh/28eb3vo70k5izep/AAD3cPzFMxRIrcTGcibpf0Bca>>
>
>
>         (The Question is the last photo in the row.)
>
>         I am curious if anybody has tried this route already and what
>         are your
>         experience with inviting graphic facilitator to OS.
>
>         Be well!
>
>         Arno
>
>         **
>
>
>
>
>
>
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>
>     --
>     Michael M Pannwitz
>     Draisweg 1, 12209 Berlin, Germany
>     ++49 - 30-772 8000 <tel:%2B%2B49%20-%2030-772%208000>
>
>
>
>     Check out the Open Space World Map presently showing 394 resident
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-- 
Michael M Pannwitz
Draisweg 1, 12209 Berlin, Germany
++49 - 30-772 8000



Check out the Open Space World Map presently showing 394 resident Open 
Space Workers in 68 countries working in a total of 142 countries 
worldwide: www.openspaceworldmap.org
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