Thursday, November 15, 2012

Thomas Herman opening space in Sweeden




 The Swedish Transport Administration hired Thomas Herrmann, Open Space Consulting to facilitate an Open Space Techonology meeting in January 2011. A diverse group worked together to find ways to enhance the effects of implementing Intelligent Transport Systems (ITS). This film gives a good view of the whole process during the day from "opening of space" until convergence and action teams forming. English subtitles. (text from the YouTube site)

@Eleder_BuM  (Twitter) www.burumapak.blogspot.com (Basque)  

www.bilbohiria.com/gaika/berbaz (radio interviews)


Monday, November 5, 2012

Wosonos 2012


See here a 4´30´´ video shot and edited by Jeppe Lajer on his iphone. Great job! You can get a taste on the following video of what the World Open Space on Open Space was like in London 2012. Like the music?The Kenneth Bager Experience)



People liked this visual summary much and some of them expressed it on the oslist... Christy Lee-Engel, for example: "I have the odd sensation of nostalgia for a time and place I haven't been - except I guess that maybe all Open Space (and Time) is just one space and place and time, even though of course unique and never to be repeated ;-)"

We also had the pleassure to take part in it and in Lisa Heft´s previous training workshop. Feel free to ask for the materials generated in both (eleder-dot-aurtenetxe-at-gmail-dot-com).


And, thanks to Karl Royle, we can also see in the following 19´ video how Phelim McDermott opened the space in Stoke Newington. One can learn much watching other experienced colleagues...



Enjoy life!

@Eleder_BuM  (Twitter) www.burumapak.blogspot.com (Basque)   

http://www.bilbohiria.com/gaika/berbaz (radio interviews)

I´m new here (Gil Sott-Heron)

Yaari Pannwitz plays with the words of this great song to announce his coming back to the oslist... (Oct 2012)

I did not become someone different
That I did not want to be
But I'm new here
Will you show me around

No matter how far wrong you've gone
You can always turn around

Met a woman in a bar
Told her I was hard to get to know
And near impossible to forget
She said I had an ego on me
The size of Texas

Well I'm new here and I forget
Does that mean big or small

No matter how far wrong you've gone You can always turnaround

And I'm shedding plates like a snake
And it may be crazy but I'm
The closest thing I have
To a voice of reason

Turnaround turnaround turnaround
And you may come full circle
And be new here again

@Eleder_BuM  (Twitter) www.burumapak.blogspot.com (Basque)   

http://www.bilbohiria.com/gaika/berbaz (radio interviews)

Friday, November 2, 2012

Moneyless Manifesto (Mark Boyle)



Mark Boyle's new book, The Moneyless Manifesto explores in-depth the social, personal, ecological and economic reasons why we may want to transition beyond money into a localised, gift-based economic model. In it he also provides a vast toolkit of ways you can thrive with little (or no) money.
For more information (and to read the book) go to: http://www.moneylessmanifesto.org.

Film produced by James Light the Gorilla Film Maker
http://www.jameslight.tv/
http://www.youtube.com/user/gorillafilmmakernow

Thank you to The Sustainability Center for there hospitality.
http://www.sustainability-centre.org

(Text above from the YouTube page).

Enjoy this great day!

@Eleder_BuM  (Twitter) www.burumapak.blogspot.com (Basque)   

http://www.bilbohiria.com/gaika/berbaz (radio interviews)

Monday, September 24, 2012

WARM RAIN

 Michael Pannwitz shares on the Oslist a way to close space with lots of people

1) Everyone stands up and, if you have up to 60 people or so, forms one circle, people standing close to each other, if you have several hundred, you just stand in a crowd but the inner circle should be a circle with the others standing behind the folks in the inner circle.
2) Everybody raises their arms, keeps them pointing to the ceiling/sky and lets just the hands and fingers drop down so they are pointing to the floor/earth.
3) People move their fingers imagining that raindrops come out of their fingertips.
4) The facilitator asks people to be absolutely quiet so everyone can hear the raindrops falling (its stupendous: as the group falls into silence and listens you can actually hear the raindrops...).
5) The rain may go on 15 or 20 seconds, folks will follow the facilitator as she/he lowers the arms.
6) After that people can say goodbye to each other or, as I have often done following Harrisons lead, ask the people to have a final look around telling them that this is the last time they will see this group stand together in this mix...and after a little while (I look at everyone, yes everyone and then continue) I suggest that everyone turns looking away from the center of the circle, remain that way a few seconds feeling the presence of the group behind them and then step away from the circle in all directions of the compass... after that people still remain and hug and say goodbye...

