Good tale Chris! I (vaguely) remember when it was all going down. And then of 
course there was the one about building roads on tribal lands. I tell it at the 
opening of The User’s Guide if you want the details – but basically we has 
several hundred Feds, State Government and 1st Nation people who had been 
charged with the expenditure of over a billion $$’s for roads on Tribal Lands. 
These folks had spent several years killing each other, and the money was just 
about to go back to the US Treasury. Two days of sizzling open space with 
conflict massively deep…  and in the closing circle I’ll never forget a Navaho 
Chief saying that he had never felt so listened to and respected. 6 weeks later 
the final allocation plan was signed and approved. Works. And for the record, I 
never intervened at any point. I’m sure that wasn’t about doctrine or process – 
just pure self preservation. But what I learned was there was no need.

 

Harrison

 

From: OSList [mailto:oslist-boun...@lists.openspacetech.org] On Behalf Of Chris 
Kloth via OSList
Sent: Monday, February 5, 2018 9:51 PM
To: oslist@lists.openspacetech.org; Harrison Owen
Cc: Chris Kloth
Subject: Re: [OSList] OST encourages avoidance of conflict (a bit long)

 

Harrison, et al. 

It's been a while since I checked in, but this thread brought back many fond 
memories of several OST events over the years, and one in particular.

It's been many years since I was contacted by a group that included multiple 
coalitions of mental health professionals, administrators, and policy makers 
from throughout Ohio. At the time, local urban and local rural leaders of 
county mental health boards were battling with each other and state mental 
health officials over what was described as inequitable, differential funding 
of urban and rural systems by the state. One of the local coalitions had an 
active lawsuit pending against the state over inequitable funding. At that 
point the lawsuit had been pending for several years.

However, the reason they contacted me was that the state legislature had 
initiated legislation on a particular policy that each of the three groups 
found problematic for different reasons. Several of them had experienced OST in 
other settings and thought it might be a way sort things out on the legislative 
issue.

During the planning process we spent quite a bit of time considering/testing 
potential questions to frame an inclusive invitation to a wide variety of 
people concerned about the issue. Several times during the planning process 
members of the planning group made it clear that they did not want to take on 
the other issues and that they expected me to "manage" that "problem." I kept 
saying that, whatever question we arrived at, I couldn't promise the other 
topics wouldn't come up if it was important to people at the event. I did say 
that I thought the organizing question they landed on seemed inclusive and that 
they would quite likely end up someplace that would help them advance their 
cause.

The day we were opening space, with about 100 people attending, the bulletin 
board filled up with all kinds of good stuff. As you might predict, most of the 
topics were on the legislation, but some of the topics were related to 
inequitable funding. A few of their planners continued to be frustrated and 
approached me. I advised that they each think about what they felt passionate 
about and were willing to accept responsibility for working on... and then vote 
with their feet. The first day people worked on what they cared about, with 
most focusing on the legislation. Some people stayed irritated, but those few 
working on inequitable funding seemed to be really listening to one another in 
their sessions. The next day work continued on the legislation, building on 
work from the day before. However, as the morning evolved I noticed and 
increasing amount of bee and butterfly activity, much more than I was used to 
seeing. I listened in on some of the conversations and the talk was about 
equitable funding (not inequitable funding). At the time I said the air was 
electric - but sizzles works. After lunch most of the participants attended one 
huge session that had been posted as funding related. In the next 90 minutes 
they came to common ground on an approach to addressing funding issues!

My take on the closing circle was that 4 themes emerged. One was that working 
together on the legislation reminded all of them what they all felt passion 
about - providing community based options for individuals and families 
experiencing the effects of mental illness. Another theme was how good they 
felt about working together again after so many years... they remembered the 
"good old days" that had brought them together so many years ago. Third, they 
realized that, for quite a while, there had been some people who had been ready 
to engage in dialogue about funding, but hadn't found a nontoxic space to do so 
in... until then. Finally, they noticed the paradox I suspect all of us have 
experienced in one form or another... when they stopped thinking about the 
"problem" or "the conflict" or the toxicity they had all come to accept as 
"normal," something else showed up! 

The results? During the next several weeks they each did their part in 
preparing to address the legislature. After the legislative hearings, about 6 
weeks after the OST, the legislature shifted its approach. That's lightening 
speed when addressing a complicated, statewide public policy and fiscal issue 
in a volatile political and economic environment. Within about 6 months of the 
OST the lawsuit (the one they wanted me to make sure didn't get discussed) was 
resolved and a collaborative group had developed options that all could all 
invest in.

