Michael – Your story of the South African (presumably not an Afrikaner J) made 
me smile. I have had the same experience on multiple occasions. In South 
Africa, East Africa, West Africa, US, and Down Under. Folks in South and East 
Africa call it “Indaba” – West Africa, “Palaver.” But in all cases it is the 
same. Sit in a circle... A Navaho Chief said to me (with a smile), “White Man – 
where did you steal that?”  Open Space is not exactly new. It certainly isn’t 
our invention. Been around...

 

Harrison

 

Winter Address

7808 River Falls Drive

Potomac, MD 20854

301-365-2093

 

Summer Address

189 Beaucaire Ave.

Camden, ME 04843

207-763-3261

 

Websites

www.openspaceworld.com

www.ho-image.com

OSLIST To subscribe, unsubscribe, change your options, view the archives of 
OSLIST Go 
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From: OSList [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
Michael Herman via OSList
Sent: Thursday, March 26, 2015 1:09 PM
Cc: World wide Open Space Technology email list
Subject: Re: [OSList] Opening Space on the Heels of Starbucks' Race Together 
Campaign

 

here's one more data point, lucas...

 

a while ago i did an open space conference where some folks were in from south 
africa.  after the closing, one of the south africans came up to me and said, 
"you know, i really like open space and we've been doing open space for a very 
long time in south africa.  but we don't call it that.  we call it 'meeting 
under the trees.'  but we don't do our government that way.  what i learned 
here is that we could be doing our government under the trees!"

 

  




 
--

Michael Herman
Michael Herman Associates
312-280-7838 (mobile)

http://MichaelHerman.com
http://OpenSpaceWorld.org

 

On Thu, Mar 26, 2015 at 12:04 PM, Michael Herman <[email protected]> 
wrote:

i think the free speech part is important, amanda, at least in the U.S. where 
we've made such a big deal about it for so long.  it might be our most basic 
right, a proxy for all our other rights.  and yet it doesn't work unless 
somebody's also listening.  responsibility.  it seems important to be able to 
do these things together, in small flash groups like lucas has been doing and 
also to make it a signal that has application and implications for the largest 
political conversations.  one of the steele election reforms, for instance, is 
ending gerrymandering, the practice of cobbling together sprawling election 
districts where (and so that) speech can go on without listening.  

 

it's exciting, at the moment, to have lucas' experiment running alongside 
daniel's experiment, too.

 

 

 




 
--

Michael Herman
Michael Herman Associates
312-280-7838 (mobile)

http://MichaelHerman.com
http://OpenSpaceWorld.org

 

On Thu, Mar 26, 2015 at 11:47 AM, facilit8 - Amanda Bucklow 
<[email protected]> wrote:

This is so exciting! I don’t know quite why is should be so exciting but it is 
for me. I am with you Michael on all your points. I might even be tempted to 
drop the ‘free speech’ part and just go with ‘free listening’ although I like 
the 'two way street’.

 

Thanks for the note about Fran Peavey - I will look her up and the bits on your 
web site. 

 

warm wishes

Amanda

 

 

 

On 26 Mar 2015, at 16:25, Michael Herman <[email protected]> wrote:

 

AWESOME!

 

and a few thoughts to mix in...

 

1. if you haven't seen or heard of her, lucas, you might have a look for fran 
peavey.  the gist of her story is that at a higher point of cold war tension 
and nuclear worries, she sold her house and stuff, bought a plane ticket, and 
packed a bit of old sheet with "American willing to listen" written on it in 
marker.  I think she went first to Japan, and started a practice of sitting on 
benches and other public places with her sign laid out next to her.  And then 
just waiting.  This developed into something she called "strategic 
questioning."  It seems her old website has disappeared, but a while back i 
captured some favorite bits of it at 
http://www.michaelherman.com/cgi/wiki.cgi?StrategicQuestions

 

2. i'm sure there are any number of ways to add rules and guidance and 
structure to what you've done, as you've wondered here.  i'd say resist the 
temptation.  years ago i was sitting in a circle in racine wisconsin, one big 
circle of 40 folks, talking about the future of their city and how to organize 
things in support.  things got a little tense, scraped the wall in spots, shall 
we say, but i sat and did nothing, witnessing, holding, trusting, i suppose.  
when i shared the story with harrison, he said something like, "well, you've 
earned your stripes and your pay."  this seems like one of those moments to be 
fully present and do as little, signal as little as possible.  

