“Whenever knowledge connects with knowledge, new combinations spontaneously take place. Ideas spark ideas, which synthesize with each other until more knowledge results. It is completely natural… Sharing knowledge means bringing more people into the conversation.”

~ Verna Allee

Stories

Day One: Evening

Monday evening we had a dinner with some special guests from Asia to honor the publication of the new Japanese and Taiwanese translations of the World Café book.

There were five members of the Japanese translation team, including Daisuke Kawaguchi, who had been my main contact throughout the process, and his colleagues Toshimitsu Kanekiyo, Kazuaka Katori, Mikako Yusa and Riichiro Oda; Stephen Meng from the Taiwan translation team was there and Chaiwat Thirapantu from Thailand, along with Alfred Hanner of Saudi Arabia.

We were all tired from a long full day and our various travels, but the energy was wonderful, the stories inspirational and the conversation incredibly rich and heartfelt. Sitting next to Japanese colleagues I learned that there is a new online World Café community being formed in Japan, and that Riichiro had himself hosted seven World Cafés in Japan this year, the most recent being one on Climate Change.

I fell in love with each of these incredibly kind and thoughtful people as I found myself relaxing after the full day, being asked wonderfully gentle and stimulating personal questions like “What is your vision of the future” and “What do you hope for in your own life?”

* * *

 

To keep reading this harvest chronologically, click here for Tuesday morning’s weaving and the keynote by Boeing.

Day 1: Afternoon

Weavers

In the afternoon weaving Bard Hurley gave us a metaphor for what he sensed “in the field”, a beautiful image from James Mitchner about a slow accumulation, a melding of meaning like individual droplets of dew gathering together to create a river. We were invited to take a moment and reflect on the intention that had brought us each here, and then share with each other what had been meaningful in relation to that intention so far.

In my small group a bishop form NJ shared his intention as a wish to experience a “moment of light”.

***

Otto Scharmer jumped right into the “Theory U and the Blind Spot of Leadership”, which offers a lens that sheds light onto a blind spot in our understanding of leadership – the crucial importance of the leader’s interior condition.

For example, as a painter you could have a completed painting, which is the “result”. It came into being through the process of painting, which is the “how”, but at the source you have the blank canvas, the moment of origin, the blind spot where you are present with the creative process.

He illustrated this moment of origin in an amazing bit of footage taken of the great operatic tenor Placido Domingo and a virtuoso conductor whose name I didn’t catch. In this film, there is a moment where the conductor and Domingo become one. The whole room felt it like a thrill, a surge of electricity, and when it was over Otto asked us to describe what they’d seen. Here are a couple of the responses: “I saw them touching the divine, becoming one”, “an opening – one moment manifesting through two people.”

Otto pointed to this moment of presence between the conductor to the tenor as an example of a shift in leadership – at times like this a crack appears, he says, and there is a choice – to let the ego get out of the way and hold the space for something else to emerge, or to try and control the space and bring it “back on track”.

When the ego can get out of the way, perception begins to extend to the whole. It shifts from the inside to the outside in an empathic listening, where feelings are organs of perception and boundaries break down. All the attention is focused on the emergent. You step back and create an empty space where others can step in and something new can emerge from the “pregnant” aspect of the now.

He described four types of listening – in the first, of old patterns, the person is situated inside themselves. In the second, the move to the edge of themselves and begin to see possibilities. The third is empathic listening, where the focus is outside oneself, in another. In the fourth mode of listening you are listening from the emergent, simultaneously focused inside yourself and in everything around you, shifting the place from which you operate and staying with the moment of stillness at the moment of presence.

The slidehow that illustrated his talk shows his theory of two sources of learning and learning cycles, and two cognitions: [Download Otto_Scharmer.ppt (561.0K)]

Presencing, Otto says, is “sensing” and beginning to operate from that place in the now. The future shows up in our heart first. The mind can only see what has happened in the past; to connect with the future we have to activate a new source of learning – the heart.

