Lots of good thoughts there Lucas... and I do believe space/time is a 
marvelously slippery critter. As St. Augustine once remarked (I think), “I know 
exactly what time (space) is until I try to explain it.” I do love the slippery 
bit. For example, most people would probably agree that we only have 24 hours 
in a day. But that bit of “solid wisdom” depends totally on where you are in 
the cosmos, and whose “day” you are talking about. Actually if you were sort of 
floating about, I guess you would be day-less?  As for creating space – we have 
an abundance of expressions that suggest we do it all the time, as in “my 
space,” “our space,” “your space.” And just when we think we have it all 
together, some idiot comes along and creates “cyberspace.”

 

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 
to:http://lists.openspacetech.org/listinfo.cgi/oslist-openspacetech.org

 

From: OSList [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Lucas 
Cioffi via OSList
Sent: Wednesday, September 02, 2015 9:48 AM
To: World wide Open Space Technology email list
Subject: [OSList] Creating Space or Opening Space?

 

That's an interesting thread you started, Daniel, about inviting non-invitation.

 

Harrison writes yesterday:

Here’s a thought... Space/time is infinite, defined by our minds, and limited 
by our imagination. So “constraints” are only what you make them out to be. 
AND... it is always nice to have as much “space/time” as possible. A “genuine 
invitation” creates a LOT of space/time.

 

Do y'all think we are creating space or are we opening space?  It's an 
important distinction, because creating implies a win-win but opening could be 
a win-lose situation.  I'd say none of us is ever creating space, just opening 
it, and that someone or something is always losing something else when we do.  

 

I'll do my best to explain...

Instead of "creating space" I'd argue that instead we are "creating space for" 
because the space literally already exists.  We are creating opportunity for 
voices to be heard and for people to participate.  But in some indirect way a 
space for X is at least indirectly a space against Y.  We are never actually 
creating new space, instead we are creating "new space for" by marking that 
space with an invitation/purpose, principles, and a law of two feet.  The space 
(the hotel conference room, the warehouse, etc) already exists.

 

I don't disagree, Harrison, that overall space/time might be infinite–I don't 
know :) –but each of us is limited to being in one physical space at a time, 
monitoring/interacting with a handful of physical spaces virtually, and having 
24 hours in a day.  In that way we'd all agree that space and time are nearly 
zero sum at a personal scale, so when we open/create space for _________, and 
people accept the invitation, we are decreasing energy and time spent some 
where else.  There is a cost.  We don't talk about that, but I don't think we 
forget that either.

 

So, to take this argument full circle (pun intended), I'd say that whenever we 
open space, we do it by force.  Space doesn't open on its own (or does it?!-- 
what if we aren't really opening space and the space is already open, that 
we're just the first to see it?).  Well, even if space opens on its own and 
then if we're the first ones to walk into it and invite others, we are still 
inviting by force–this not a bad force or a coercive force, but it's a force 
nonetheless.  We know this, because we know how it requires force to launch an 
invitation into the world.  (Or is this not always the case?  Can someone 
invite by simply being?)

 

Any invitation displaces people's time: to read it (maybe just 30 seconds) and 
then much more time is displaced for people choose to attend (an hour, a day, 
etc).  What I'm trying to say is that I'm beginning to see opening space more 
and more as active, forceful (in a good way), and intentional.  When we open 
space that was previously closed, we are using force, and that might mean that 
someone else is experiencing something else closing (the old order of business 
in an organization or fewer people attending another event or doing something 
that they would have otherwise been doing if they weren't attending).

 

Bottom line: It's hard to argue with creating space because it looks like a 
win-win, but somewhere someone or something is losing our time, energy, and 
support in the short term.  In the case of an organization the person losing is 
the boss who wants to keep the old order of things.  When that situation isn't 
applicable, we're at least spending time away from other things we could be 
doing such as tending to a vegetable garden or taking Fido for a walk.  So it's 
always important to keep in mind who/what is losing when we open space, and 
perhaps using the phrase "creating space" is a good way to focus on the upside.




Lucas Cioffi

Founder, QiqoChat.com

Charlottesville, VA

Mobile: 917-528-1831

 

 

_______________________________________________
OSList mailing list
To post send emails to [email protected]
To unsubscribe send an email to [email protected]
To subscribe or manage your subscription click below:
http://lists.openspacetech.org/listinfo.cgi/oslist-openspacetech.org
Past archives can be viewed here: 
http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]

Reply via email to