Thanks Suzanne…this brings to mind another paradox that is important to me and 
from which I have carried out many years of my experimenting and research. ‘The 
good news is that OST always works. The bad news is that OST always works.’

 

Warmly,

Birgitt

 

From: Suzanne Daigle [mailto:sdaig...@gmail.com] 
Sent: Monday, March 14, 2016 8:18 PM
To: Birgitt Williams; World wide Open Space Technology email list
Cc: Michael Herman; Tony Budak
Subject: Re: [OSList] embracing paradox as a leadership competency

 

Dear Birgitt, 
You captured in such a beautiful way what I savor about open space and life. A 
journey of continuing exploration that is as you've described it. 
Thank you!!
Suzanne

On Mar 14, 2016 9:58 AM, "Birgitt Williams via OSList" 
<oslist@lists.openspacetech.org> wrote:

Thanks Michael, Tony, Daniel, Skye, and Marie,

Great contributions. Thank you. I appreciated the images of oscillating, of 
pulsing and of breathing in describing embracing paradox. I felt that 
oscillating and pulsing reflect my experience of sequential handling of 
paradoxical concepts, experiences etc with the oscillation increasing in 
frequency until it is no longer apparent. Michael…thank you for reminding us of 
the breath, one of the essential components that as facilitators we draw 
attention to in an OST meeting. There is the in-breath, the out-breath, and the 
relax or stillpoint or fulcrum point between the two actions that reflects that 
state of being in between two opposite actions. I feel it is worthy and also 
can be great fun as facilitators to explore what I think of as paradox and the 
competency to be in that stillpoint and what Michael refers to as mutuality and 
Harrison refers to as open space, seeming variations of the same concept.

 

Some of the paradoxes of working with OST that come to mind for me in my 
current moment of contemplation about the importance of facilitators of OST 
growing their leadership competence with paradox:

 

 

~the experience of being in an OST meeting and the experience post-OST meeting 
in the organization especially in organizations mandated with lots of 
regulatory mechanisms

~the experience of the facilitator as highly controlling during the opening to 
facilitate the opening of space for important conversations immediately 
followed by being extremely detached while people self lead and self manage

~being fully present and fully invisible simultaneously

 

With appreciation for the wisdom showing up,

Birgitt

 

From: OSList [mailto:oslist-boun...@lists.openspacetech.org] On Behalf Of 
Michael Herman via OSList
Sent: Sunday, March 13, 2016 1:22 PM
To: Tony Budak; World wide Open Space Technology email list
Subject: Re: [OSList] embracing paradox as a leadership competency

 

thanks for starting this, birgitt.

 

first, because i know words matter to you, i want to suggest an alternative to 
"paradox," which is about apparently conflicting statements or ideas.  i would 
broaden it to distinct or even opposing experiences, ways of being.  i want to 
offer the word "mutuality" which describes what we can practice in these 
moments of apparent conflict.  and the beginning of this practice is pulsation, 
which i think is this sequencing you describe.  

 

we talk a lot about circle in this community, and marketplace and bulletin 
board.  harrison's fourth mechanism, breathing, or what i often generalize to 
pulsation, or in agile circles, to iteration gets little attention, but is no 
less important.  

 

i learned the practice of "mutuality" sitting with a partner, pulsing awareness 
between noticing all of the sensations that let me know that i AM and being 
aware that the person sitting in front of me also IS.  we practiced pulsing 
back and forth, noticing self and other, until it became normal to be aware of 
both as distinct AND as one, simultaneously, paradoxically.  in this way, i 
came to understand mutuality as a way of being with someone, or some group, or 
otherwise holding-without-collapsing apparently opposite experiences or 
positions.  

 

i think this sense of mutuality, of being separate and one, simultaneously, is 
what we are inviting everyone to practice when we facilitate open space 
meetings.  for me, the four principles (nobody's in charge) and law of two feet 
(you can go wherever you need to) are held mutually.  learning and contributing 
-- how often and quickly groups learn that bringing a question for their own 
learning ends up being simultaneously a contribution to the whole group -- 
leading by following, i think.  inside and outside.  sellers and customers.  
individual and community.  plenary and breakouts -- these happen in apparent 
pulsation, and then how often is it that everyone discovers that while in so 
many breakouts and side conversations, they've all been talking about the same 
issues?  one and many, simultaneously.  in so many ways we invite people to 
pulse awareness between distinct or even opposing points, while holding both as 
real.  

 

i've heard a tibetan description of this as the experience/practice of taking 
in the vastness of the starry sky at night and still being able to hear the dog 
barking at the bottom of hill.  i've also heard the tibetan sense of 
"mutuality" translated as "equalizing and exchanging self and others."  both of 
these images fit my experience of opening space and ost.

 

and when we practice in this way, the result is the spontaneous arising of the 
compassion, love, freedom, and joy.  that is, the wish for others to not 
suffer, for things to go well for them, self-direction and -organization, and a 
gratitude and delight in what is.  now substitute problem solving for not 
suffering, achievement for things going well, empowerment and thank you, and it 
sounds a lot like open space, again.

 

the law of two feet tosses OS participants into a pulsation between what's 
happening in the room and what's happening in their own bodies and minds.  this 
can be in conflict, or paradoxical, but it's always simultaneous.  we ask them 
to maximize learning and contribution, taking in and giving into.  in every 
single moment, as often as each one of them can manage to notice it, they have 
a choice between staying and going.  

