Opening Space at MeshForum 2005

Looking forward to MeshForum 2005, May 1st-4th in Chicago, where I’ve been asked to facilitate a day of working and learning in Open Space.

MeshForum will bring together academics and business professionals across many fields and industries, bound together by a shared interest in Networks – in understanding, navigating, securing and working within and with them.

Registration is open now…

Higher Performance

Harrison Owen, originator of OpenSpaceTech, recently posted this to the OSLIST worldwide practitioners listserve:

When I see people using Open Space “just” as a meeting management tool, I don’t have much problem in suggesting that there might be broader applications and implications. As I said to an executive of a large multi-national, “I think you need to understand that you have just bought a Ferrari – but you are using it to go to the corner market. The car will get you there, but that may not be the best use of the car.” And when I see people performing at inspired levels in an Open Space and also having fun – only to return to the drudgery of Monday morning where they are miserable – I must honor their choice for sure. But I also feel more than a little sadness.

Chris Corrigan, my co-conspirator and co-developer of the OST training program we’ve run run around the world, reports in from the road, somewhere in northern (i think) British Columbia:

I’m using a whole new way of dealing with the material, more of a coaching type workshop, introduction into the role of the facilitator, logistics, connecting passion and invitation and so on and then some open space to get projects going.

In my own practice, too, I am finding that a coaching approach is most effective for getting into (or get others into) the practice of Opening Space. Can’t wait ’til Chris can fill me in on what he did this time. Sure there’s nothing sad about the results there.

A box by any other color…

Mailboxes are blue. When I put an envelope in a blue US Postal Service box, I’m done with it. All postal jokes and general grumblings aside, once it’s in that box, my whole body believes it’s as good as there.

UK Royal Mail boxes are big red tubes. They look official enough, but dropping a bank deposit (not just any old letter!) into the slot, I can’t help but notice my nervousness. Of course it’s a post box, and yet I have absolutely no direct experiential evidence to prove to myself that this money is not lost forever. Brain is convinced and pushes on, but somewhere deep in my cells, body is totally unconvinced, edgy even.

No wonder kids ask so many questions. They have so little reason to believe anything new. What a rush!

Good Shit?

This afternoon random sites in my bookmarks suddenly failed to load. In one case, I could load the xml feed but not the html pages of a favorite blog. I’m not sure if that was weird or not, but the randomness of the connections certainly was. At first, I thought I’d lost the line to my cell here. As I say, several bookmarks failed to load. So I typed “shit” and googled it as a test. Google responded as usual, with a list of links. I clicked number one and found something interesting.

And so now I ask you, is the internet shit? …or is it delicious?

How Does Dish Soap Work?

I spend a good part of my mornings these days chopping veggies and washing big pots, pans and bowls. Somehow putting a little love into the food while wielding a big kitchen knife isn’t any trouble at all. The real mystery is at the sink: how does the dish soap really work?

This matters tremendously because I wash a lot of dishes, our spanish cook does everything in olive oil, and because I had to take an 8-hour food safety course that is pretty much designed to scare the crap out of you, or at least to scare it off your hands.

So here’s a short answer and the really long answer, the latter comes complete with the scary stuff to make you really want to do it right. Yikes.

Heart Stretches

For the last two weeks or so, I’ve been working as kitchen yogi, aka cook’s assistant here at the Centre. This means I spend most of a 9-3 shift pulsing between chopping veggies for 30 or 40 hot lunches and washing piles of big pots, pans and spoons.

After all the cooking, I return to my cell for a like number of hours of working online, pulsing between local body and cyberspace, between GMT and other timezones, between MHA (for profit) and sCNN (for passion), and between current conversations and future conferences. Evenings and weekends I pulse between my two homes, here and Jill’s place.

I realized this morning that I’m involved in conversations in London, Chicago, Kathmandu, South Africa, Vancouver, Open Space (wherever that is) and a few other places that I can’t quite pin down on the map. It’s getting to be quite the heart stretch, all this pulsation, and a very interesting world. God knows I’m glad to be in the kitchen to keep it all ever so slightly tethered to ground.

