Hi Agustin: I Like this book theory U I don,t think that I understand it
very well but I am living mi self this process of letting go and letting
come new things because I was in Montreal for seven years and now I live in
Mexico again but in a new city called Queretaro.
I will be facilitating an OS for the pschology students congress of the
UCO_Mondragon university.
I am exited to do it.
 But yes every time explaining OS confronts me with this aspect that people
need to let go to their old model before they accept to try this new one
option.

I am also having the same difficulties with the other approach I use calle
Groupe de codéveloppement profesionel based on experiential learning and
group interaction. It is also based on the idea that a group has a
collective intelligence that is bigger when we talk together.
I would like to share this method with people from this list. If someone
wants to know more and to have a first experience I would like to offer a
free on line session. I need minimum 3 people and maximum 5. It takes 2
hours. This method for me is very powerful and could be complementary with
an OS event . Contact me if you want to know more!

Thank you for sharing this good ideas and experiences!
Adriana

2015-03-23 21:34 GMT-06:00 agusj via OSList <[email protected]>
:

> Hello Suzanne and all,
>
> "The challenge is how to get from “here” to “there”.  Letting go the old
> ways of doing things, acknowledging the futility of much that we are now
> doing, starting to operate from a whole new frame, almost from scratch if
> one considers the contrast between hierarchy and self-organization.  This
> represents a ton of internal grief work and lots of trial and error."
> Wonderful  and provocative thought.
>
> I had the opportunity and the privelege of participating in the ULab led
> by Otto Sharmer some weeks ago. In my humble opinion, U Theory has 2
> concepts that are in line with this conversation about death and birth.
> They are "letting go" and "letting come". You have to letting go the past
> in order to letting come the emergent future. I compare this "letting go"
> with the "death process" you are talking about, and the "letting come" with
> the "birth process" respectively.  I would dare say that these both
> "processes" are also present in OS. In the last year, I have facilitated 3
> three-day OS events and what I have observed is that the first day is for
> "catharsis", and is only after that, that the group can overcome the past
> and is ready to letting come the emergent future in the second day.  I
> think that this "letting come" is possible, because OS propitiates the
> conditions for presencing, that happens at the bottom of the U, and this is
> the point where you connect to your inner source of inspiration and will.
>
> I am eager to hear your ideas about this connection I have found between U
> Theory and OS.
>
> Agustin
>
>
>
>   ------------------------------
>  *From:* Suzanne Daigle via OSList <[email protected]>
> *To:* OSLIST <[email protected]>
> *Sent:* Sunday, March 22, 2015 7:07 AM
> *Subject:* [OSList] From "here to there"... "less is more"
>
> Harrison and all,
>
> I had the opportunity to visit some companies lately that had the
> stirrings of self-organization. One of them, Sun Hydraulics, was among the
> 12 organizations featured in Frederic Laloux’s book: Reinventing
> Organizations. And as luck would have it, Doug Kirkpatrick of Morning Star
> (another Laloux company) was touring with me.
>
> The other companies I visited were not at the same level but in their
> heart and actions, I knew they were heading in the same direction.  Though
> truly for all, it is the journey and not the destination that
> self-organization represents.
>
> I was in awe and truly could not get enough.  It reminded me of those best
> moments in my own work career when shared pride, purpose, collaboration,
> camaraderie, high performance and aliveness bubbled over. Above all, I was
> struck by the wonderful “ordinary” people doing “extraordinary things”;
> leadership lurking everywhere, individuals taking and living their own
> space with others.
>
> In the joy of experiencing and reliving the intensity and vibrancy of what
> “work” can and should be like, I was struck and deeply saddened knowing how
> few organizations are operating this way.  How much pain and how much
> “settling and giving up” there still is in the world of work today.
>
> I see and feel the contrast of the two: lifeless versus vibrant.
>
> And yet in the despair of knowing this, I sense a shift in consciousness,
> two realities colliding, as one world dies, another waits to be
> birthed.  There is much “hanging on” in companies today with a grasping of
> the “illusion of safety” that our old system operated on, whilst many are
> now edging towards something that is exerting its pull, something new.
>
> Much has been written about the industrial model under which most
> companies still operate.  A top-down hierarchy, command-control system with
> predictability and efficiency built in. The habits of this are embedded
> everywhere. Most of us know this operating system has been pushed to its
> limits and no longer serves. One can’t deny that much good came of it not
> the least of which we have been given more years in this wonderful life.
> Nor can one deny its excesses, which have caused much damage not the least
> of which to our human spirit on what matters most.
>
> The challenge is how to get from “here” to “there”.  Letting go the old
> ways of doing things, acknowledging the futility of much that we are now
> doing, starting to operate from a whole new frame, almost from scratch if
> one considers the contrast between hierarchy and self-organization.  This
> represents a ton of internal grief work and lots of trial and error.
>
> Does it require that our organizations hit bottom?  Or perhaps in our
> souls, we know that we have already hit bottom and this will be enough to
> propel us forward.
>
> Harrison says:  “The cure then would be to stop the wounding, at least
> until we could see how things might go. Of course, if the situation is
> really terminal, then by all means. Bring it on! That could be SCRUM,
> Facilitation, Last Rites, whatever…”
>
> And then later he says:
> “Before we do anything more, different, or otherwise – I sincerely believe
> we need to stop and appreciate what apparently happens very naturally, all
> by itself, with minimal or no assistance. And after that appreciative
> moment, we might think of a few things to do, but only a very few.”
>
> Harrison, in my heart of hearts, I believe this too.  I believe in “less
> is more” even though I still struggle in living this way.  My struggles
> will be no different than the struggles of others and indeed there is
> beauty in those struggles, in doing it wrong, in losing and finding our
> way.  It is the essence and unfolding of life.
>
> And what I also know is what the “real deal” Open Space can do to snap us
> out of the command/control shackles, to shock us into awareness, a coming
> home to who we are buried there inside of us.  The work ahead, I believe,
> is to continue to invite from the place of where people are, without shame
> or blame, because they cannot know what they do not know until they have
> experienced it. That power of less is more. Knowing that in the "less" lies
> the best in high performance, creativity, human connection and life.
> Therein lies the magic of Open Space.  It gives us a taste of what could
> be.
>
> Suzanne
>
> Suzanne Daigle
> Open Space Facilitator
> NuFocus Strategic Group
>
> FL 941-359-8877
> Cell: 203-722-2009
> www.nufocusgroup.com
> [email protected]
> Twitter @Daiglesuz
>
>
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>
>
> Enviado desde mi iPad
>
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-- 

Dra. Adriana Díaz-Berrio  CRHA
438 338 1654 (Montreal, Canadá)
(52) 442 212 63 92 (Querétaro fijo)
(52) 55 13 28 19 12 (México DF)
www.diazberrio.com
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