The rain drop ceremony is also called "warm rain" and often used by people sitting in a circle when something is said that she/he appreciates or wants to honor, its a nice/silent variation on "clapping the hands" ... as far as I know its one of the North American Indian ways of communicating.

Have a great day in Iceland
mmp

Wednesday, September 19, 2012

WOSONOS 2012, LONDON, ARE YOU READY?

Berlin 2010 was my first Wosonos just after a few small facilitating experiences. I met there sage, fun and loving people that I feel now somehow as my "world family". I came back to Bilbao with the clear determination to "do more open space".

Last 2 years have made this dream come true and  now, after several OS experiences, I can say that "I can facilitate" open space. Now I'd love to go farer in the no-end way to become a "good" facilitator. And I know that London will be a key milestone on the way.

And I know, too, that beyond the walls and schedules of the official settings, we will continue enjoying this learning adventure all over the open space of life. Yes, we also will still gather, relax, eat, walk, drink, chat, sing and dance together in the pubs and parks,... as far as our two feet take us there.

Are you prepared to be surprised?

@Eleder_BuM  (Twitter) www.burumapak.blogspot.com (Basque)   
http://www.bilbohiria.com/gaika/berbaz (radio interviews)

Friday, September 14, 2012

DOG, CAT & RAT



Take time to read the comments on the video here.

Who said we are supposed/designed to "eat each other"?

Enjoy life,

Eleder BuM31    Buru-mapak-Espazio Irekia-Sormena  

Thursday, September 13, 2012

We Are The Ones We Have Been Waiting For

Exploring possibilities for 8-15 Oct in London, where I´m travelling for Wosonos 2012, I visited London Permaculturalists and found this beautiful poem. Enjoy it, enjoy yourselves!

You have been telling the people that this is the Eleventh Hour.
Now you must go back and tell the people that this is The Hour.

Here are the things that must be considered:

Where are you living?
What are you doing?
What are your relationships?
Are you in right relation?
Where is your water?
Know our garden.
It is time to speak your Truth.
Create your community.
Be good to each other.
And do not look outside yourself for the leader.

This could be a good time!

There is a river flowing now very fast.
It is so great and swift that there are those who will be afraid.
They will try to hold on to the shore.
They will feel like they are being torn apart, and they will suffer greatly.

Know the river has its destination.
The elders say we must let go of the shore, push off toward the middle of
the river,
keep our eyes open, and our heads above the water.

See who is there with you and celebrate.

At this time in history, we are to take nothing personally, least of all
ourselves!
For the moment we do, our spiritual growth and journey comes to a halt.

The time of the lonely wolf is over.
Gather yourselves!

Banish the word struggle from your attitude and vocabulary.

All that we do now must be done in a sacred manner and in celebration.

We are the ones we have been waiting for.

http://www.bilbohiria.com/gaika/berbaz (irratikoak)

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

Another way of ending

Brendan McKeague shares on the OSLIST a great way for the closing of an Open Space event.If you are a practitioner, you'll find it very useful, sure,...

So here is what I usually do at the Closing Circle, after everyone has spoken and the Sponsor, being the last one to speak in the group, hands the talking stick/mic back to me...

I rise and slowly walk the circle with some words of description around what people came to do and what they actually did during the meeting (number of topics, action plans...) and then I invite folks to reflect on how the principles showed up for them during the meeting experience - usually beginning with a question, followed by a pause, like:

"Did you notice the right people came here here today?" - pausing while I walk another few steps, then

"How did whatever happened...appear for you today?"...pause...

"Did you start at the right time?"...pause...

"Did you recognise when it was over - or not over?"...pause..

