Koos...for me the law of two feet is about passion and responsibility.  If you 
care about something, take care of it.  

Paul may have felt that he was "taking care of it" when he produced his 
critiques of the event in London.  Possibly. But my experience is that many 
people are comfortable just being in their passion about something - sometimes 
just ranting - and fail to join in, support, improve, help out or otherwise 
make a responsibility based offering to the situation at hand.  While i 
appreciate criticism and am perfectly capable of wrestling with ideas - and in 
this case I even pointed out that there is much merit in Paul's observations - 
I nevertheless would invite consideration of the fact that if someone is 
sitting through an open space event and not offering responsibility, that the 
criticism has the feeling of being sniping from the sidelines while failing to 
take up the invitation at hand and it's hard to work with that.  That is all.

A some level, love it or leave is also always an option, but that isn't what 
I'm talking about here.  I'm looking for a more nuanced response from a 
practitioner that is clearly very familiar with the dynamics of Open Space and 
self organization and wondering what he did at the event to use his own power 
to create the experience he was looking for.

He may have done something, but as I read it, he stayed for whole thing and 
then wrote a fairly detailed critique of the whole experience.  

So.   Hmmmmm.

Chris

---
CHRIS CORRIGAN
http://www.chriscorrigan.com
+1 604 947 9236

On 2012-10-21, at 3:22 AM, Koos de Heer <k...@auryn.nl> wrote:

> Hi Chris, 
> 
> I am not sure I understand what you mean when you say that the law of two 
> feet applies. If it means as much as "This is Open Space, love it or leave 
> it," I feel compelled to say that I don't support that. 
> 
> Of course I can walk out of a session if I am feeling that I am neither 
> learning nor contributing. But if I have the idea that the Open Space 
> gathering as a whole could use improvements in the way it is run, referring 
> to the law of two feet can become a way to evade a discussion that needs to 
> take place. It can take place at a later date, which is what is happening now 
> and that is fine. 
> 
> Koos
> 
> 
> Op 20 okt. 2012 om 21:23 heeft Chris Corrigan <chris.corri...@gmail.com> het 
> volgende geschreven:
> 
>> The critique in the article is fine. And the subsequent link Phelim sent 
>> along is fine too. Paul's tone is a bit jarring and his argument isn't 
>> helped by making a lot of generalized statements. Also he critiques WOSonOS 
>> in a way that makes it hard to separate his critique if the event from a 
>> critique of the team, even though he later clarifies that he wasn't 
>> critiquing the facilitator. It's tricky to make a forceful and powerful 
>> critique without it seeming personal.  
>> 
>> My response to these posts is that Paul is right in substance. In general my 
>> take in things is that the Law of Two Feet applies. If you are not learning 
>> or contributing find some way or some where that you can. That's what makes 
>> things better. Obviously expecting others to change the way the way a 
>> process seems too dependant on them is rational madness. 
>> 
>> Chris
>> -- 
>> CHRIS CORRIGAN
>> Harvest Moon Consultants
>> www.chriscorrigan.com
>> 
>> 
>> Art of Hosting - Participatory Leadership and Social Collaboration, Bowen 
>> Island, BC
>> November 12-15 2012 
>> 
>> Art of Hosting in Faith Based Communities, Salt Lake City, Utah
>> November 28th - December 1, 2012
>> 
>> On 2012-10-20, at 5:09 AM, "a...@alanhalford.com.au" 
>> <a...@alanhalford.com.au> wrote:
>> 
>>> Just spent a delicious  three days co-learning with Peggy Holman here in 
>>> Perth then I read this - 
>>> So, what's possible now?
>>> http://rationalmadness.wordpress.com/2012/10/18/the-tragic-re-imprisonment-of-open-space/
>>> 
>>> take care out there
>>> alan 
>>> 
>>> 
>>> www.alanhalford.com.au
>>> 0421 475 252
>>> skype: alanhalford
>>> 
>>>  
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