Derek--

Wow! This post is a keeper! Thank you!

Perhaps we should rename it to Trust (slow). So I did, but slowly.

:- Doug. Germann



On 02/02/2014 04:52 PM, Derek W. Wade wrote:
You all rock. If "learning is remembering something you already knew,"
then I'm delighted with the gift of learning I've received from this
conversation.

Back when I used to fly airplanes upside-down as a competitive sport, I
received a simple, profound lesson that I now realize I can apply to
Open Space.

  I was having breakfast with my coach, world aerobatic champion Nikolay
Timofeev. He was going to compete later that day in the "Unlimited"
category -- something he had been doing for many years -- and I was
going to fly my first competitive routine in the much less complicated
"Sportsman" category. A pilot's first Sportsman flight is a milestone:
its the one and only time in your aerobatic career to win a "best first
time" award. I was nervous and concerned about time; gulping my coffee,
obsessively looking over the plan of figures to be flown and judging
criteria for each, checking and re-checking the timetable of the day.

I was nervous both because it was my first time flying at a more
advanced level, and also because we had had a few bobbles the previous
few days, including the canopy of the aircraft coming off in flight and
falling to earth who-knew-where. So I would be flying open-cockpit, the
wind in my face for the first time. A lot of unexpected firsts that were
out of my control.

Something compelled me to ask, "Nik, what's one piece of advice you can
give me for this flight?" I was hoping for something about altitudes or
airspeeds or specifics of the maneuvers to be flown.

  Nikolay finished chewing his bite of toast, took a measured,
deliberate sip of coffee, set his cup down carefully, laid both his
hands palm-down on either side of his breakfast, and said, "before
flight, you must do everything slow. Everything. You drink coffee, you
do slow." He demonstrated with a careful lift of his cup. "You walk out
to airplane, slow. Steady. Starter will be run around, get everyone in
airplanes, go go go, now now now. You breathe. You put on parachute
slow.  Get in airplane now -- but get in slow." He accentuated with
smooth, meditative movements of his hands, as if doing tai chi at the
breakfast table. "Touch airplane, feel it. Breathe. Slow. That is best
thing for this flight. All flights."

It was a bit of a slap in the face -- what, I can't just have some
pointers? Doesn't he realize how many things I'm dealing with here? But
I did as he said. I left myself enough time that I could be deliberate
and unhurried with all my preparation. The starter did indeed try to
hustle me along when it was my turn to line up, but I smiled and yelled
"thank you, got it" before I began buckling the chute on.

It was SO hard. At every step I felt the need to check on something, to
adjust some tiny little detail. But I did it. Slow and deliberate, just
breathing with each motion. Paying total attention to one thing at a time.

It was the best flight I ever flew. It felt like the airplane had turned
transparent and I could see everything with 360-degree vision. At one
point I was in the middle of a maneuver called a hammerhead turn -- a
vertical up line until you run out of airspeed and then the engine's
torque pivots the plane to point downward -- and saw that my path would
take me into a cloud. Entering a cloud is illegal, and you're required
to break off and restart your flight with no official penalty, but it
can break up the judges' flow and result in lower marks.  Without
thinking I pulled the propeller pitch back to act as a speedbrake  --
nothing I had ever been trained to do -- and completed that figure just
under the cloud.

Hours later I was still working out why it had worked, and why pulling
the throttle would not have worked. I didn't feel like I had made the
decision, I felt  like the plane and I both did it. It mattered: I
received best first-time and best overall in category for that flight.

Earlier in this thread, Harrison said:
"...coming to the circle scattered, confused and anxious is a good way
to fry your soul and create an environment that matches your state."

And, David Osborne  wrote:
"Trust = the safety condition for self-organization."

So my lesson from you all is that whether the circle is drawn in the sky
with an airplane, or drawn on the ground and made of people, its
critical to treat that circle as a magic circle; to enter it with all
awareness, calm, trust, and respect due a place of power.

I thank you all for the insight. I'll remember that flight -- and Nik's
lesson -- any time I attempt to Open Space.




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