"Did you use the Law of Mobility at all...or notice others using it?"...pause..

"Did you butterfly a bit?"...pause...

"Did you buzz a bit?"...pause...

"Did you need a billabong space for yourself at any time during the meeting?"  (billabong being an Australian word referring to a 'watering hole/oasis')...pause...

"And finally, were you surprised at all about what happened here today, in yourself, observing others, topics raised, anything?"...pause...



In the tradition of the OS Closing Circle, I then invite the group to stand, look around the circle and acknowledge what has been given and received to/from each other, and the work that has been done here today, and when you're ready, take a 180deg turn and step out of the circle...and we're done.

That's it...until the next one!


Cheers

Brendan

Friday, August 10, 2012

FLOW CHART

Inidea sent a short message to introduce this to the CREA-CPS distribution list. Quite proper for the Flow&Show blog. Isn´t it?


Enjoy life :-)!

http://www.bilbohiria.com/gaika/berbaz (irratikoak)

Friday, August 3, 2012

Year of the rat


(One, one, one, one, one, one. One, one, one, one, one, one)


June is on the run for so long
Pushed and pulled then shunned
It was so wrong
These fours walls crashing in won't stop me now
Cause I'm alive, I'm out tonight, all night


Everybody needs to know it's the year of the rat
Every day we've got to hold on
'cause if we hold on we could find some new energy


Streets with flags unfurled like treasure
Thank me for my words, it's a pleasure
Just don't ask me to stay 'cause I'll be gone
But it's alright I'm OK - always


Everybody needs to know it's the year of the rat
Every day we've got to hold on
'cause if we hold on we could find some new energy


One plus one is one - together
One plus one is one - forever
One plus one is one - together
One plus one is one - forever


Everybody needs to know it's the year of the rat
Everybody needs to know it's the year of the rat
Everybody needs to know it's the year of the rat
Everybody needs to know it's the year of the rat
Every day we've got to hold on
'cause if we hold on we could find some new energy.

http://www.bilbohiria.com/gaika/berbaz (irratikoak)

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Incredible Edible in Todmorden (Manchester)


Incredible Edible Todmorden from haymedia on Vimeo.

Some words from Irena Bauman´s comment:
"A very inspirational film that tells us in a very clear way what it takes to implement a community driven regeneration... I want to see more!!!"

 Enjoy life,

Eleder BuM (Bilbao underground Mayor :)
www.burumapak.blogspot.com (eu)   @Eleder_BuM  (Twitter)
http://www.bilbohiria.com/gaika/berbaz (irratikoak)

Friday, June 22, 2012

The American Dream & theories. Who knows?


