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BM31_BILBAO: Mind mapping - Open Space Technology - Creativity flowandshow@gmail.com

Wednesday, December 9, 2015

On Harrison Owen´s 80th birthday

From Jeff Aitken via OSList <oslist@lists.openspacetech.org>




This fun and touching poem for Harrison was just put on Facebook by Rodney B. Plimpton. Enjoy.
"A few old time friends gathered in DC to celebrate Harrison's 80th last week, and toasted him with this:  

To Harrison H. Owen on his 80th Birthday

On December Second, Nineteen Thirty Five,
Harrison Owen did arrive.
No way that his parents could have known,
The fruits of the seeds that they had sown.
Early on he seemed a normal boy,
Though he preferred catching skunks to playing with toys.
But then Seminary, a stint as a biblical scholar?
Clearly not chasing the Almighty Dollar!
Community Organizer, way down in Dixie;
Peace Corps in Liberia, where things were quite tricxy.
Then back to DC, NIH, and VA;
A strange game indeed, that he chose to play.
Biblical Studies and Bureaucracy in the heart of the Nation
Combined in his head as Organizational Transformation!
After hosting some conferences that were way too much work,
He woke up one day, and said “I’m such a jerk!;
While agendas and details all keep me awake
The things people come for are good coffee breaks!”

From that realization, however belated,
His famed Open Space soon was created
From a simple experiment, thirty years ago,
The phenomenon has continued to grow
Now, thirty years, and nine books later,
It’s world-wide success could not be greater.
Self-Organization is at its’ core,
But Harrison’s message says so much more:
We’ve all been taught that Management’s Role
Is to Plan, Organize, Direct, and Control –
That’s all wrong, said this radical boy
Envision, Engage, Empower, Enjoy!The paradox is -- by controlling the least
You get both High Performance and a true sense of Peace.
Results speak for themselves, and by any measure,
Harrison’s thinking has become a World Treasure.
But what of the man whom we know as our neighbor;
Modest, laid back, full of stories to savor?
On high seas he commands the Ethelyn Rose,
But on land who commands nobody knows!
One thing is for certain, we love and adore
This world-famous guru -- our good friend next door.
Congratulations, Harrison, on your 80th; you done good."

**************

Suzanne Daigle via OSList <oslist@lists.openspacetech.org>

abe. 3 (Duela 6 egun)
Helbide honetara: OSLIST
Hi Everyone, 

It's hard to tell how many people popped in yesterday -- 40, 50, 60 or more!!  Sometimes we just saw their names, other times their voices and their faces. It was a wild wonderful ride, a technology adventure of the best kind. Lucas Cioffi ever so dedicated who conceived QiQoChat which created the dream that it would be possible for us to meet in a big house cannot be thanked enough. Fate conspired against us not because of QiQo but because of concurrent tech upgrades that messed us up. Not to worry, all was calm and between Lucas, Michael Herman and I and with the joint participation of all who came, we truly had a blast. We always knew this was an experiment and experiment it was. The possibilities are truly heartwarming.  Many wave riding days ahead!

There were serious topics and serious conversations, lots of hearty laughter, delighted outcries as people joined and others so pleased to meet f2f (virtually) for the very first time. You could feel the affection and interestingly enough, everyone started talking as if they'd known each other forever, because that's truly how it feels when we are part of this Open Space worldwide community.

Harrison with his usual and wonderful aplomb kept the conversation going as we settled into our tech challenges. There were some teary eyed moments as people described what Open Space meant to them and how grateful they were to Harrison.  We even sang a global Happy Birthday, a bit difficult to get all our words coordinated but that was the fun of it all. 

We had a few breaks during the day not many as one stray person after another would arrive on camera. Two by two's talking then suddenly there were three, four, five and more. Always the conversations flowed to invite and include, self-organization as its best. 

It's what a birthday party should be, a mix of everything, over meals and favorite spirits (yes we saw a beer, a glass of wine or two and martinis yes... from Russia) with a slight difference that it was from the comfort of our own homes or offices wherever we happened to be. 

