Ho!

I particularly relate to: "created the needed "open space" for people to make 
meaning by making a difference.  Which is what I find so powerful about Open 
Space, it provides the alchemist kettle, the area of bounded instability, in 
which people are turned on by making meaning in the space provided."

My instincts tell me that the human desire to create is as innate and powerful 
as desires / needs to eat, to sleep, etc. I believe this to be true on many 
levels.

My instincts also tell me that the human desire to be in community is also 
innate. Though we may seek periods of isolation, of contemplation, there 
remains a fundamental need to be together, even to experiment with being 
together.

Open Space seems to offer conditions in which these desires can be experienced. 
Part of the power, whether spoken or not, is that people recognize, once into 
it, the experience from deep inside, in their bones.

I'm enjoying this sharing.

>From a clouded, wet Utah morning.

Tenneson



> Lex:

These two paragraphs provoked a bit of 'interior discussion' that I thought I 
might share with you and any others on the List who might have an interest in 
somewhat esoteric philosophy. I (and Joelle) were fortunate enough to have had 
a great teacher from South Africa, a white mining engineer turned 
transformative-thinker (best I can say it).  He taught a philosophy of life as 
well as many other issues around making our lives (working, family, personal) 
more whole, more human, more complete.  He said that a human being was an 
organism, not a stimulus-response mechanism as contended by some folks at the 
time (BF Skinner).  He also taught that logic is only applicable to a very 
small slice of life, that intuition and wholeness applied to the most of life.  
As part of that, some of us developed, with him, the following, which may help 
in sorting out the above paragraphs:

What is PURPOSE?

Purpose is Meaning, Made Important, All Depending On You.

What is Meaning?  Meaning is Difference.  The Difference some person or some 
physical thing makes in any given situation by being there, being present.  
Thus, we can intuit the meaning by noticing the difference.  Our teacher felt 
that if he had created anything unique in his life, it was this single 
understanding, that Meaning is Difference.

Made Important?  How do you make something or someone important?  By focusing 
your attention on it or them.  Hence, by focusing, (being a fully aware, fully 
alive, fully functioning human being in the moment) you make the moment 
important.  It contains your most valuable asset, your life's time.  And thus, 
you make the person or persons important in your eyes (the window to the Soul).

All Depending On You?  That is the inner feeling that the needed outcome of the 
action or of the moment is all depending on you and you will be in such a state 
as to be wholly focused on the requirements of the situation in which you find 
yourself.  Now, sometimes the situation is so overwhelming that you are simply 
unable to cope, no matter how centered or focused.  Natural disasters such as 
the tsunami's or earthquakes are examples.  Man-made disasters such as war's 
are another.  However, by being in that state of personal responsibility for 
the outcome, you have a very much better probablility of meeting the needs of 
the situation, and doing so brilliantly, with 'savior faire' (I hope I got the 
French right).

Therefore, we came to the understanding that a human being longs to be a 
meaning-maker.  One who can say 'I have made a difference'.  And, thus, 
organizations that strive to help that to happen will be uncommonly successful 
because they will have created the needed "open space" for people to make 
meaning by making a difference.  Which is what I find so powerful about Open 
Space, it provides the alchemist kettle, the area of bounded instability, in 
which people are turned on by making meaning in the space provided.

That's what I think tonight.  I sure am enjoying this thread.  Thank you, Doug, 
for the evocative question.

Warmly, <



Tenneson Woolf
801 376 2213

"Stories are medicine. They have such power;
they do not require that we do, be, act anything -
We need only listen."
Clarissa Pinkola Estes

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