<grin>  i like that a lot.  hho and faq.  maybe we should just post that
as the intro to OSLIST on the website, too.

m



Chris Corrigan wrote:

Thanks for that Harrison...I'm adding it the FAQ as a "word from our
sponsor!"

Chris

---
CHRIS CORRIGAN
Bowen Island, BC, Canada
(604) 947-9236

Consultation - Facilitation
Open Space Technology

Weblog: http://www.chriscorrigan.com/parkinglot
Homepage: http://www.chriscorrigan.com
[email protected]
(604) 947-9236








-----Original Message-----
From: OSLIST [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of


Harrison


Owen
Sent: Thursday, March 18, 2004 8:59 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Open Space / Open List

From the very beginning (1985) Open Space Technology has been free


and


freely available. I can't possibly remember how many times I have said
this
in print, verbally, and online - but I am reasonably certain that


whenever


I
said it, I followed with the words -- But there is a cost. That we


freely


share what we are learning. The mechanisms of sharing are multiple
including
training programs, public presentations, private emails and of course
OSLIST. The substance of what we share is even more diverse: Technical
"How
toss," Philosophical meanderings, and deep feelings from the heart.


And in


many ways, I think the deep feelings are the most important. It is


from


those feelings that we learn who we are, what we are doing, and what


the


true value might be. Were Open Space simply a technical approach to


better


meetings, we might avoid both the philosophy and the feelings. I


believe


we
have discovered, however, that OS as a meeting methodology is but a


tiny


part of the reality. Over time we have wandered into the strange world


of


self-organizing systems, questions of peace making, human dignity,
personal
sense of worth, constructive conflict. And our journey has always been


a


shared one. No single person has, or could have, the total experience.


And


no one has the interpretive capacity to explain and elucidate that
experience. We can only do this together, freely and openly.

Occasionally I am asked why I never trademarked, patented, or


franchised


Open Space Technology. A flip, but honest answer would be that I was


too


lazy, in addition to the fact that I had better things to do than


spend my


time defending the sacred precincts. The same might be said for my


refusal


to "Certify" OS Practitioners. More to the point, and closer to my


heart


(true feelings :-)), I really felt/feel that OS does some good in ways
that
this funny world of ours can truly benefit from. Therefore I wanted it


to


be
freely available to whomever, wherever, and however. . . And I don't


just


mean Open Space Technology as a narrowly prescribed methodology. I


mean


the
whole enchilada - Method, Philosophy, Feelings, and anything else that


has


popped up along the way.

The OSLIST has been one critical part of the Open Space experience,


and


the
evolution of the global Open Space community. From the very beginning


it


was
open to anybody who cared - with no questions asked about why they


cared


or
how much. People have come, people have gone, and some have just hung


out.


There has never been any promise of privacy or exclusivity, indeed


just


the
opposite. Anybody who thought they had joined a private, exclusive


club


was
operating under a severe misunderstanding. Indeed, the nature of the
Internet, of which OSLIST is an infinitesimally small part, fosters


this


openness, for anything that appears anywhere in cyberspace is quite


likely


to show up somewhere else. In the case of OSLIST, all of this has been
profoundly and wonderfully true. Messages forwarded and copied have


gone


around the world multiple times making Open Space, and the


possibilities


of
Open Space, available to people and places we will never know.


Fantastic!


For myself, I propose to keep the space fully open. Or if we do


restrict


it
to a particular community, I propose the community of the Planet. And


that


is a very strong feeling.

Harrison

Harrison Owen
7808 River Falls Drive
Potomac, Maryland   20845
Phone 301-365-2093

Open Space Training www.openspaceworld.com
<http://www.openspaceworld.com/>

Open Space Institute www.openspaceworld.org
Personal website http://mywebpages.comcast.net/hhowen/index.htm
[email protected]
To subscribe, unsubscribe, change your options, view the archives


Visit:


http://listserv.boisestate.edu/archives/oslist.html




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--

Michael Herman
Michael Herman Associates
300 West North Avenue #1105
Chicago IL 60610 USA
(312) 280-7838

http://www.michaelherman.com - consulting & publications
http://www.globalchicago.net - laboratory & playground
http://www.openspaceworld.org - worldwide open space

...inviting organization into movement

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