Here is a rough picture album pulled together from computer screen shots. As you scroll down with your mouse, notice how the captions pop up to describe some of the antics of the day. You'll see how late at night Kari from Iceland came joining  Alan Stewart  in Australia who then greeted John Engle from Haiti and his daughter lying on her bed behind him. Seems Alan babysat the Engle kids a long time ago in San Francisco.  Yes many precious memories!

Thank you everyone for making this drop in global party magical. We have much to celebrate from these past 30 years  in Open Space and much to appreciate from the man in a hat, Harrison Owen who celebrated his 80 years.  

Please if you can, do consider joining us at International House in New York where Harrison and Karen Davis, with the help of OSI US, will be hosting their Open Space gathering on High Performance and the Practice of Peace. A great crew of folks have confirmed already. This experiential learning has been going on for 20 years or so and indeed in that time, many have been inspired to open space all over the world after spending three days (used to be 4 days) there. 

Thank you all so much,

From your co-hosts -  Suzanne, Lucas, Michael and the wonderful Anne Stadler who is facilitating an Open Space in India as we speak.

@Eleder_BuM
Publicado por BM31 en 4:17 AM No comments:
Etiquetas: Harrison Owen, Lucas Cioffi, Open Space, OSLIST, poem, Qiqochat, Suzanne Daigle

Wednesday, November 18, 2015

Lifeline (Ben Harper)


Life is much too short to sit and wonder
Who's gonna make the next move and will slowly pull you under when you've always got something to prove?

I don't want to wait a lifetime
Yours or mine, yours or mine
Can't you see me reaching for the lifeline?

You say that I misheard you but I think you misspoke
I hear you laugh so loudly while I patiently await the joke

I don't want to wait a lifetime
Yours or mine, yours or mine
Can't you see me reaching for the lifeline?
The lifeline, the lifeline

It's a crime with only victims
We're all laid out in a row
It's hardest to listen to what we already should know

I could hold out for a lifetime
Yours or mine, yours or mine
Can't you see me reaching for your lifeline?
The lifeline, your lifeline, the lifeline
source http://www.azlyrics.com/ 
@Eleder_BuM
Publicado por BM31 en 12:44 AM No comments:
Etiquetas: Ben Harper, life, Lifeline, songs, video

One Sunday morning (Wilco, Song for Jane Smiley's Boyfriend)


This is how I tell him
Oh, but it's long
One Sunday Morning
Oh, one son is gone.
I can see where it's dawning
Over the sea
My father said what I had become
No one should be.
Outside I look lived in
Like bones in a shrine
How am I forgiven?
Oh I'll give it time.
In silence without warning
Holding my brow
In time he thought I'd kill him
But I didn't know how.
I said it's your God I don't believe in
No, your Bible can't be true
Knocked down by the long life
He cried out, I fear what waits for you.
I can hear those bells
Spoken and gone
I feel if I feel well
Now he knows he was wrong.
I am cold for my father
Frozen underground
Jesus I wouldn't bother
He belongs to me now.
Something sad keeps moving
So I wandered around.
I fell in love with the burden
Holding me down.
Bless my mind, I miss
Being told how to live.
What I learned without knowing
How much more I owe
Than I can give.
This is how I tell him
Oh, but it's wrong
One Sunday morning
One son is gone
(source: http://www.lyricsmode.com)

Gorgeous! Arrazoi dozu, Ane Txispi, temazo!!! Bai plazerra atzo Berbaz :)!

Bizi! Enjoy life!

@Eleder_BuM

Publicado por BM31 en 12:01 AM No comments:
Etiquetas: family, lyrics, relationships, songs, Wilco

Friday, November 6, 2015

Dan Ariely: irrationality and work


Conférence TED avec Dan Ariely sur la motivation au travail
from Le Manager Urbain on Vimeo.
@Eleder_BuMDuela 8 minutu
Duela 8 minutu
Very interesting research on #BeharviorialEconomics+#Irrationality by creative @DanAriely in original books+videos http://danariely.com/videos/#TOC22 
@Eleder_BuM  

Publicado por BM31 en 1:28 AM No comments:
Etiquetas: behavioral economics, Dan Ariely, happiness, irrationality, psychology, video, work

Tuesday, October 20, 2015

No time for love (Christie Moore)



You call it the law, we call it apartheid, internment, 
Conscription, partition and silence.
It's the law that they make to keep you and me where
They think we belong.
The hide behind steel and bullet-proof glass, machine
Guns and spies, 
And tell us who suffer the tear gas and the torture
That we're in the wrong.