 

i believe this is the core of what we do as leaders and facilitators and what 
our practice naturally and automatically, implicitly, invites participants 
into. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 




 
--

Michael Herman
Michael Herman Associates

312-280-7838 (mobile)

 

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

 

 

On Sat, Mar 12, 2016 at 7:34 PM, Tony Budak via OSList 
<oslist@lists.openspacetech.org> wrote:

Here is an extract from  
<http://timebankswork.net/tiki/tiki-download_file.php?fileId=10> "Is leadership 
only for heroes?",  by Zoe van Zwanenberg

"The work of leadership
In our drive to provide simple answers with clear deliverable outcomes for 
complex problems we have latched on to the notion that strong, effective 
leaders are what will make the difference.

Current belief is that the work of leadership is to define not just what needs 
to be done but how it will be done and by whom in a defined linear format. In 
this model the work of leadership is to be all knowing and to take the blame 
when things do not work out in accordance with the master plan.

The certainty that this type of leadership provides should then enable us to 
see our way out of the complex mix of dilemmas and relationships that face us. 
This seems to presume a straight line of cause and effect and also a simplicity 
of relationships between problems and solutions that our everyday experience of 
the world would deny.

It is also based on a very simple and value laden model of leadership – that of 
the leader/hero who provides direction, goals, standards and behaviors that all 
can follow.

If the work of leadership is to provide answers, then we are resigning 
ourselves to being a dependent community of followers yet reserving the right 
to sacrifice the leader when the answers do not address the real problem or 
prove unacceptable."

Click here for the short article 
<http://timebankswork.net/tiki/tiki-download_file.php?fileId=10> 

 

On 3/10/2016 9:21 AM, Birgitt Williams via OSList wrote:

Dear Friends and Colleagues,

Facilitators, change agents, consultants, coaches, moderators and trainers, in 
my experience, struggle with their role and power as leaders. Years ago, I 
learned a lot from the late Angeles Arrien about the power of leadership: the 
power of position, the power of influence, the power of communication. In our 
roles especially as outsiders to an organization and to the lives of the people 
involved, we have all three of these powers. I have been active in my pursuit 
of understanding leadership since I was fifteen and catapulted into leadership 
positions that I may or may not have been ready for, despite what the adults 
around me might have believed.

In recent years, one of the leadership competencies that has grown and expanded 
in me is the ability to embrace paradox, to simultaneously hold two seemingly 
opposing views or emotions, with both being valid for me. For example, I can 
recognize in myself to be in extreme gratitude for something simultaneous to 
feeling extreme anger…containing both emotions simultaneously, not 
sequentially. I have come to understand how important this is as a leadership 
competency, and I write about it on this list as I feel it is a most valuable 
competency for facilitators of OST. I remember way back when Harrison teaching 
about OST assisting the people in a system working with both chaos and order. I 
was fascinated by this topic. And yet, today, I admit that as I learned about 
chaos and order, I seemed to have an internal picture of one, then the other, 
then the other, kind of like a teeter totter with possibly some kind of balance 
point at the fulcrum. As I expanded my capacity to handle paradox, I was able 
to genuinely grasp chaos and order both existing simultaneously.

 

In understanding and working with OST, I think it is important to embrace 
paradox and to expand our personal capacity to handle paradox in even very 
stress filled situations. For example, a paradox that we end up contending with 
is that everything is open space, and Open Space Technology is a tool. What is 
the benefit of grasping this paradox, you might ask? If I approach OST as a 
tool from the simultaneous perspective of ‘everything is open space’, I am 
going to influence different outcomes than if I approach working with OST only 
as a tool. 

 

I wrote about embracing paradox recently, so you can see I am feeling deep 
interest in this topic at the moment 
http://www.dalarinternational.com/the-power-of-limits. What are your thoughts 
about ourselves as leaders? What are your thoughts about the importance of 
expanding personal leadership competency with embracing paradox? Or maybe, in 
working with OST you are currently developing other leadership competencies? I 
am interested to see if anyone has interest in showing up to this topic.

 

With blessings,

Birgitt

 

Birgitt Williams

 

President & Senior Consultant of Dalar International Consultancy, Inc. 

 <http://www.dalarinternational.com/> http://www.dalarinternational.com 

Co-founder of the Extraordinary Leadership Network 
http://www.extraordinaryleadershipnetwork.com

Co-founder of the Genuine Contact™program and author of The Genuine Contact 
Way: Nourishing a Culture of Leadership  http://www.genuinecontactway.com       
            

Co-owner of the Genuine Contact Co-owners Group Ltd. 
http://www.genuinecontact.net

 

Supporting leadership development for leading in a culture requiring agility 
and flexibility in a performance environment of constant change.

 

Leadership development at your own pace? Become a member of the Extraordinary 
Leadership Network http://www.extraordinaryleadershipnetwork.com to participate 
in an online leadership development program designed to increase your 
leadership skills and capacity. 

 

PO Box 19373, Raleigh, North Carolina, USA 27619

phone: 1-919-522-7750

    

 

 

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-- 
Regards,
Tony Budak <http://www.linkedin.com/in/tonybudak> 
 <http://tbmw.org/> 


Time Bank Mahoning Watershed <http://tbmw.org/>  
mobile: 330-716-2722 | Skype: tony.budak1
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