 

3.  that said, you already have made signs, so i'm going to say that's part of 
the practice, already.  you already used the words "free speech."  i said don't 
add anything and now i want to suggest adding just a very little bit to that 
and wonder if that won't be enough guidance on the micro as-its-happening level 
AND the macro social change level.  my thought is that the signs might say 
"free speech / free listening"  make it look like a street/traffic sign, play 
with making the free listening part in a font style that is an outline of the 
letters.  add a verb if you must.  whatever and as little as you can.  but i 
think the combination of free speech/free listening might turn out to be some 
very robust and portable guidance.  

 

thank you!  m

 




 
--

Michael Herman
Michael Herman Associates
312-280-7838 (mobile)

http://MichaelHerman.com <http://michaelherman.com/> 
http://OpenSpaceWorld.org <http://openspaceworld.org/> 

 

On Thu, Mar 26, 2015 at 11:02 AM, Amanda Bucklow via OSList 
<[email protected]> wrote:

This is just bloomin' fantastic and open space!

 

Outrageously wonderful! Well done and do keep us posted on the developments.

 

Warm wishes

Amanda

Amanda Bucklow

Independent Commercial Mediator

http://www.amandabucklow.co.uk <http://www.amandabucklow.co.uk/> 


On 26 Mar 2015, at 14:29, Lucas Cioffi via OSList 
<[email protected]> wrote:

Hi All,

 

This is cross-posted on the NCDD listserv, and I'm sharing it with the OS List, 
because-- even though it's not about OST-- it's about opening space, and I 
welcome your thoughts!

 

I was partially inspired by Michael Herman's quote from four days ago:

"the other thing i do is never set out big circles in the breakout spaces.  i 
set three chairs to mark each breakout space, with more chairs piled to the 
sides.  the three chairs are pushed right together close, their front edges 
forming a closed triangle.  set this way, they are impossible to use.  the 
first person has to move them to whatever distance feels right to them.  after 
three people come, everyone needs to move them to make room for others.  in 
this way, i dictate nothing.  they literally open the space at the center of 
each breakout group.  i've done it this way every time since my first time, 
when i set big chairs and watched some small groups squirm in spaces that were 
too big for them."

 

I happen to live in Charlottesville, Virginia where a recent violent arrest of 
a student and race-related protests have gotten some national media attention.  
Over the past two days I tried an experiment in creating pop-up civic space for 
dialogue.  

 

This is designed as an alternative to how Starbucks conducted its Race Together 
initiative last week which has had mixed reviews.  I wrote up my thoughts below 
and attached some photos so you can get a feel for the experience.

 

My goals were to "bring dialogue to people" and to create a simple, repeatable 
process that others might improve or replicate, even without resources.

 

This is not to detract from formal and well-resourced dialogue programs.  I 
believe there is also a vital need for public dialogue in the margins like this 
when no resources are available.  

 

I'm wondering what your thoughts and suggestions are for improvement.
-- 

Lucas Cioffi

Co-Founder, QiqoChat

Charlottesville, VA

917-528-1831

 

 

 

 

Note: The article and full size photos are here: http://americantownhalls.org 
<http://americantownhalls.org/> 

 

The American Townhall on Anything

Over the past few years, I've worked with a few volunteers to experiment with 
different methods for having productive discussions on difficult topics like 
politics.

Our current effort is The American Townhall on Anything, a playful yet 
important opportunity to connect with fellow Americans for meaningful 
conversation.

The goal for this experiment is to create "pop-up civic space" where people can 
have productive political discussions.  This effort is similar to open source 
software; no one owns it, and anyone can build on it and modify it to make it 
work for their community.

There is no official organization making this happen.  These are just ideas 
that we hope will catch on, evolve, and adapt as they grow to have greater 
impact.

You are invited to take these ideas, improve them, and build on them.  Here's 
what we've learned so far:

Day 1, March 24th

With my dad visiting from out of town, I wanted to have some fun, meet some 
people, and help him get the feel for the community.  I've been thinking about 
doing something like this for a few weeks now, and (finally!) I had someone who 
would sit there with me so I don't look so alone.  Thanks, Pops!