He points out that when you are connected to source in this way, your “hands know what to do”, and that conversely, you need to embody something in order to really learn it. If you always let someone else take the lead, like the prevailing ‘expert mode’ encourages, you never learn how to lead yourself. So, he advises, get out of the institutional bubble, connect with what really matters to you, and do it!

The ultimate “open will” stage of the “U” is operating in harmony with what is around you. Each of us is two selves, he says, the small self and the Self – who we can become in the future. Presencing is these two selves connecting and beginning to act together.

***

To continue chronologically and read about Monday evening’s dinner with our book translation colleagues from Asia, click here.

Day 1: Conversation Space

After the first keynote by Debra Meyerson, the conference moved into the morning’s concurrent sessions. This year we had arranged to have a conversation space available throughout the conference that would be hosted during the scheduled morning break-out sessions and afternoon forums.

Several of us from a variety of hosting communities – World Café, Open Space, and Art of Hosting – had gotten together, created a hospitable environment and devised a hosting schedule so that there would always be at least two hosts collaborating during each session. This first session was mine, working with the amazing Nancy White.

I was a bit nervous because this was the first one and would set the
tone. I’d never formally hosted a conversation before and hadn’t had
the chance to huddle with Nancy to get a sense of what we would do,
which I had expected we would. To compound my insecurity, most of the
initial people who gathered came because the other sessions were all
full. 

But even from the beginning the hosting team was attracted to play
together no matter whose ‘turn’ it was, so there were several others
there to give me courage and support and it soon became clear that I
knew exactly what to do. The conversation space was launched!

Temperedradical

As our small circle grew to over 20 people, and the conversation began
to weave its juicy way around, our experiences from the morning began
to settle and reflect themselves back to us. Through the speaking of
our words and the listening to each other’s words, through the essence
that Nancy sensed in the conversation and translated into visible form,
colors, images, metaphors and phrases for us to see, we began to
integrate the information we had taken in and ground it. We began to
bring it through the cognition of our minds and into the knowing of our
hearts and bodies.

For the continuing blog harvest, of the afternoon session of the 1st day, click here.

Systems Thinking in Action 2007

This post is the ToC for an in-depth harvest of the 2007 Pegasus Systems Thinking in Action conference, held in Seattle, Washington.

If you were there, please use the comments link at the bottom of
each post to give your own perspective or share your experiences at the
conference, and if you weren’t, please add your questions and ideas.
(Use the Quick Link guide below, or start at the beginning and just follow the links straight through)

 Prelude – A quick background of the relationships behind our collaboration and the role the World Café played at this year’s event

Day 1: AM – Monday’s morning weaving & Debra Meyerson’s Keynote on ‘Tempered Radicals

Day 1: Conversation Space – The first hosted Conversation Space session

Day 1: Afternoon – Afternoon weaving and Otto Scharmer’s Keynote on ‘Theory U

Day 1: Evening – Dinner with the Japanese book translation team and other colleagues from Asia

Day 2: AM – Tuesday’s morning weaving & a Keynote by the team from Boeing entitled ‘Synergy of Action: Large Scale Change Takes Flight at Boeing

Day 2: Conversation Space – Tuesday morning’s Conversation Space session

Day 2: Conversation as a Radical Act – Juanita Brown’s presentation, with Nancy Margulies and Nancy White

Day 2: Afternoon – Tuesday afternoon’s weaving and Van Jones’ Keynote on ‘Multiplying our Impact

Day 2: Evening – Informal open reception co-hosted by The World Café, Berkana Institute & Art of Hosting

Day 3: AM – Wednesday morning’s weaving session

Day 3: Conversation Space – Wednesday’s hosted Conversation Space session

Day 3: Final KeyNote & Closing – The last Keynote, Peter Senge’s ‘Collaboration: The Human Face of Systems Thinking‘, and the conference closing

Day 3 – Conversation Space Debrief – with the Conversation Space hosting team and the Pegasus conference organizers

Day 1: AM

Amplifying our Impact: Strategies for Unleashing the Power of Relationship, the 17th annual Pegasus Systems Thinking in Action Conference begins to weave the field even before we arrive as we connect with old friends and look forward to the new ones we’ll meet there.

