Hi Harrison!

Hooting and hollering! A great blast off call for International Women's Day!

Love it when you fire with all engines full throttle.

Without excluding all our OS guy friends one bit, thought I'd send a shout
out to all my gal pal OS friends around the world. Now that we have the
vote, this seems like an awfully good cause. Glad to be on that journey
already with y'all.

Suzanne

P.S. Under that warm cuddly stuff, we've got nerves of steel. A touch of
humor:-)
On Mar 7, 2015 3:53 PM, "Harrison via OSList" <
[email protected]> wrote:

> Emergence is a nice, warm cuddly word. Makes you think of springtime
> flowers making their random appearance, little babies entering the world –
> everything just sort of popping up when and as it chooses. I can understand
> why this cuddly word has replaced the harsher “Self Organization” in the
> vocabulary of many people, but it is the same stuff by another name.
> Emergence is simply what life does – it just pops up randomly and never
> follows a plan, or certainly not any plan we might have made. The shift
> from “self organization” to “emergence” is, I suspect, a lightly veiled
> effort to sugar coat the reality that Emergence (self organization) is the
> manager/executive’s worst nightmare. And if you are going to have a
> nightmare, best it be a warm and cuddly one.
>
>
>
> Face it. Emergence is the last thing that any competent manager wants in
> their organization. The Enemy. It is unpredictable, uncontrollable, and
> quite unknowable. Without prediction, control, and knowledge, where would
> any self respecting manager be? The uncomfortable answer: Out of a job.
>
>
>
> The response has been the elimination of Emergence at all costs. The first
> line of defense is carefully designed organizational systems, crafted to
> prevent variability and deviance. Each working unit is precisely defined so
> as to integrate with all others in a seamless manner. To insure effective
> operation, these systems are encased in layers of control – not just one
> but controllers controlling the controllers, and so on *ad infinitum*.
> Rounding out the picture, we have multiple training programs, skillfully
> constructed to insure total compliance with system demands.
>
>
>
> The effort to date has been massive and in many ways, quite productive.
> Unfortunately there appear to be certain unintended consequences. For
> example, as organizations operate within narrower degrees of variance,
> innovation, creativity, agility, and flexibility almost disappear. New
> Leadership (one might say emergent) is noticeably absent – after all who
> could tolerate such Emergence? Communication is reduced to small restricted
> areas and allowed to follow narrowly defined channels. This sounds good,
> but it renders the often praised, but rarely seen Cross
> Disciplinary/Departmental cooperation virtually non-existent. Lastly,
> individuals employed by such systems are perhaps less than content. Even
> though they spend a majority of their waking hours so engaged they appear
> to devote major energy to thoughts of escape. They long for the weekend,
> Thank God for Friday, would rather be fishing, and often compare their
> situation to being in jail. I even heard some say that they felt like rats
> in a cage.
>
>
>
> These unintended consequences are apparently taken to be a small and
> inescapable price for the productivity we have achieved. In addition, an
> appropriate fix is readily available. Indeed we have a whole profession
> devoted to the effort: Consultants. These wise purveyors of Leadership
> Development, Communication Skills, Creativity Enhancement,  Employee
> Motivation,  Conflict Resolution, Meeting Facilitation, Change Management –
> all packaged in suitable interventions, programs, and “tools,” are ready to
> assist. For a fee of course.
>
>
>
> Taken as a whole, it would seem that we have all bases covered. Productive
> systems function without distraction from pesky Emergence, and such
> unintended consequences as there may be are well handled by the
> professionals. Could it get any better than this? Probably not unless...
>
>
>
> ...unless it were to turn out that our organizations were actually part of
> life. Life, of course is incredibly complicated with many unknowns, but it
> does seem that we have learned a few things. For example, living creatures
> really don’t do very well when locked in a box. They may survive, but in
> very reduced terms. Life always seems better with some basic fundamentals,
> such as fresh air to breath, space to move about in, interesting and
> diverse experiences and challenges, mountains to climb, and unknown hills
> to peer over. Always strange, always new, always a challenge, and never
> quite what we might expect. You could say Life is emergent.
>
>
>
> This list certainly not inclusive, and hardly scientific, but given such
> basics, life does seem to work itself out. Most interestingly – Given the
> basics, living creatures naturally display amazing creativity, agile
> adaptation to new opportunities and changing environments, and are
> constantly in communication with their fellows and other creatures. Along
> the way, they create complex and elegant structures, manage such conflicts
> as they have in ways that create minimal damage and maximum gain, and they
> have been doing all this for a long, long time. However, deprived of such
> fundamentals, life turns nasty real quick. For example, if you take a dozen
> perfectly respectable, amiable, well behaved rats and squeeze them into a
> small box – they will quickly kill each other.
>
>
>
> An odd thought does arise. It would seem that most everything we do in the
> name of organizational effectiveness is antithetical to what Life requires.
> Should our organizations be part of life it would then follow that such
> ills as we experience (loss of agility, creativity, leadership, etc) are
> actually self inflicted wounds. Doubtless our various attempts to aid the
> wounded through our multiple programs, interventions and tools, are
> commendable, but truthfully we are only dealing with problems we have
> created. It might make a lot more sense to just stop shooting ourselves in
> the foot (and elsewhere).
>
>
>
> For a next step, we might just open up some space for life to breath.
> Won’t solve everything, but it could be a good place to start. And we might
> just find that the Enemy (Emergence) is our friend...
>
>
>
> Harrison
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
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