Chris,

Thanks for the clarity of your reflections Chris. What you said resonates with 
me and links, I think, to Harrison's proposition of the 'centripital' nature of 
self organisation - passion plus responsibility. In my case study that gave 
rise to this conversation, the 'boundaries' are related to many legal 
uncertainties which tend to impinge on conversations around 'responsibility'. 
For example,  'can we take responsibility for 'x' issue when the responsibility 
 for 'x', under the law,  is determined to lie elsewhere?  This seems to me to 
be a boundary issue which creates a lot of ambiguity in the centre of the 
circle. But I suppose that this is just the nature of life. Sometimes things 
(like the law) are unclear and we need to just get on with it and do the best 
we can under the conditions that present themselves, rather than the conditions 
that we'd ideally like. Similar to some recent conversations on this list about 
chaos in Syria and the Ukraine - which have much larger sta
 kes than my little case study.

Michael Wood
Perth, WA

Message: 1
Date: Wed, 9 Apr 2014 19:40:59 -0700
From: [email protected]
To: World wide Open Space Technology email list
        <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [OSList] Open Space and boundaries
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=windows-1252

I?m a little late to this and see that other threads have spun out but I have a 
thought or two.

Containers - social containers - are absolutely essential to any level of 
order.  Without something to contain the chaos you simply have chaos.  Order 
arises when there is coherence.  The coherence inside a container is different 
from the coherence or the chaos outside a container.  The place where this 
transition happens is the boundary.  The boundary may be permeable to various 
degrees but it is certainly real.  

As to how the boundary is created, I think my experience says that it is 
socially constructed.  It can be influenced by many actions - including 
intention, invitation, the nature of the shared culture within the container, 
and the action that is undertaken.  Open Space facilitators become helpful when 
we can work with this container.  

How do you do that?  In my experience, the most powerful and generative 
containers are those that gather around a centre, rather that those that are 
contained by a boundary.  

In practical terms what this looks like is simple: drop a powerful invitation 
into the centre of a group (passion and urgency) and a group will coalesce 
around that and ?fall in together.?  Your other option is to create a fence and 
gather people up and put them inside it.  This is much more work and rarely 
effective.  You have a container, but you also have a prison. 

When life gathers around a powerful centre you are invoking a pattern that is 
replicated at many scales all through the natural world from galaxies to atoms. 
The Milky Way is not a THING by virtue of someone maintaining a fence around 
it; it is a thing by virtue of proximity to it?s centre.  Same with an atom.  
Same with social containers formed around invitation.

the Open Space facilitator?s job I think is to pay deep attention to the the 
centre of the work and to support a co-holding of thet centre with the calling 
team for whom the work is really important. When you start making rules about 
who is in and who is out, you are really getting lost in container making.  
When you create just the right invitation, you feed the hunger for 
togetherness, work and creativity that is essential for Open Space - and any 
other generative, complex and self-organizing process - to thrive.  

Chris
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