Catallaxis

My old buddy Daniel O’Connor has, at long last, leapt into the blogosphere. He’s been working on an integral economics book for a couple of years. Looks like he’s going to start spilling his secrets at Catallaxis. Take your thinking cap when you visit. He’s not messing around:

Catallaxis is a blog about the market

Quality of Attention

Good to hear Euan blogging in his own words yesterday, concluding…

We can no longer rely on the certainties that appeared to underpin our world. Experts who knew all the answers, structures that remained unchanged for decades, society that neatly lined up the way it was meant to and individuals who knew their place and assumed the roles expected of them.

In the fragmentation of sense-making, as the comfort of mass media and culture dissolves into so many individual bloggy, often foggy, and other voices, it occurs to me that the clarity we each achieve is directly related to the quality of attention and energy that we each bring to the task, for ourselves. And any sense we make is a gift to everyone around us. Uniquely universal. Hmmm….

Money and Power

Having spent a fair amount of time in the last few years in Canada and some other places that still put the Queen on their money, I’ve come to delight in the circle that goes like this: Why is the Queen on your money? Because she’s the Queen. Well why do you let her run your country? We don’t. Well why is she on your money? Because she’s the Queen. Does she have any power at all? No. Then why not take her off the money? Because she’s the Queen. Is the money hers? No. Well… you get the picture. The only good excuse I’ve ever heard for leaving her on is that “our young people can go study and work in the UK without any special visa requirements.”

Now this week comes the news that Charles is going to wed again. His announcement was reported on the first seven full pages of the one major newspaper that I saw that day. What would they have done for news if the announcement had come one day earlier or later? And what does all this have to do with Canada? Well this…

It seems there was some question about Canadian approval of the wedding or titles to be given as a result. According to the Toronto Star, the Constitution Act of 1867 makes the monarch Canada’s head of state, head of the executive branch of government and commander-in-chief of the military. Wow. No wonder she’s still on the money.

Housekeeping

just finished up my housekeeping rotation at the Centre and it seems a little housekeeping is in order here, in the way of some observations about my best days…

  • i started out hoovering and cleaning from the mind of one who expected to do this one thing, the hoovering, the wiping, the stacking, the moving as if i would do it forever. this seemed to make more space for me to work.
  • i noticed that everything i did was quickly undone and i came to expect that, without minimizing the contribution and importance of doing it.
  • i noticed that nothing i did was really important, but i enjoyed it anyway.
  • i looked for extra things to do, things others needed, contributions that were outside the job description, things that i wanted to do and could do and offer in my own way. these, too, made more space for me to work.
  • i noticed the messes i made, the things i forgot to do, the things i avoided, and the things left half-finished in distraction. i noticed, too, the things that other did before i could get to them. this made more space for everybody.
  • i appreciated the compassion and kindness of the community here, which allowed me to notice that most often the pushing and pressure to do well or fast or right arises somewhere internally, in the comfort of my own mind.
  • i noticed that there is no way to finish the work here, only contribute and enjoy along the way. i have practiced letting my shoulders slide down and rest where they belong, hanging loosely at the bottom of my neck. i’ve practice jangling a bit as i bop around with bits of three or four or five different tasks in my hands at once.
  • i notice again the value and importance of care, connection, attention, space, compassion, mutuality, pulsation, contribution, offering, receiving, humor, laughing, leftovers, peanut butter, bran flakes, brown rice, fresh kale, broccoli, olive oil, red pepper and brie cheese, and dsl are to my well-being.

starting into a more stable scheduling routine as kitchen yogi (cook’s assistant) now, expecting more time for playing with jill, online projects, walking around the big city, and taking tea with friends of friends.

Ask Them About What They Know

Chris Corrigan reminded me of this the other day. A gem I’ve blogged before from his past (march 11th).

…Utah Phillips, the old anarchist folk singer, began perusing the bookshelves and was immediately struck by the huge number of books from the ultra conservative John Birch Society. His initial reaction was to ask himself what he was doing there, about to have a conversation with a man who was bound to feed him political babble that Phillips would find deeply offensive.