On Monday morning, conference weavers Tom Hurley and Sharon Eakes opened by inviting us to “listen with all our parts” for the next few days, creating a living network of conversation with the possibility of rippling out beyond this event.

Causal_loop_2
Before introducing Harvard professor Debra Meyerson, who was speaking on ‘Tempered Radicals’ for our first keynote, Tom told us that the word radical derived from the word “root” and gave us a few questions to ponder as we listen into her words …

“What are the “roots” in our lives that support our work?” and “What is it that is radiating from that root?

“How have we been “tempered” by our experiences in promoting change?” and “How have our failures, and well as our successes, strengthened us?”

Debra began by contrasting two models of change – the ‘episodic’ model that focuses on structured programs and top-driven big changes, and the more organic, ‘adaptive’ model with many small acts of incremental change.

In a world where what we see depends on our underlying perceptions, where the adaptive model is often seen to have less value than the episodic, we may miss the opportunities it offers.

For tempered radicals working within the system there is often a creative tension between the deviant impulse and the need to conform, the desire to effect change and at the same time maintain legitimacy.

Debra Meyerson outlined some creative ways to work with this tension and employ the adaptive model in everyday acts that become the building blocks of change. Small acts of self-expression – in our dress, language, and practices – that deviate from taken-for-granted notions of “normal” can be effective signals to inspire and encourage others to express themselves as well. Other micro moves that push against the status quo include taking “negotiated turns” by stepping up to problems and using them as opportunities to engage, have conversations and build allies, from there organizing coalitions of alliances based on shared interests.

Look for those ‘small wins’ Meyerson encourages, those doable opportunities for concrete action that can create confidence, alleviate anxiety, and attract allies and resources.

In addressing amplification from the local to the systemic, Meyerson says:

  • Start with what works; refine and test the results of your small acts until they are concrete and proven
  • Build meaning around your wins
    • Use the results of your small wins as an excuse for starting conversations
    • Frame the change in terms of the existing needs and interests of the organization
  • Bundle a series of small winds together and call it a ‘program’, ‘pilot’, or initiative
  • Find and create alliances with people who bridge networks and export your win

Given the status quo within many working environments where one is afraid to admit mistakes or take risks for fear of appearing incompetent, afraid to ask questions for fear of appearing ignorant, and afraid to deviate from the party line for fear of the repercussions of being seen as a non-conformist, none of these small acts can occur unless and until an environment of ‘psychological safety’ has been established. There needs to be a transformation from a culture of fear to culture of trust and openness.

In closing, she described a series of psychological conditions under which one might feel safe or unsafe, including acceptance of errors and genuine inquiry into symbols of deviance.
Psychologicalconditions
(Chris Corrigan, Gabriel Shirley and Teresa Posakony experimented with group blogging this keynote, passing Chris’ laptop between them to mark their impressions of Debra’s talk. Their harvesting artistry is posted on Chris’ blog, “Parking Lot’).

***

This year there was a new aspect to the conference – a conversation space that remained open throughout the conference as a reflective place to go and ‘be’ with the questions arising and share your experience with others. It was to be hosted during the morning concurrent sessions and afternoon forums, and open for self-organized conversation the rest of the time. So as the movement into the morning’s concurrent sessions began, this conversation space too was about to be inaugurated.

For the next chronological installment of this harvesting, about what happened in the conversation space, click here.

Systems Thinking in Action 2007: Prelude

The World Café has been closely associated with Pegasus and the annual Systems Thinking conferences for a number of years. We were an active partner in this year’s event, and deeply woven in to the program – David and Juanita both held pre-conference World Café community-building sessions, Tom Hurley co-hosted (with Sharon Eakes) the conference, Juanita unveiled her recent thinking on the subject of Conversation as a Radical Act at a break-out forum, we co-hosted an Open Reception with our friends at Berkana Institute and Art of Hosting, and as veteran collaborators and supporters of Pegasus and this work for well over ten years we were also formal sponsors of this year’s event.