Harrison described organizations without conflict as dead. I agree. One way I 
think of conflict is: the opportunity for diverse groups of passionate people 
who really care about what they are doing, are invested in taking 
responsibility for what they are doing, and (not but), have very different 
perspectives about what is going on, what to make of it and what, if anything, 
to do about it. From my perspective, in a world characterized by diversity, 
complexity, chaos, implicate order, emergent order, the capacity for 
self-organization (and more), the good news is that healthy conflict can enrich 
our understanding of what, in the moment, we are experiencing, what we will 
make of that experience, and what, if anything, we will do about it. 

OST leads to avoiding conflict? Not in my approximately 25 years of opening 
space... quite the opposite.

-- 
Shalom,
 
Chris Kloth
Principal/Lead Consultant
ChangeWorks of the Heartland
254 South Merkle Road
Columbus, OH 43209-1801
P - 1+ 614-239-1336
F - 1+ 614-237-2347
www.got2change.com 
 
Think globally, act locally.

 

On 2/1/2018 2:58 PM, Harrison Owen via OSList wrote:

There is conflict, and then there is destructive conflict. I think they are two 
entirely different things. Conflict is an essential part of living, life, the 
total evolutionary process. Show me any organization that has no conflict and 
I’ll show you a dead one. Conflict occurs when two or more critical concerns 
(cares) but heads. Given sufficient room, they will find a way. Close that 
space and they will kill each other. My experience in Open Space has always 
been one of intense conflict combined with serious way finding. Parties who 
would ordinarily kill each other find common ground. And the air sizzles. 
Believe me, I’ve been there.

 

Harrison

 

Winter Address

7808 River Falls Dr.

Potomac, MD 20854

301-365-2093

 

Summer Address

189 Beaucauire Ave

Camden, ME 04843

207 763-3261

 

Websites

www.openspaceworld.com

www.ho-image.com

 

From: OSList [mailto:oslist-boun...@lists.openspacetech.org] On Behalf Of 
Harold Shinsato via OSList
Sent: Tuesday, January 30, 2018 5:25 PM
To: oslist@lists.openspacetech.org
Cc: Harold Shinsato
Subject: Re: [OSList] OST encourages avoidance of conflict

 

Daniel,

Interesting concern. I think I remember hearing this from a well respected 
management guru as a critique of Open Space. I can't help but wonder the 
following:

- How well do individual adults resolve conflicts when an authority figure 
forces them?
- How well do conflicting peoples or tribal communities resolve conflicts when 
they are forcibly held together by an imperial force (think Rome, USSR, 
pre-partition India, etc etc etc)

If you are dealing with children or developmentally challenged individuals - 
especially those who have violated others rights are are in prison - I can 
imagine there being some value to some level of compulsion or coercion here. 
But even there, it may temporarily resolve the fighting and damage, but not the 
children's growth.

If you are dealing with severe human rights being violated in tribal scenarios, 
I can see how that might justify gunboat diplomacy. But I can't imagine the 
tribal system will evolve to respect human rights without a huge additional 
investment from the gunboat diplomats. And it is all too likely that such 
interference may not only cause even bigger problems later on, but can also 
encourage exploitation of the less developed tribe/community.

Thanks for asking this question!

    Harold




On 1/30/18 2:07 PM, Daniel Mezick via OSList wrote:

I am hearing this pointed criticism from some quarters: That OST actually 
encourages conflict-avoidance via the Law of 2 Feet. In other words, people who 
need to be resolving conflict (or at least discussing it) can just avoid the 
touchy topic... and each other. 

Could this actually be true? If not why not? 

 

-- 
Daniel Mezick
Culture Strategist. Author. Keynoter.
(203) 915 7248. Bio. <http://www.DanielMezick.com/>  Blog. 
<http://www.NewTechUSA.net/blog/>  Twitter. <https://twitter.com/DanielMezick>  
Book: The Culture Game. <http://theculturegame.com/>  
Book: The OpenSpace Agility Handbook. 
<http://www.amazon.com/OpenSpace-Agility-Handbook-Daniel-Mezick/dp/0984875336>  







_______________________________________________
OSList mailing list
To post send emails to OSList@lists.openspacetech.org
To unsubscribe send an email to oslist-le...@lists.openspacetech.org
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/oslist@lists.openspacetech.org

 

-- 
Harold Shinsato
har...@shinsato.com
http://shinsato.com
twitter: @hajush <http://twitter.com/hajush> 






_______________________________________________
OSList mailing list
To post send emails to OSList@lists.openspacetech.org
To unsubscribe send an email to oslist-le...@lists.openspacetech.org
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/oslist@lists.openspacetech.org





 
_______________________________________________
OSList mailing list
To post send emails to OSList@lists.openspacetech.org
To unsubscribe send an email to oslist-le...@lists.openspacetech.org
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/oslist@lists.openspacetech.org

Reply via email to