And then he caught himself and he realized that he wasn

Make Poverty History

It’s a campaign and coalition being held up with the likes of the sufferage, abolitionist, and anti-apartheid movements that have already succeeded in much of the world. Today, it was Nelson Mandela in Trafalgar Square rallying a crowd of thousands to support fair trade, not free trade, just trade, not charity.

He was introduced to the cheering crowd as the President of the World and he joked about coming to speak here publicly after recently announcing his retirement from public life. In his short speech he suggested the willful and conscious continuation of the current state of extreme poverty for so many at the same time that some others live in extreme wealth is equivalent to a crime against humanity. That we have the means to end poverty and do not can never be acceptable.

The day was damp, gray, and chilly. A hard day to ignite crowds and a sedate crowd by my own American standards. And what are so many little people to do in the face of this story of about global trade and G8 meetings of national finance ministers, anyway?

The answer, the small change answer, was given by the guy who opened the day, I got there after he was introduced, so I don’t even know who he is. What he did was invite everyone to take out their mobile phones and text message Tony Blair. He called out the number and thousands of people punched it in and sent a message to “Make Poverty History.” Personally, I am reminded again that I need to understand better what some of these “free” and “fair” terms mean. I want to for myself what really makes sense for all of us, and within that, what I can actually do now.

The most exciting part of the day for me was riding my borrowed bicycle back home, negotiating a number of major roundabouts around the bridges that cross the Thames. My thanks to the bus driver and the truck driver… you guys know who you are… who were looking out for me! Maybe bicycling and looking out for each other, person-to-person, in everyday traffic is the best start.

Sir Bob Geldof, of rock and roll and Live Aid fame, introduced Nelson Mandela and made reference to centuries of gatherings in Trafalgar Square, of little people showing up, shouting out, linking arms and working for human rights. It seems that there is now the opportunity for a new kind of linking — of keyboards, blogs and people, signing on, posting it up, and blogrolling others. These small changes seem bound to make a world of difference.

Compassion and Kindness

We posted a new biography today, documenting the compassion and kindness of Julie Henderson, at the Zapchen Somatics website. See the doc for bibliothings and the rest of the story, but here’s a delicious little taste:

…It may be initially helpful to consider what compassion is not. For example, compassion is not pity, nor sympathy, or even empathy. There is a wide range of views about compassion and kindness. Some of these views are narrow and small and others expansive. An Australian dictionary defines compassion as “feelings of distress and pity for the suffering or misfortune of another.” A somewhat broader view is that of Feldman and Kornfield, who state that compassion “is a deep, heartfelt caring for the dignity, well-being and integrity of every single life in our world – from the smallest creature to the most powerful person.”

Lama Zopa Rinpoche, a Tibetan lama, alludes to “great compassion”, which is the “wish that all sentient beings might be free of all suffering and the resolve to bring this about ourselves.” Another well-known Tibetan Buddhist teacher Sogyal Rinpoche, states that “compassion is not true compassion unless it is active.” Within the Tibetan Buddhist pantheon there are numerous Buddas of Compassion. For example, Chenrezig is a four-armed Buddha of Compassion with the six-syllable mantra

Vast Left-Click Conversation?

Finally got to spend a couple hours with Euan Semple yesterday at the BBC. Ping. Ping Ping PIng… Lookout here we come! Another dizzy-making batch of connectings.

How can two guys who’ve never met in person, and traded only a few short messages in a year and a half, be working on so much in common? Mileage may vary, dates and places are all different of course, but Euan and I, and the other bloggers I’m crossing paths with over here, are definitely all heading somewhere in common. In commons. Same shapes, one mind, real heart.

I can’t help but wonder what this vast embracing web of us is really up to. And can it be long now ’til something big (whatever that means) really clicks in? Chris mailed this morning to suggest that our 100bloggers chapter might focus on Conversation.

More and more this is looking like some sort of Vast Left-Click Conversation.

Hoover Really Sucks ‘Em In

This is the funniest damned thing I’ve ever seen in a blog — a brand new comment to an months old posting. The good news is that I’m well on my way to having my 100bloggers contribution written! The bad news is I have to admit that my favorite posting in more than 18 months of blogging was written by somebody else! What do you think?

