Yes!  I think Kaliya has the right of it ...it is the work of creating a nest - 
a rich, nutrient environment and it is vital work.  Having been to several 
gatherings with all seasoned practitioners, who know how it all works, we still 
found it an important discipline to pay attention to the space.  It can be done 
by one, by a few or by everyone, but the quality of the gathering is vastly 
improved by the mindfulness of caring for the space.  It is a light holding, to 
be sure, and a service to the group, but there is a HUGE difference between no 
attention and a light touch.

I remember reading years ago about Ron Lippitt's experiments with boys clubs.  
They thought they were testing two models of leadership - autocratic and 
democratic.  In practice, they found there were actually three styles.  They 
called the third laissez-faire.  I think this has some relevance to this 
discussion about the nature of the leadership role in the calling to and 
holding of space.  I equate Ralph's experiment idea to the laissez-faire 
example. Here's an excerpt from Marv Weisbord's Productive Workplaces:

Lippitt and teacher Ralph White designed experiements with volunteer boys' 
clubs doing typical activities like arts and crafts [note from Peggy:  notice 
no girls were part of these experiments...I wonder how that might have affected 
things?] .  Each researcher led a group democratically for several sessions, 
then autocratically for several more, observing the impact of different styles 
on the group climate and output.  Acting as authoritarians, White or Lippitt 
dominated, set goals, issued instructions, interrupted, made all decisions, and 
criticized the work.  Their followers argued more, showed more hostility, 
fought, damaged play material, lost initiative, became restless, showed no 
concern for group goals or others' interests.  They scapegoated the weaker 
members (an analogue to Hitler's Germany not lost on the researchers).  Then, 
as democratic leaders, the researchers encouraged groups to set goals, make 
decisions, and mutually critique one another's work.  These groups stuck to the 
task and developed more friendliness, group spirit, and cooperation.

Lewin, running a movie camera behind a screen, soon observed White, an 
inexperienced group leader, using a third variation: letting the boys do what 
they wanted. the team called this style "laissez-faire" and made it part of the 
experiment (Marrow, 1969).  Groups led in laissez-faire style showed less task 
focus than either of the others.  Lack of direction frustrated the boys, who 
felt vaguely inadequate and blamed their unhappiness on less able members.

Climate and results followed style, no matter which leader exhibited it.  The 
extraordinary thing was how fast group behavior changed when leaders changed 
their styles.

...

Watching Lewin's film in my office recently (you can rent it for a few 
dollars), I was struck by the marked differences in behavior when the leader 
left the room (a deliberate act).  In the autocratic group, the boys picked on 
weaker members, goofed off, even destroyed their work.  In the democratic 
group, the boys hardly noticed the leader' absence and kept right on working.  
In laissez-fare, boredom quickly surfaced.  Some boys quit doing anything and 
wandered around the room.

(p. 83-85)


A personal experience on laissez-faire.  I was at a wonderful gathering of 
mostly seasoned practitioners at a place called Hazelwood in England.  The 
hosts were of the Art of Hosting community.  They took us through the opening 
day and then asked for someone(s) to take responsibility for hosting on the 
next day.  No one stepped forward (I think we were all looking for a break from 
this role!).  Well, it turned into an aimless, meandering mess of too many 
people trying to figure out how to manage themselves.  I, as a good OS 
practitioner, excised the law of two feet and left what I knew would be a 
frustrating and not particularly productive conversation.  (Reports from those 
who stayed confirmed this to me later.)  That evening, a group of us agreed to 
host - to open the space the next morning because the time was too precious to 
stay in such a laissez-faire state.  We did, and the rest flowed on in juicy, 
productive work.

here's to democracy, not laissez-faire-ocracy,
Peggy


________________________________
Peggy Holman
The Open Circle Company
15347 SE 49th Place
Bellevue, WA  98006
(425) 746-6274 

www.opencirclecompany.com


For the new edition of The Change Handbook, go to: 
www.bkconnection.com/ChangeHandbook 

"An angel told me that the only way to step into the fire and not get burnt, is 
to become 
the fire".
  -- Drew Dellinger


  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Kaliya Hamlin 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Wednesday, May 30, 2007 5:57 PM
  Subject: Re: [OSLIST] "rules" and self-organization


  It is nice you all want to be so 'free form' about things and 'believe' that 
humans just 'self-organize'.
  Â 
  My experience has taught me that leaning to far in this direction actually 
creates a lot of dissonance for people and leads to spaces with negative 
energy.


