Thank you Paul for changing the subject!

Your comment made me think of this rather large mural image from a stairwell in Evergreen State College, in Olympia, Washington.



I discovered this image during the Art of Participatory Leadership <http://www.emergingwisdom.net/AOPLWA/> workshop there last November. I grabbed the photo, part of a 1979 project there called "The Dragon Wall". As I was in the area, I also visited Anne Stadler to get more of the creation story of the Open Space community, especially around the amazing Spirited Work project which was a 6 year practice 1999-2005 of living in Open Space 24/7/365, and including a quarterly multi-day Open Space Technology event near Seattle: http://www.collectivewisdominitiative.org/papers/stadler_reflections.htm

The nuclear phoenix image inspired some of what Anne and I spoke about. I video taped most of her reflections, which I hope to make available at a future date.

The interesting thing about the Internet was that it was created to survive a nuclear holocaust. The Internet is designed to be multiply redundant and decentralized so that information can be automatically rerouted, even if massive segments fail.

I recall many nuclear explosion nightmares from the 1980's onward when I was old enough to really understand the annihilation we were facing. In many ways, that threat is still there, though perhaps morphed into financial collapse, climate catastrophe, and a technological robotics nightmare apocalypse. Or maybe just completely losing any sense of knowing what comes next.

In some ways, I wonder about Open Space Technology being a child of the Cold War, and having a similar level of redundancy and resilience as the Internet. And being able to help us through this global civilization passage rite (thank you Daniel Mezick for that understanding!)

But I think Paul may be on to something. If we burned all our OSList records, I sense indeed that Open Space would very much rise again like a Phoenix. Perhaps we can metaphorically do so - without actually encouraging barbarian hoards and similar groups that burned the ancient libraries in Alexandria, or torched Willhelm Reich's research studies in the 1950's, etc.

Paul's musings on remaking Open Space Technology fresh and new inspires me greatly - and I believe his thinking will be very much part of the next phase of Open Space. Highly recommend folks check him out! https://rationalmadness.wordpress.com/treasures/open-space-realm/

    Harold
<http://www.collectivewisdominitiative.org/papers/stadler_reflections.htm>
On 3/25/15 2:49 PM, paul levy wrote:
Am I the only one who thinks we should burn the whole lot and make a Phoenix ?

Yours

Paul

On Tuesday, 24 March 2015, Harold Shinsato via OSList <oslist@lists.openspacetech.org <mailto:oslist@lists.openspacetech.org>> wrote:

    Wow, can't believe I'm finally reporting success. The messages are
    all there and searchable. And it seems linkable. But the index
    only goes back 3000 messages. So you need to use the search if you
    want older messages. Below is more explanation, and a link back to
    the first 1996 OSLIST messages.

          Regards,
          Harold


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