Found your site on the web because you mentioned “Hoovering.” My Hoover just went out. I know it is a faulty connection, because it went out repeatedly in my hands when I wiggled the wire to the switch. So, all I need to do is open it up and resecure the wire, right?

Well, the Hoover is plastic, so it snaps together, and I’ll be danged if I can’t get it open to at least look and see if I can see a loose connection. But noooooo. . . . .

The manual on the web shows how to snap it together, but does not show how to “unsnap” it. I bet I can lug this thing to a shop, and if they are not too busy, will charge me $50 for a simple screw tightening, but will have to wait two weeks (if they don’t forget about me) to justify the 50 buck charge!

So . . . . . . I had this brilliant idea after I realized that your blog site was not a Hoover repair site!

What if, . . . .

Someone turned their blog site into a repair chat room!!!

Somebody probably had the same problem and found a way around it. They would probably be willing to share it with others, just so that lazy repair man can’t rip off other unsuspecting blokes for 50 bucks or so.

Think of all the traffic it could generate. Think of the advertising royalties. Think of all the satisfied people.

The site would not have to be up-dated. New visitors would write of other ways to solve the problems. The old solutions could be archived “for ever” in case the new way wasn’t quite as good, or models changed, etc. The site would take care of itself. It is just a self generating chat room!

What do you think?

I think I’m laughing my arse off… and on a real practical level, this is exactly the shape of thing that sCNN is just now seeking to create, for a different kind of equipment. I feel the same way about wasting energy on 501c3 status as this guy feels about wasting money on hoover repairs!

As it turns out, just hours before this came in, I’d really run out of gas and started to doubt the whole sCNN process. In some crazy twisted way, going forward now makes just a wee bit more sense again. I’ve no idea where this came from, crazy old friend or crazy new, but it sure did the trick for me last night! Thanks!

UPDATE: checked the stats, and sure enough… I’m #2 on msn.com search for hoover repairs!

Taking Care of Joy

Dan Oestreich on self-care and leadership today…

…am I living this joy today or have I covered it up in my search for accomplishment, in my devotion to my causes?

He continues on about responsibility, how it can take us outside of ourselves, away from ourselves. Alternatively, we take it too much into ourselves. The sensations show up for me as deflation and collapse, pressure and stiffness, grabbing or resisting.

Joy, on the other hand, is something that I find naturally arising, whenever I can come back to myself and restart the pulsation. I come back to a view that sees me and my surroundings, me and my job, me and my relationships, as simultaneous but distinct. Dan quotes Pema Chodron on the sensation of softening.

If I understand correctly, the choice to soften to the world lets the two, me and the rest of everything else, pull apart a bit, mind settles releases its grip. Body settles. Rest becomes possible. Muscles slacken. Tissues stretch. Fluids and joints move more freely. I embody the resiliences Dan’s stories illustrate. In mutuality terms, I let myself be as real to me as is everything arising outside of me, work, relationships, interests, all distractions.

This is related to why I’m about to turn down my fifth and sixth chances to move to a bigger cell here. I find that there is no room in this smallest cell for anything but me. The rest of the Centre stays outside. I am held closely, inside, and solidly, distinct.

My own habit in work is to make my field of awareness quite big. Sometimes I get wispy and thin in the middle. I sense the whole of this building complex, paying attention to everything a little and to myself almost nothing at all. Then I come back to my cell, and come back to myself.

I wonder now if that is the same effect as is provided by an internet connection. Distinct because distant, while wired still into the web? Joy as a binary pulse? Everybody wave.

Cell Life

i posted this over in jill’s blog, but i like it so much that i wanted to put it here, too. a few more cell shots here in the PeaSoup Notebook.

I’ve got just three more days of working on the hospitality team, then i move into new role as kitchen yogi, aka cook’s assistant. that’s a steadier schedule that should allow more sleep in between meetings with people around london and working on scnn. I’m about halfway through my six-month tour of service here at jamyang.

Life Work

Thanks to Karen who smacked this James Michener quote into a comment a few posts back…

As master in the art of living you draw no distinction between your work and your play, your labor and your leisure, your mind and your body, your education and your recreation, your love and your religion. You hardly know which is which. You simply pursue your vision of excellence through whatever you are doing and leave it to others to determine if you

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