Your opinion sought

Rank your choices for energy efficiency at a site provided by Senator Barbara Boxer.

Boxer "Last Tuesday, my first major act as the new Chair of the Senate’s Environment and Public Works Committee was to hold a hearing on global warming.  More than one-third of my colleagues participated — an unprecedented number — each Senator offering his or her own ideas and perspectives about how we should deal with the global warming crisis.
Then, after the hearing, I was further energized by the feedback I received when blogging about the hearing on DailyKos, spawning a rousing discussion that drew more than 800 comments to my initial blog post.
Clearly, online and offline, from the halls of Congress to the keyboards of Americans all across our country, a growing bipartisan consensus is emerging to confront this environmental crisis head-on…so please, take just 60 seconds to rank your preferred approaches for fighting global warming now!"  -Barbara Boxer

Nevada City Global Cooling Café

Connie Parsons of Nevada City sent this report on their successful Café

Report from Nevada City, CA

Graphic Recorder Sherrin Bennett recorded the eventGlobalcoolingcafe1_2

Our Global Cooling Café was overflowing with people, animated conversation, and numerous innovative ideas. It was very clear that many of us are concerned about the climate crisis and feel an urgency to act now. As a result, nineteen action groups have been formed and are currently beginning to focus on specific tasks that support carbon reduction in our community!

Next we will contact all the point persons to see how they are
progressing. We will also send photos to all participants showing the
wonderful graphics inspired by their conversations and ideas.

Because this was our first use of the World Café process, we tried
some new things and, in a few things, fell short.  The participants
gave us excellent feedback that we will integrate to make our next Café
even more successful. The suggestion that we received the most was that
people wanted more time for action-oriented discussion.  Bravo!

At our debriefing meeting, we lamented the fact that, for a variety
of reasons, we got a late start on our program. As a result, we ended
up with less time than planned for the action sign-up process. We also
realized that it was not made clear to those who were ready to roll up
their sleeves and get to work on specific action items, that this would
not take place until the third conversation round of the evening. Due
to this misunderstanding, some who were eager to go into action found
the initial phases somewhat frustrating.

On the other hand, the first questions were quite effective in
building a sense of community and fostering the creativity that emerged
in the action stages. Many who came to the meeting, especially those
who were new to social activism and the café process, expressed
appreciation for the opportunity to voice their concerns and to
discover that they were not alone. The success of this process was
demonstrated by their participation in the formation of action teams
during the latter part of the meeting.

We invite you to attend our next Café Team planning meeting. For details, please contact Power Up – NC at 470-8642.

Our second Café is open to participants of the first, and to others
who wish to join us. Please come, and invite your friends and family.
We will be able to accommodate almost twice as many participants, with
less crowded conditions. With the experience of our first Café to build
upon, it will be a productive, action focused evening. The Café will be
held at the Methodist Church in Nevada City, July 17th from 6:00 – 9:30
PM.

Please mark your calendars for the third Café at the Power Palooza – Miner’s Foundry, Nevada City, August 19th!

Thanks again for joining us in this process!

The Global Cooling Café Team
Connie Parsons, Reinette Senum,
Kelly Casterson, Emmett Miller, Sandra Miller, Jim Bair, Terri Hicklin,
Aeron Miller, Sharyn McDonald, Giza Valentiar Kelly

Café Sponsors
Power Up – NC, APPLE, KVMR

Reflections from Dresden

I’ve just returned from London after our first  planning meeting for the World Café Europe event in Bilbao next May, and I wanted to post some reflections from my experience in Dresden while they are still fresh in my mind…

There is a great power in local processes done in a dialogue form.
Here the whole concept of democracy is brought forward. The process to
let people talk about what matters to them in a context of social and
political environments as a means for preparation of, for instance, the
election of representatives in local parliaments or equivalent. In fact
the democratic process needs support from approaches like the (world)
café dialogues. In a society as center-oriented as ours, the dialogue
is one of the few ways in which we can keep the sense of individual
participation in democracy healthy and alive. It is through such
conversations that it continues.