We took my four dining room chairs and walked them over to Charlottesville's 
charming Downtown Pedestrian Mall.  With some paper and tape I put some signs 
on the back of the chairs such as the one you can read above.

Using indoor dining room chairs wasn't intentional (I didn't have any other 
chairs), however they probably helped to catch people's attention because they 
were both unusual and inviting.

My father and I just started talking about topics that were important to us.  
We had two open seats and people would read the signs and drop in to join us 
for some conversation from time to time.

Over the course of two hours, we met all types of great folks with interesting 
stories to share.  We talked about the weather.  We talked about race, 
religion, politics, and power.  We connected in some surprising and rewarding 
ways.

One person walking by asked an intriguing question with a warm smile: "Is this 
performance art?"  My answer: "I don't know."  Perhaps it is, or perhaps it 
should be.  I have to think about that.

Day 2, March 25th

On Day 2, I wanted to kick it up a notch.  I wanted to bring our traveling road 
show to the grounds of the University of Virginia where there has been 
significant racial tension over the past week due to an arrest outside a bar.

We didn't go there to talk about any specific topic.  We wanted to just "open 
some space" and see what people wanted to talk about.  This was an experiment 
to test how students and university staff would react to an opportunity to 
exercise their right to free speech.

I was anxious, because I didn't know how this would be received.  After all, 
these are strangers sitting down to have some potentially difficult 
conversations.  I didn't want to create a space where someone would feel 
uncomfortable, misunderstood, or disrespected.  Fortunately everyone felt 
comfortable, and we had some great conversations.

We didn't state any ground rules.  People simply defaulted to being humane.  
Perhaps there should be ground rules.  I don't know.

On this second day, we were more effective in communicating what was happening; 
we posted small paper signs 50 feet out in both directions along the main 
walking path so that people had more time to understand what was going on and 
that that they were absolutely invited to join the conversation.  Our simple 
handwritten signs were in color and said "FREE SPEECH - Talk about anything."

 

Sometimes when people would walk by, we would ask them jokingly, "Are you here 
for the free speech?"  People got a laugh out of that.

Students were curious.  The chairs filled up quickly.  Several other students 
took photographs and we heard some very positive comments as people were 
passing by: "Great idea!" and "I'm headed to class, but how long are you hear 
today?" and "Are you going to be here tomorrow too?"

After 30 minutes, it started raining, so we packed up and went home.  All in 
all, we were able to quickly validate our hypothesis that people would be 
receptive to this type of experiment on a college campus.

I wanted to see whether the students would move the discussion to some 
difficult topics on their own, but the rain cut us short.  Given what I saw 
today and given my experience participating in a formal 
student-faculty-community dialogue programs at UVA last year, I expect all 
participants would have dealt with difficult topics in a respectful and 
productive way if they came up.

Next Steps

This was energizing and fun, and I'm not quite sure what happens next.

I'm active in some online communities of dialogue facilitators, so I'm going to 
share this story with some friends in the National Coalition for Dialogue and 
Deliberation and elsewhere to see what they think.

Given that the new Starbucks "Race Together" dialogue initiative has had mixed 
results (many people did not want dialogue forced upon them), I'd also like to 
(delicately) try a modified version of this inside experiment a Starbucks.

If I try something in a Starbucks over the next few days, it will be very 
different-- it would be just a sign-- a silent invitation-- and people can 
choose to sit down and join the conversation if they'd like.

What do you think?

Where do we go from here? Well, if I/you/we can create a simple, repeatable 
process for opening "pop-up civic space" like this, then others might do the 
same, and we might all surprise ourselves with what is possible.  There is 
certainly a need for more productive dialogue in our country.

Please do get in touch:  <mailto:[email protected]> 
[email protected]

 

<Screen Shot 2015-03-26 at 12.50.09 AM.png>

<Screen Shot 2015-03-26 at 12.50.34 AM.png>

<Screen Shot 2015-03-26 at 12.50.41 AM.png>

<Screen Shot 2015-03-26 at 12.50.51 AM.png>

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