CHORUS

No time for love if they come in the morning, 
No time to show tears or for fears in the morning, 
No time for goodbye, no time to ask why, 
And the sound of the siren's the cry of the morning.

They suffered the torture they rotted in cells, went
Crazy, wrote letters and died.
The limits of pain they endured - the loneliness got
Them instead.
And the courts gave them justice as justice is given by
Well-mannered thugs.
Sometimes they fought for the will to survive but more
Times they just wished they were dead.

CHORUS

They took away Sacco, Vanzetti, Connolly and Pearce in

Their time.
They came for Newton and Seal, Bobby Sands and some of
His friends.
In Boston, Chicago, Saigon, Santiago, Warsaw and
Belfast, 
And places that never make headlines, the list never
Ends.

CHORUS

The boys in blue are only a few of the everyday cops on
The beat, 
The C.I.D., Branchmen, informers and spies do their
Jobs just as well; 
Behind them the men who tap phones, take photos, 
Program computers and files, 
And the man who tells them when to come and take you to
Your cell.

CHORUS

All of you people who give to your sisters and brothers
The will to fight on, 
They say you can get used to a war, that doesn't mean
That the war isn't on.
The fish need the sea to survive, just like your people
Need you.
And the death squad can only get through to them if
First they can get through to you. 

CHORUS


Basque version of this great song by Hetzainak follows:


@Eleder_BuM   
Publicado por BM31 en 1:56 AM No comments:
Etiquetas: Christie Moore, Hertzainak, lyrics, music, peace, songs, video

Wednesday, September 30, 2015

Limestone Permaculture Farm


A tour of Limestone Permaculture Farm in New South Wales, Australia. 
The 1 acre property has been developed into a productive permaculture farm
that is currently feeding around 50 families. 
The tour includes a look at the orchard, caravan farm gate, chicken and duck areas, and the shade house.
Website: http://jordanosmond.comLimestone Permaculture Farm: http://www.limestonepermaculture.com

Enjoy life!

@Eleder_BuM   


Publicado por BM31 en 11:29 PM No comments:
Etiquetas: Brett Cooper, Jordan Osmond, permaculture, stories, video

Thursday, September 17, 2015

Original Play (Fred Donaldson)


Back from Wosonos 2015 in Krakow, this was one of the big gifts there, knowing about Original Play. Is there a key on the proportion kids/adults?

Thanks Agata!

Love,

@Eleder_BuM
Publicado por BM31 en 4:52 AM No comments:
Etiquetas: creativity, Fred Donaldson, love, Loveolution, Original Play, play, video, WOSONOS

Sunday, June 7, 2015

Love yourself

Enjoy life!

@Eleder_BuM
Publicado por BM31 en 11:59 PM No comments:
Etiquetas: images, love, Loveolution

Tuesday, June 2, 2015

Lookin' Out My Back Door (Creedence Clearwater Revival)


Just got home from Illinois lock the front door oh boy!
Got to sit down take a rest on the porch.
Imagination sets in pretty soon I'm singin'
Doo doo doo lookin' out my back door.
There's a giant doing cartwheels, a statue wearin' high heels.
Look at all the happy creatures dancing on the lawn.
A dinosaur Victrola list'ning to Buck Owens.
Doo doo doo lookin' out my back door.
Tambourines and elephants are playing in the band.
Won't you take a ride on the flyin' spoon?
Doo doo doo.
Wond'rous apparition provided by magician.
Doo doo doo lookin' out my back door.
Tambourines and elephants are playing in the band.
Won't you take a ride on the flyin' spoon?
Doo doo doo.
Bother me tomorrow, today, I'll buy no sorrows.
Doo doo doo lookin' out my back door.
Forward troubles Illinois, lock the front door oh boy!
Look at all the happy creatures dancing on the lawn.
Bother me tomorrow, today, I'll buy no sorrows.
Doo doo doo lookin' out my back door.

About Lookin' Out My Back Door in Wikipedia,

From the comments (often, the most interesting part :-) on 10 Songs That Will INSTANTLY Put You In A Good Mood and part two here.