The video with Spanish subtitles here

I received the film link from a good friend and, after viewing its start and appearence I was just going to post it with no comments.
Then, as the subject is quite far from me I started inquiring a bit,... Finally I´m publishing it after some big doubts, specially to help us think about the difficulty to really know... 
Take a look to the lines below to know why I say it...
You can listen to an interview with its director, Tad Lumpkin here.
Here a comment on the film on RationalWiki -with my blackening some words-:
At first glance, the movie seems to explain rather accurately what concepts such as money and debt mean. At around half way through the film however, it deteriorates into a vast conspiracy theory, claiming, among other things, that the Rothschild family (called "Red-Shields" in the film) are controlling the Federal Reserve and that they were responsible for the Assassination of JFK. The film's official website contains a list of "Good Guys" who, according to the film's creators, try to fight the evil Rotschilds from taking over the world. The website Drudge Report and Alex Jones are listed among them. Jones himself has given a positive review of the film.[1]
Some comments by Tad Lumpkin -with my blackening some words- answering to people´s comments to the film on Ron Paul´s page (Wikipedia on Ron Paul. Take a look to Newsletters controversy.)
I took a look at the thread. First off, what people need to understand is that we made this as a way to start a conversation and explain the basics of the economic, banking and monetary system we have. The point is to expose that it is inherently a scam. The film is meant to drive people who are currently unengaged in this issue to become engaged. People within the movement need to look at this not as a competitor or replacement to a longer more in depth examination of the exact mechanics but as a gateway to it.
Think of this film more in the vein of South Park. Its a mix of exposing an issue using fact and storytelling with our commentary obviously laid in there.
On specific issues, like the Thomas Jefferson quote:
That quote is attributed to him over and over again and maybe he didn't say it but most people right or wrong believe he did. Regardless of the reality, it conveys the point we wanted to make. Thomas Jefferson spoke about all the issues and ideas covered in that quote many many times in 100% verifiable historical documents. The rivalry of ideas with Alexander Hamilton is one of the most famous political rivalries in American history. There isn't anything in that quote that is contradictory to the often expressed beliefs that Jefferson espoused. Its not like that quote is counter what he believed. Again, we aren't making a historical book of quotes, we are made a narrative cartoon. Whether the words were the exact way he said those ideas or not it doesn't change anything.
Its the same thing on "I killed the bank' being said by Andrew Jackson" that potentially could be lore, but again its totally consistent to who he was and what he did. If he didn't say it on his death bed, he should have and again, It doesn't change anything. We aren't trying to trick people, we are trying to motivate them to research the ideas in the film and get involved.
On the 10th century scene with the candy man. The point of that was to show the evolution from barter to currency and the move from coinage to paper and how that then provided the opportunity for fractional reserve banking and unintended consequences. The prices went up because the bank, a private bank increased the money supply because of the switch from a full reserve system to a fractional reserve system.
Beyond that, I'll make it clear for the record that we are not endorsing violence. Our website has more information on things people can go do to get involved. What we are endorsing is people to do something, question the system, take these people to task and be willing to be a patriot by risking something to refresh the tree of liberty. Protest, organizing and civil disobedience via many methods is hopefully sufficient to change things. We are not being polite about our point of view. Part of our style is an edgy satire that calls it likes it sees it. We were tame compared to something like South Park that is wildly popular.
Same on the conspiracy theory comment. Again "Its an animated satire" Its not a documentary. There are tons of very dry and straight forward presentations of these ideas, this is something different. Not in conflict with those but again as a gateway.
The biggest thing that people in the liberty movement need to understand is that everyone isn't like them and doesn't respond to the same generally academic methodology. Remember our current President won on what? not a real plan... He won on "hope and change". You have to market these ideas to people.This movement has by far the most superior concepts but it lacks the wide spread acknowledgment that having the best ideas is not enough. We need to present these in a way that can be summarized in words like 'hope and change", not just in 300 page Austrian economics book. If we only rely on that, we'll never hit critical mass to really change things back to a liberty based philosophy.
I have shown this film to lots of people who are everything but a libertarian oriented person and they love it and they get it.
The Pepsi Challenge I'll put forth to everyone, is to show this film to their friends and family that they have been trying to get to read Road to Serfdom for the last 10 years and see what happens. One, you can get most everyone to sit down and watch it because its short and easy to watch. Two, take a look at the impact rate. It is far higher because of the simplicity.
That is my diatribe. Hope that addresses some of the concerns.
best
Tad

Who really knows?

Best,

Eleder BuM (Bilbao underground Mayor :)
www.burumapak.blogspot.com (eu)   @Eleder_BuM  (Twitter)
http://www.bilbohiria.com/gaika/berbaz (irratikoak)

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Alice Herz-Sommer, dancing under the gallows

Alice Herz-Sommer (born 26 November 1903 in Prague). Pianist, music teacher and the world’s oldest known Holocaust survivor.

Here "Alice dancing under the Gallows" promo video (12´) and some words from the comments on the site:
  • This video changed my life. It never gets old, or loses it's gravity. Alice, you were sent from God as a light to mankind. God bless you. You are my hero.
  • I am head over heels in love with Alice. I've watched this about 20 times. It's my Alice-therapy. God bless her. She is a gift to this world.
Here the same video with Spanish subtitles.


Enjoy this wonderful day :-)!