Amazing what you can do in half a day. There is a power of deep
conversations, with people that are willing to open to inner realms in
their hearts, that will in some cases, heal wounds that are half a
century old. In the Frauen Kirche there were people who found peace
with great injustice done to them many, many years ago.

There is a power of graphics in the context of the deep dialogues.
But they have to be designed in such a way as to be integral to the
process. It is a very efficient harvesting method when done as a part
of the overall design. The images give an extra dimension but must be
given a place where participants can reflect on them, not just happen
to watch them by chance. Here is a potential worth more exploration.

Working as a graphic facilitator gives one a special view on the
topics covered in the session. Not better or worse but just different.
You think in images and that generates and opens channels of creativity
and innovation. In this conference these were both major themes, but
are often just an assumed quality in the dialogues.

The images can be used as a mean to deepen the processes, like the breathing exercises and the meditations we did.

The design as a whole was very powerful in leading people into new
dimensions in their understanding. Different people went into different
arenas and that was both good and expected. In contrast to normal
conferences where the participants are often left to themselves in
their psychological process, here it was done very thoughtfully as part
of the design and execution. To that can be added the personal need to
talk to someone about the process one enters. Several people
spontaneously found other participants that made a great difference to
them. My reflection is then that in conversations people enter those
inner realms that create a psychological and spiritual need for support
that is sometimes not given as a part of a conference design, but the
need is still there.

The “working metaphor” of breathing was more important than I first
understood it to be. In practice, it was the container of the whole and
gave meaning to what we did. People accepted doing “strange” things
like breathing exercises and meditations because it was part of an
explicit design. Perhaps that could have been explained even more
clearly in the beginning, but I think the people got it intuitively
after a while.

If one takes this into a deeper level, the metaphor is the container
of the energy AND the rhythm, in the form of the wavelength of the
energy on the collective level. The collective intelligence or rather
feeling on the archetypal level has to be aligned to create the
conditions under which people dare, can and will go the levels beyond
change and make real “quantum" movements to a place of a new being,

Here is a metaphor again used to understand the issue of alignment.
When two pipes create sounding and are too near each other it can
create distortion in both. The interference appears before the real
sound of the individual pipe has had the opportunity to form itself and
find its true representation. It is the same with people. The
individuals must claim their space first to be able to be true to
themselves. Then they can align into the collective rhythm to be able
to produce a tone that can create aligned sounds in the collective
energy chorus. When this happens there is an alignment on a
intellectual and emotional or feeling level. But it is also an
alignment on a physical level. The vibrations of the individual can
take place on the deepest possible level.

To be able to let that happen in the planning process of the
conference, it needs time and conscious efforts as well as openness in
the team. It then happens on the level of collective unconsciousness.

Two things that are obvious in all conferences or meetings like this
are 1) a clear structure and 2) leadership. It is crucial that the
participants feel the security that there is a meaning to what is
happening and that there is someone holding the baton so that they can
put their mind and energy to their own responsibilities.

The harvesting in a conference of this form is perhaps one of the
things that needs the most thinking through. Harvesting is done on many
levels. Individually, in the groups we belong to when we go back home,
and in the whole conference, on an intellectual level, a feeling level,
a conscious and on an unconscious level. All this has to be taken into
account when designing the harvesting process for a conference like
Dresden. This could have been extended a bit more, even if many people
went away with very important findings for themselves. I think we will
learn more about this in the future.

The points above show how important it is that people on the
planning team have a deep understanding of café processes and group
dynamics in interaction as well as an ability to pace the progress in a
rhythm that is in accordance with the group. All these are absolutely
vital if one wants to come to the deeper levels of conversation where
people not only understand, but also change themselves.

Notes from Brasil

Juanita Brown reports directly from Brasil, on process activism and the power of conversation to change the world …

Day One:
Carlos, Marcela and I all made it to Brazil safe and sound and we are ensconced in our hotel which is quite lovely and small…

We went to a lovely informal reception late this afternoon at the Willis Harman House with key people connected both with the community Café being held here as part of the World Business Academy meeting (a full day Café!) in a neighborhood that they want to use as a model for cleaning up the whole city of Sao Paulo (a city of 20 million people!), and with the World Business Academy meeting.