Enjoy life!

@Eleder_BuM
Publicado por BM31 en 12:00 AM No comments:
Etiquetas: CCR, Creedence Clearwater Revival, happiness, lyrics, music, songs, video

Thursday, May 21, 2015

All I really need to know...


ALL I REALLY NEED TO KNOW I LEARNED IN KINDERGARTEN (a guide for Global Leadership)All I really need to know about how to live and what to do and how to be I learned in kindergarten. Wisdom was not at the top of the graduate school mountain, but there in the sand pile at school.These are the things I learned:
  • Share everything.
  • Play fair.
  • Don't hit people.
  • Put things back where you found them.
  • Clean up your own mess.
  • Don't take things that aren't yours.
  • Say you're sorry when you hurt somebody.
  • Wash your hands before you eat.
  • Flush.
  • Warm cookies and cold milk are good for you.
  • Live a balanced life - learn some and think some and draw and paint and sing and dance and play and work every day some.
  • Take a nap every afternoon.
  • When you go out in the world, watch out for traffic, hold hands and stick together.
  • Be aware of wonder. Remember the little seed in the Styrofoam cup: the roots go down and the plant goes up and nobody really knows how or why, but we are all like that.
  • Goldfish and hamsters and white mice and even the little seed in the Styrofoam cup - they all die. So do we.
  • And then remember the Dick-and-Jane books and the first word you learned - the biggest word of all - LOOK.
Everything you need to know is in there somewhere. The Golden Rule and love and basic sanitation. Ecology and politics and equality and sane living.
Take any one of those items and extrapolate it into sophisticated adult terms and apply it to your family life or your work or government or your world and it holds true and clear and firm. Think what a better world it would be if we all - the whole world - had cookies and milk at about 3 o'clock in the afternoon and then lay down with our blankies for a nap. Or if all governments had as a basic policy to always put things back where they found them and to clean up their own mess.
And it is still true, no matter how old you are, when you go out in the world, it is best to hold hands and stick together.

[Source: "ALL I REALLY NEED TO KNOW I LEARNED IN KINDERGARTEN" by Robert Fulghum.  See his web site at http://www.robertfulghum.com]

************************************************************

Stephanie M. Echeveste´s (a friend I met during her stage in Bilbao, some years ago, whose passion finds place in Etxe) message reminded me writes in a message of these sage words by Robert Fulghum

"...But maybe, instead of giving general change-the-world advice, we could give new graduates slightly more specific advice--like...
  • find out what moves you, 
  • try out everything until you get lost in it,
  • think about what you do and why do you do it before you say yes to a paycheck. 
  • Figure out how to be a good friend, a good sibling, a good daughter/son, and don't forget what that feels like.
  • Practice staying in touch with people you care about. 
  • Notice what makes you laugh and don't let yourself wake up another day feeling less than ecstatic. 
  • Learn how to be alone. 
  • Work at being the best at what makes you most happy, and then, once you get there, look around. 
You're probably out in the world. Doing what you love. Making it a better place."
Thanks Steph, Robert and best wishes for all!

@Eleder_BuM    
www.burumapak.blogspot.com  www.flowandshow.blogspot.com  
http://in-fluyendo.blogspot.com.es
www.bilbohiria.com/irratsaioak/berbaz
Publicado por BM31 en 12:03 AM No comments:
Etiquetas: All I really need to know, manifesto, Robert Fulghum, Stephanie Etxebeste, wisdom

Monday, May 11, 2015

What we " do" is just a joke

(Harrison Owen tells on the OSLIST this funny story on the origin of the "T" for Technology in the name Open Space Technology)