  Having a person or better a group of people taking responsiblity for holding 
the space creating a nest if you will... within which people feel safe to 'open 
up' and explore with each other possibilities.... out of this space this nest 
is born new action and activity.


  At this time on our planet we need to be as intentional and catalytic as 
possible in creating space for new possibilities of our civilization to 
emerge....being passive and hoping that people conditioned the way they are in 
our current culture will some how 'magically' 'awake' and 'self-organize' is to 
me hopelessly naive. 


  Diffusing the simple tools and 'rules'Â  or principles and practices is one 
of the things that could make the  most difference at this time on our 
planet. 


  My experience is that professional  communities (that is people coming 
together to use this methodology in peer-to-peer professional network (outside 
'AN' organization) settings) seeking to take action together learn the way OST 
works and take to it....it becomes the new norm -the shared way of doing things 
together that they work on.  It lets all the passion talent and energy come 
forward and the people who are interested find each other because there is 
enough structure ... just enough that it is functional and effective for them 
to spend their time in the space together.   THIS IS important. I somethings 
think people undervalue peoples time and energy by all this 'it just happens' 
talk....well if you help it happen and you follow some simple steps it is like 
10x better.  THAT MATTERS for the state of the world and to respect peoples 
time and energy for showing up.


  Â 








  On May 30, 2007, at 4:19 PM, openspacekorea wrote:


    great! i agree with your point 100%.
    Â 
    thank u...
    Â 
    Love and Peace,
    Â 
    park



----------------------------------------------------------------------------
    From: OSLIST [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Ralph 
Copleman
    Sent: Wednesday, May 30, 2007 10:12 PM
    To: [email protected]
    Subject: "rules" and self-organization


    One way to test what is essential (what Artur termed "micro") and what is 
not would be to open some space without mentioning either the four principles 
or the law of two feet. Â Or anything else.

    If self-organization occurs in os, would not the "space" still "open" 
without things we have come to believe are essential? Â I'm betting it would, 
or at least could. Â Perhaps all we need is a room and a theme and a wall. Â 
Maybe some tea and coffee. Â How free are we? Â 

    Picture it. Â You're invited, so you show up because the theme interests 
you or you know the inviter. Â You get there, see the theme statement on the 
wall, and nothing but a circle of chairs. Â Nothing. Â Not even a facilitator. 
 Others arrive.  The only things you share at this point are your presence 
and your presumed interest in the theme.

    If self-organization is real, is not the space already open? Â It may take 
longer, but might relevant, useful conversations begin?

    I think the facilitator meets our need for an authority figure (a perfectly 
natural, good thing, most of the time), and the ideas about feet, insects, etc. 
a minimal unifying structure (think of it perhaps as curbs to a boulevard?) 
that steer us into an opening, a place we have agreed, by showing up, we want 
to be. Â OS in action resembles self-organization, but it isn't the pure thing. 
 (Not that it really matters.  I love it simply because it’s the best way I 
know to show people what evolution on Earth is really like. Â And it produces 
great results for my clients.)

    One more rumpled notion occurs this morning... Â What about the 
storytelling role, the thing we do as facilitators to connect people entering 
an open space to a greater whole? Â I know this is important, but is not the 
facilitator simply reminding people of a story they already know, deep down? Â 
If self-organization/evolution is real, it’s been working far longer than 
humans have even  been around.  Might we not trust this process?  How far 
can we go?


    Ralph Copleman






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  Kaliya - Identity Woman


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  skype:identitywoman
  Y!:earthwaters


  http://www.identitywoman.net
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  510 472-9069 (bay area)
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