Eleder BuM (Bilbao underground Mayor)
www.burumapak.blogspot.com (Basque)   @Eleder_BuM  (Twitter)




Thursday, June 7, 2012

Midway between beauty & horror. Love what is

Do we have the courage to face the realities of our time?
And allow ourselves to feel deeply enough that it transforms us
 and our future?
Come with me on a journey through the eye of beauty
Across an ocean of grief and beyond…
Chris Jordan - Director/Producer   For more information:  MidwayFilm.com  Twitter: @midwayjourney

Music Baaba Maal

Text below from the Vimeo page of the project:

A powerful, poetic, visual and introspective journey into the heart of an astonishingly symbolic environmental tragedy. On one of the remotest islands on our planet, tens of thousands of baby albatrosses lie dead on the ground, their bodies filled with plastic from the Pacific Garbage Patch. Returning to the island over several years, our team is witnessing the cycles of life and death of these birds as a multi-layered metaphor for our times. With photographer Chris Jordan as our guide, we walk through the fire of horror and grief, facing the immensity of this tragedy—and our own complicity—head on. And in this process, we find an unexpected route to a transformational experience of beauty, acceptance, and understanding.

We frame our story in the vividly gorgeous language of state-of-the-art high-definition digital cinematography, surrounded by millions of live birds in one of the world’s most beautiful natural sanctuaries. The viewer will experience stunning juxtapositions of beauty and horror, destruction and renewal, grief and joy, birth and death, coming out the other side with their heart broken open and their worldview shifted. Stepping outside the stylistic templates of traditional environmental or documentary films, MIDWAY will take viewers on a guided tour into the depths of their own spirits, delivering a profound message of reverence and love.

Watching and reading this takes us to embrace  chaos, confusion and conflict as Harrison Owen suggests us; birth and death, breath in, breath out; let go through the grief process,... Open Space. It also takes us to Byron Katie´s proposal to love what is.

Best,

Eleder BuM (Bilbao underground Mayor)
www.burumapak.blogspot.com (Basque)   @Eleder_BuM  (Twitter)

http://www.bilbohiria.com/gaika/berbaz (radio interviews Basque)  

Monday, June 4, 2012

Circle + Open Space power: nice story via HO

 Very nice stroy shared by Harrison Owen on the Oslist. OS and a circle layout: much  more  productive, much more peaceful,...

Just imagine 250 Senior Rabbis and Imams gathered together in the service of Peace. Place was Seville and the participants were the upper echelon, so to speak. The sponsors, assuming that a little transition into Open Space would be helpful for this bunch of folks, had designed the 1st day in the Standard Way. Straight rows of chairs, dais, and endless speeches. The proceedings began at 9 am, but by noon the room was total chaos. Delegates were standing on desks and screaming at each other.  I wasn’t in the room, finding such a meeting more than I can handle, but as I was walking towards the  dining room for lunch I was intercepted by the sponsor’s associate. Frantically he called my name and popped the big question, “How quickly could I Open Space?”

The Open Space part of the 3 day program wasn’t due to start until the next day, but plans do change when driven by necessity. I replied that we were good to go just as quickly as the hotel could re-arrange the room – which turned out to be 2 hours. That gave us time for lunch and a little cooling off period for a very overheated group of people.

Somewhere around 3 pm – there we were. The same group of folks who in the morning were close to killing each other (at least verbally) – now all sitting peacefully in a circle. And so it went – just like usual…

Harrison


Friday, June 1, 2012

Open Space "side effects" during 1st Lunch Beat in Bilbao

Yesterday some people gathered in Bilbao to join a Lunch Beat first time in our town (an interesting way to open a bit of connecting space in daily routine at lunch time. How? Dancing! Take a look to the manifesto, you´ll like it!). The inviters (Pink Gorillas) had taken few time to spread the word, people tend to be quite scared to dance here, it was first time,... so, they were (as most of conveners usually are) a bit worried about attendance.

But, very quickly, someone said "ok, no problem, whoever comes is the right people, like in Open Space....".

Yes, they had attended some Open Space events last years and they love it :-)!

And yes! A grin prompted on my face :-)!.

Simple story and (very) gratifying... sure you have many similar ones!

Enjoy life!