It was 1989 in Bombay (now Mumbai). My friend and colleague, one V.S. Mahesh, a senior member of the Tata Administrative Service Corps, had invited me to do a series of lectures, in addition to an Open Space conference in Goa. How could I resist?
 At the conclusion of the several programs, Mahesh convened a press conference for the business reporters of India. This was rather a formal event, and in the way of such things in India, Mahesh’s introduction of myself seemed to go on forever. He covered my CV in detail, including articles and activities I had forgotten, one of which was a review of a colleague’s book entitled, “Global Management Principles.” This 725 page monster described the work of 4 management theorists under such headings as, “Primal Management,” “Developmental Management,” – and last,  “Metaphysical Management,”  ...and that was me. As Mahesh drew to a heart stopping close, he said... It is my pleasure to introduce Harrison Owen  ... and Harrison will you please explain to the gentlemen of the press what you mean by Metaphysical Management and Open Space...Technology. And he sat down. I think I could have shot him. “Metaphysical Management” was the invention of a colleague. I think I know what he was getting at, but it surely would not have been my choice of wording. As for Open Space Technology, that was, I do believe, Mahesh’s invention. “Open Space,” I admit to... as for “Technology” – I can only think that Mahesh got on a roll. “Metaphysical Management” was pretty cool. But “Open Space” was a little weak. Needed a tweak.  “Technology” might just make it into the titles of the next day’s articles. Mahesh was right. The Press took the bait. And we have been stuck with it ever since. So that’s the story... as best as I can tell it. But I think there is a moral. If we ever take what we are doing too seriously, we are definitely in trouble. What we “do” is really a joke. Truthfully, it all happens by itself. We just take naps... if we are smart. Harrison

Thanks, Dan, for opening the space with your questions! 
Publicado por BM31 en 11:34 PM No comments:
Etiquetas: Harrison Owen, joke, life, nap, Open Space, OSLIST, self-organization, stories

Bruce Lee and Open Space (sent to OSLIST by Dan Mezick)

(Interesting message from Dan Mezick just picked on the oslist)

Greetings All,

I am reading a book [Bruce Lee: Artist Of Life] and some of the things he is saying are strikingly resonant with OST. 

In some spots he seems to be speaking quite directly about it specifically. 

I plan to post more quotes here soon, and for now I offer these for your consideration: 

Page 3
"[the principle] is not a thing that can be learned, like a science, by fact-finding or instruction in facts. It has to grow spontaneously, like a flower, in a mind free of desires and emotions. The core of this principle is ... the spontaneity of the universe."
Page 18
"[the discipline] values the wonder of the ordinary, and the idea is not daily increase, but daily decrease."
Page 19
"Being wise in [the discipline] does not mean adding more but being able to remove sophistication and ornamentation and simply simple- like a sculptor building a statue not by adding but by hacking away the unessential so that the truth will be revealed unobstructed."

Page 121
"Learn the principles, abide by the principles, then dissolve the principles. In short, enter a mold without being caged in it, and obey the principles without be bound by them."
Page 120
One should respond to circumstances without artificial and "wooden" prearrangement. One's action should be like the immediacy of a shadow adapting to a moving object. One's task is simply to compete the other half of the "oneness" spontaneously."
Page 97
"It is useless to try to stir the dirt out of the muddy water, as it will become murkier. But leave it alone, and if it should be cleared, it will become clear by itself."
Page 80
"If you understand the situation you are in, and let the situation that you are in control your actions, then you learn how to cope with life."
Page 72:
"The meaning of life is that it is to be lived, and it is not to be traded and conceptualized into a pattern of systems. We realize that manipulation and control are not the ultimate joy of life- to become real, to learn to take a stand, to develop one's center, to support our total personality, a release to spontaneity- yes, yes, yes."
Page 74:
"...our life is basically practically nothing but an infinite number of unfinished situations- incomplete gestalts. No sooner have we finished one situation than another one comes up."
Page 121:
"When one has no forms, one can be all forms, when one has no style, one can fit with any style."
"In primary freedom one uses all ways and is bound by none, and likewise one uses any technique or means that serves one's end. Efficiency is anything that [achieves the goal.] 
"When you perceive the truth of [the discipline,] you are at the undifferentiated center of a circle that has no circumference."
Page 123
"True observation begins when one is devoid of set patterns; freedom of expression occurs when one is beyond system."
Page 124
"If we honestly look at the nature of combat as it actually is, I am sure we cannot help but notice that a 'style' tends to bring about adjustment, partiality, denials, condemnation and a lot of justification. In short, the solution being offered is the very cause of the problem, placing limitations and obstacles on our natural growth and consequently obstructing the way to genuine understanding."
Page 126
Any structure, however efficiently designed, becomes a cage if the practitioner is obsessed with it."