It was a wonderful and heartfelt opening circle with people from community groups, business, & spiritual communities.  It wasn’t an actual café but more like a lovely modified council circle with the question “Who are you and what is your connection to the World Café?” Once again, like in the Bay Area Café I was just dumbfounded by the incredible stories–including one woman who had done a Café with representatives from 90 different countries on the topic of diversity and identity … and also about a bank here ABN/Amro from the Netherlands with 30,000 Brazilian employees that is actually hoping to become a “café bank” through becoming a leader in sustainability efforts in their own bank and within the banking industry here.  I was floored!  Lots of tears and laughter..

And, if I paid close attention, I even understood much of the Portuguese….

 

Day Three:

Brasil is turning out to be an amazing experience already. Yesterday we went to Santos, which is an hour from Sao Paulo on the coast to meet with Edgard Gouveia. He is the Ashoka Fellow who founded the Elos Institute and received this honor for their work in local communities here in Brazil.

The Elos core team in Santos shared a video with us of the program in January where young leaders from four continents (primarily, however, from Latin America) came together for a month long program called “Warriors without Weapons”.  Their task was to learn collaborative, non-adversarial organizing approaches (including World Café) and then to work with one of the poorest communities in Santos, Paqueta, to clean up and transform a truly devastating area. Even I, who have spent a lot of time in Latin America was shocked at what it looked like and how horrible it was when they started.

A key part of the month was to help host a major World Café with residents of Paqueta and all key stakeholders in Santos to this effort – government, NGO’s, businesses etc. Carlos Mota came from Mexico to be their mentor and Café coach.  The idea was to use the World Café and the efforts of these young people as “attractors”  to evoke love and care for the neighborhood through the power of passion and possibility rather than through the power of protest and provocation.

Yesterday, the group shared with us a 10 minute video they’d made of the whole process and shared their stories of the large Paqueta Café which set the stage of the whole rest of the work there. When I saw it I just wept and wept, to see how this little “being” that was born by accident in our living room is now truly serving so many different wonderful efforts around the world.

To see the faces of the young leaders there yesterday at Elos, beaming as they shared their experiences and what they learned and are now planning next in the community in terms of the next phase Cafés and projects helped me know that there is, indeed, hope in this crazy world of ours.

And, a seed idea emerged as well from the group … there is “something” in the combination between these types of processes which foster collective intelligence and democratic voice across levels and life situations and the critical content “issues” whatever they may be – neighborhood development, indigenous rights, global warming, worker participation, AIDS, human trafficking etc.  And that we don’t have a good way of showing in a heartfelt and inspiring way the power of the combination between these processes the evoke collective intelligence and commitment to positive change (process activism as I think about it) and the critical issues themselves (issue based activism). Issue based activism is often adversarial frameworks, and process work is often seen as “soft”.

We now have such good “footage” both of World Café work and of key areas of application (like in the Dresden Cafés and here in Brasil and other settings) that creating some kind of powerful short video that helps show and communicate the both/and here – that it’s not just the World Café (a key catalyzer) or not just the “issue” or “program” (the key “content”) that’s important to support (which is where most people’s attention goes)  but the power of the combination of them that is truly the change force for large scale systemic impact in terms of lasting results.  To create “something” that helps tell THAT story would be  of service so many different groups trying to make a difference across the globe.

Anyhow, I’m sorry I’ve gone on – but this was a fascinating conversation we had yesterday based on these young people’s experience with the power of that combination in their own lives and work.

Today we are planning for another major community Café here in Sao Paulo as part of the Latin American World Business Academy meeting. They hope that the Boulevard Paulistano project will become a model for other neighborhoods here in Sao Paulo–a city of 20 million people!  And, at the end of that day, the World Café book is being launched in Portugese.

Who could have imagined all this when we were sitting in our living room with a small group of 24 people
in a dialogue around intellectual capital!