Eleder BuM31    Open Space-Mind mapping-Creativity    

pd: some time before Lunch Beat, yesterday I booked the plane tickets for London (go 8-X ; unplanned time + Wosonos; back 15-X,). Hope to join you there,... dancing too :-)!

Thursday, May 31, 2012

Gustavo Esteva: challenging the institutional production of truth



Gustavo Esteva provides with a very interesting view on present global issues.

You´ll also probably enjoy reading this piece by Gustavo on Unitierra (learning&community&playfulness...):  


... and maybe some lines on Gustavo (here) too.

Where did I first knew about Gustavo and Unitierra? #WalkOutWalkOn , great book by Deborah Frieze and Meg Wheatley.


Big hug!


Eleder BuM31    Buru-mapak-Espazio Irekia-Sormena  

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Green House Project in Joubert Park (Johannesburg)





Really inspiring story in this 4´video!

Eleder BuM31    Buru-mapak-Espazio Irekia-Sormena  

Friday, March 30, 2012

Friday, March 16, 2012

Creativity: Basic Principles (by Kim Hermanson)

Kim Hermanson, an author we like so much, just tweeted on creativity principles. Here is the link to the source of this lines. Thanks so much, Kim!

I discovered these "principles of creativity" on a handout I made for a workshop I led ten years ago (yikes.) In any case, I believe they still hold up:
  • Creativity comes from the heart. Our hearts are what inspire our creativity. Listening to the heart's wisdom, we have the courage to do something different, try out new directions and explore new terrain. Creativity happens when our heart is moved and inspired.
  • Creativity needs space, both internal and external. One of the biggest blocks to creativity is having our psyches clogged with unfinished business. A simple walk or time spent in nature can give us space and a fresh perspective, or simply stopping to close our eyes and take a few deep breaths.
  • Your creative spirit needs a big vision. When we make things too small and focus on the mundane and trivial, we lose juice and life becomes boring. We can focus on problems, or we can focus on our big vision. We have a choice.
  • Creativity is nourished and fed by beauty. Nurturing environments and nurturing people.
  • Creativity is centered in you. The creative ground that you stand on is outside of the institution that you work for. Your own creative ground is comprised of your loves and passions, those things that you value and hold most dear.
  • Creativity is unique. Your response to any situation is unique. Your perspective is unique. And your creative expression is unique.
  • Creativity is bigger than you are. In the midst of a creative project, you don't know what the end result is going to look like. It's a lesson in letting go, to let your creativity take you in a different direction than you expected.
  • Creativity comes with "Beginner's Mind." Beginner's Mind means not acting out of habit. It means having an open mind and perceiving what is happening with fresh eyes. Be willing to not know.
  • Creativity means having a relationship with the world. Creativity requires participation--stepping out of our "bubbles," engaging with whatever it is that we are passionate about.
  • The movement of your life is toward learning and creative growth. Life always presents us with continual opportunities to learn and create.
So good advice, thanks Kim!


Eleder BuM31    Buru-mapak-Espazio Irekia-Sormena  
www.burumapak.blogspot.com (eus)   @Eleder_BuM  (Twitter)

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

OPEN SPACE: Peggy´s favorite video (16´)


U S WEST Open Space from Peggy Holman on Vimeo.

Peggy Holman tells us on the OSLIST the story...
How about another telecommunications company story? It was my first real experience of Open Space. The company was US WEST and the year was 1995. There had been floods in Arizona and serious outages. It was also a time of transition to high bandwidth technologies so little investment in the old copper phone lines had been made. The system was in bad shape as a result. And to complicate matters further, union contracts were being negotiated behind the scenes.

A union rep, Bill Mahoney, who also worked with Open Space, convinced the head of the state organization to try Open Space. I was part of a corporate group and got involved. We contacted Harrison and ran a 2.5 day Open Space called "Discovering Priorities". It was a wild event! The majority of the participants were network technicians -- the people who climb telephone poles. (When they were made of wood and people still climbed them.) They had a colorful vocabulary, with more 4 letter words (curse words) than I'd ever heard before!