--- 
Daniel Mezick, President
New Technology Solutions Inc.
Publicado por BM31 en 2:25 AM No comments:
Etiquetas: Bruce Lee, Daniel Mezick, discipline, Open Space, OSLIST, Principles

Wednesday, April 15, 2015

Edna O´Brien: you have to be lonely to be a writer



@Eleder_BuM
Publicado por BM31 en 2:29 AM No comments:
Etiquetas: biography, courage, creativity, Edna O´Brien, interviews, Ireland, video, women, writers

Monday, March 23, 2015

Prime-OS (Danie Mezick)

Dan Mezick shares on the OSLIST:
From: OSList [mailto:oslist-bounces@lists.openspacetech.org] On Behalf Of Daniel Mezick via OSList
Sent: 16 March 2015 20:01
To: oslist@lists.openspacetech.org
Subject: [OSList] Agile-in-OpenSpace videos

Greetings,

Find below 15-minute videos of software industry executive Frank Tino, explaining his org's journey through Open Space on the way to a genuine, rapid, lasting, enterprise-wide, "scaled" Agile adoption. 

Frank's 100-person company (now 150++ just one year layer) authorized several full-day before/after Open Space events. In between there was 100 days of experimentation and learning in between those gatherings. In these videos he explains the astonishing results obtained in just 100 days...

...Open Space is now part of the cultural fabric of his entire organization. And the coaches are GONE.




Is Open Agile Adoption something completely new? Well yes, it is actually. Thanks for asking! Explained here:

Open Agile Adoption Theory and Components
http://openagileadoption.com/open-agile-adoption-components/




Here's the links to those executive videos:
http://openagileadoption.com/open-agile-adoption-videos/

PART1: 15 mins
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eWjNQM7q64o 
PART2: 15 mins
http://youtu.be/UdSmGS9JTtU
PART3: 15 mins
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T9cpRPlLHYU


Open Agile Adoption (OAA) is a new composition of powerful elements that work together to strongly encourage positive cultural change in organizations. Open Agile Adoption incorporates the power of invitation, Open Space, game mechanics, passage rites, storytelling and more…so your Agile adoption can actually take root. 

OAA is based on people, THEN practices. You can introduce any practice or framework with it. Open Agile Adoption is based on Prime-OS which is social technology published under an open-source, free-to-the-world ("free culture") license from Creative Commons. 

www.OpenAgileAdoption.com
www.Prime-OS.com

Daniel Mezick, President
New Technology Solutions Inc.
(203) 915 7248 (cell)
Bio. Blog. Twitter. 
Examine my new book:  The Culture Game : Tools for the Agile Manager.
Explore Agile Team Training and Coaching.
Explore the Agile Boston Community. 
Daniel Mezick, President
New Technology Solutions Inc.

Product Development Director Frank Tino discusses his experience bringing Agile to a software development organization of 100 people using Open Agile Adoption. Part 2 of 3.





Enjoy life!

Eleder
Publicado por BM31 en 6:16 AM No comments:
Etiquetas: Dan Mezick, Frank Tino, Open Space, OSLIST, videos

Wednesday, March 11, 2015

My way (Nina Simone, Paul Anka,...)



And now, the end is here
And so I face the final curtain
My friend, I'll say it clear
I'll state my case, of which I'm certain
I've lived a life that's fullI traveled each and ev'ry highway
And more, much more than this, I did it my way

Regrets, I've had a few
But then again, too few to mention
I did what I had to do
and saw it through without exemption
I planned each charted course,
each careful step along the byway 
But more, much more than this, I did it my way 

Yes, there were times, I'm sure you knew
When I bit off more than I could chew
But through it all, when there was doubt
I ate it up and spit it out
I faced it all and I stood tall and did it my way

I've loved, I've laughed and cried
I've had my fill, my share of losing
And now, as tears subside, I find it all so amusing
To think I did all that
And may I say, not in a shy way,
"Oh, no, oh, no, not me, I did it my way"

For what is a man, what has he got?
If not himself, then he has naught
To say the things he truly feels
and not the words of one who kneels
The record shows I took the blows and did it my way!
Yes, it was my way

Enjoy life, the huge gift!
Eleder

Publicado por BM31 en 12:39 AM No comments:
Etiquetas: life, lifestyles, Paul Anka, songs, video