The outcome: people not only worked out how to deal with the aging technology and get back to reliable service (a high value for the company and among the many veteran employees), but long-time broken relationships between groups were mended. My favorite example:

People from two departments who were always fighting met with each other. They discovered that their performance goals were written in a way that by definition put them in conflict. They worked out a manager swap, where they'd have first-line supervisors trade jobs to learn about each other's businesses. And of course, renegotiate goals that supported the success of both groups.

Another favorite moment: about a week after the Open Space, a meeting about next steps occurred. Rather than just managers, it was opened to anyone who wanted to participate. A number of the union people -- network technicians -- were there. One of them said, "let's hire contract workers (non-union labor) to handle the daily stuff while we rehabilitate the basic plant." This would have gotten him shot before the Open Space! What had happened during the OS was people had a chance to learn more about how everything worked so rather than making decisions from a narrow perspective, this suggestion was based in having an understanding of the whole system.

This is the event where I fell in love with Open Space because I saw the needs of individuals and the whole both met.

And I'm happy to report that it is on video. It's still my favorite video about Open Space all these years later. The Open Space Institute US, through Harold Shinsato, put it on Vimeo about 8 months ago:
http://vimeo.com/25251316...

Peggy
 

Eleder BuM31    Mind Mapping-Open Space Technology-Creativity
www.burumapak.blogspot.com (eus)   @Eleder_BuM  (Twitter)
www.in-fluyendo.blogspot.com (esp) www.flowandshow.blogspot.com

Thursday, February 23, 2012

DANCE YOUR PhD: John Bohannon & Black Label Movement




Suzanne Daigle shares on the OSLIST this intriguing video she received from Tobias Mayer, and says: "For me it holds dear all that connects me to Open Space (chaos, order, science, art and then some!)   Hope you enjoy it as much as I did."

Danceyour PhD, a TEDx Brussels talk by John Bohannon.

I picked also indiantemplestampede ´s comment:  "As Doris Humphrey wrote in her amazing "The Art of Making Dances" (1959) "Beware of originality without truth..." "

Enjoy life!


Eleder BuM31    Mind Mapping-Open Space Technology-Creativity
www.burumapak.blogspot.com (eus)   @Eleder_BuM  (Twitter)
www.in-fluyendo.blogspot.com (esp) www.flowandshow.blogspot.com

Oh my, oh my! Congrats Agnetta!


Agneta Setterwall, new OSLIST Poet Laureate (2012)

An open space?
I hesitate

A call somewhere?
I hesitate

An open door?
I hesitate

And people too?!
I hesitate!

Supposed to speak?
I hesitate!!

Tell what I need...
I hesitate...

Tell what I want?
I hesitate!

And they all hear...
I doubt they do!

They will not care!
I´m sure, I´m sure...

And... there they come!
Oh my! They do!

And now we talk!
We do! We do!!!

...they listen too...
...and so do I...

...and what will come...?
Oh my! Oh my!!!

-- Agneta Setterwall (Uppsala, Sweden)
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History of the OSLIST Restricted Form Poetry Contest

“For all those who might be curious, the OSLIST Biannual Restricted Form Poetry Contest started in the spring of 2000 when I issued the challenge to the list.  [The late great] Ralph Copleman actually began the whole thing with a contest in the fall of 1999 (which I won) and so he is the “Poetry King” for all time.  I just claimed the “Poet Laureate” title in an effort to have some fun.  It was something of a one martini idea, and I was out of gin at the time...”

'Restricted form' means some described form or boundary for the poem - as in this recent Poetry Contest where you were invited to create poems about or inspired by Open Space and breathing, trusting the unknown, and emergence.
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Our Past OSLIST Poet Laureates

Ralph Copleman 1999
Chris Corrigan 1999 
Chris Weaver 2000
Jeff Aitken 2000
Florian Fischer 2001
Laurel Doersam 2002
Audrey Coward 2002
Joelle Everett 2003
Florian Fischer 2003
Joelle Everett 2004
Lisa Heft 2006
Teresa Pokasony 2006
Karen Sella 2007
Jeff Aitken 2008
Anne Hiha 2008
Esther Ewing 2009
Chris Corrigan 2010
...and now... Agneta Setterwall 2012