Tuesday, February 17, 2015

And a liitle child

Nice Open Space story by Diana Larsen on the OSLIST






Hi all,
Last week, we held the 7th annual Agile Open Northwest conference in Portland Oregon.
The Facts: Theme: Agile Vision for Agile Practitioners
Duration: 2.5+ days (+ represents holding the closing activities after lunch on the third day)
Registration: 246 people registered including organizers, volunteers, sponsor representatives, attendees, etc.
Circle Set-up: 3 concentric rows (inner 60, middle 70, outer 80) about 60-70 ft (~ 20 m) in diameter
Attending: ~190 people sat in Opening Circle, others drifted in (or out) over the course of the event, only a dozen badges had not been claimed by the end of the conference.
Marketplace: We posted sessions one day at a time over the three days.
Session times: 16 over three days - 6 on Day 1, 7 on Day 2, 3 on Day 3
Sessions possible: 208 + more outside pre-arranged times or spaces
Sessions held: ~140
Session spaces: 13 (9-11 were filled during any one session time, fewer in the evenings and early morning)
Session length: 60 minutes + 10 minutes to move between sessions
Location: http://leftbankannex.com Converted aeronautic machined-parts manufacturing shop, 14,000 sq ft on  two floors with a mezzanine. Lots of concrete, metal, windows, and vast empty space repurposed for events. Very industrial chic and highly configurable. The event coming in the day after ours was a huge Bar Mitzvah.
Experiments: We tried it with a “crew” of OS facilitators, so everyone could attend sessions, secure in the knowledge that someone(s) somewhere was attending to the space holding needs. It mostly worked, there are a few aspects of this I’d change. Harold Shinsato was one of the crew members. He may have more to say (or not).
My role: Organizer of the OS crew, participant, bumblebee, butterfly, board member.
The best part: On the last day, I brought my 4-year-old grand-daughter, T. She had been on the exploratory visit last fall when the co-chairs chose the facility, and I thought she’d like to see it all decked out for the event. Also, her Mom needed time to do a few things that are made difficult with a 4 y/o in tow. I feel blessed that I knew bringing her wouldn’t cause a moment’s concern to any of the other board members, chairs, or organizers. What a great community!
T was interested and a little overwhelmed. I’m not sure she’s ever been with such a large group before. She spent most of the day shyly curious and quietly observing, getting her bearings. The buffet breakfast was a treat for he, so the day started well. She sat intent through "morning announcements” as member of the OS crew welcomed everyone to the third day and facilitated additions to the marketplace. She attended three sessions and butterflied during the two session times before lunch.
She was fascinated by the lunch break with many tables of 8 people locked in deep discussions. “What are those people doing?”  We explained the delight of being able to talk about something you care about with other people who care as deeply…people that you might not otherwise see often. T considered this for a moment, then nodded her affirmation.
We moved to the closing. She and i found chairs in the circle, as a facilitator started it off, asking about sessions attended, giving participants time to announce actions going forward, etc. Toward the end, I asked her father to come sit with her. I needed to move into a different place in the circle to receive the microphone and close the conference space.
I had been sitting in my new seat only a few minutes and my colleague was still facilitating the harvest, when, spontaneously, T began running around the outside of the circle, defining the space, inadvertently causing those who were standing outside to move closer into the circle. Her shoes hit the floor creating a rhythmic tattoo and an energetic boundary around the community. She made 5 or so circuits. I sat in awe , feeling my eyes moisten and goosebumps rise on my skin. Then, it was time for me to take the microphone.
Walking into the circle, as I accepted the mic and began to say a few words, I felt her small hand slip lightly  into mine. Each person said their short, last comment and I invited them to stand and look around, to see who remained and remember those who had to leave earlier. She continued to walk the circle with me. Together we invited everyone to turn around and step out into their futures, closing the conference
Completely unprompted, from her own instinct, she provided the perfect reminder that all we do contributes to the world of future generations. She was totally present and, in her way, invisible, as she held space for the very first time.
From a very fortunate Grandma,
Diana

**************
Diana Larsen
http://futureworksconsulting.comEnvisioning a world where everyone at every level of the organization can say, "I love my work; this is the best job EVER!"

Enjoy life!

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