Where I’ve been – tuning the bass notes

Open Space by the Discovery Passage

I’ve been out of touch all last week, ensconced in a fascinating five day retreat with an organization that is working hard to make Open Space Technology a part of their basic operating system. We were working at a fishing lodge in Campbell River BC all week overlooking the Discovery Passage, which was filled with sea lions, eagles and a small pod of killer whales.  I had very limited internet access, and it was actually a great gift to be unplugged during that whole time.

There is lots to harvest from the trip, and several bits and pieces that I’m thinking through, but here is what is on my mind this morning.
This group is using Open Space on a regular basis to take care of the work that is not in the workplans, not in the budget and not necessarily even directly a part of what their organization seems to be about. But what we learned this week is that Open Space, used in this way, takes care of the “bass notes” within an organization. There is a kind of deeper hum within every organization – call it the culture if you like – that supports the work, generates the working environement and connects to the purpose of each person. People who are highly satisfied with their jobs and organization will often feel connected to this deeper field. They resonate with the bass note, the fundamental note of the chord. When this note isn’t present, it feels like work is not connected into a deeper pattern. Understand here that I am talking not about organizational purpose – it runs below that. It is more like organizational inspiration, operating at the level of the spirit of the place. Making Open Space part of the operating system of an organization results in tuning this bass note, or perhaps sounding it again. We have a chance to open space to breathe a little, get some distance from the mundane tasks of our job and ask some of the bigger questions about who we are and where the organization is going.

The folks in this organization are lucky that the upper leadership wants to see things working this way and has provided them with the time and resources both to meet in Open Space and to carry out the small projects starting next week that keep the bass note humming. And of course, we tuned up relationships as well, brought familiarity and warmth to an organization that is spread thinly across the whole country so that people can remember how we were when we were together, something that helps them continue to work virtually.

And a few travel notes…

6 Comments »

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  1. It’s always truly a pleasure to work with you Chris! It was great spending last week with you and I look forward to what is ahead for our organization! Take care and I’ll see you soon :) Gilakasla, Brenna

    Comment by Brenna Latimer — April 22, 2007 #

  2. Thanks for this Chris; you’ve set me thinking

    Comment by andy — April 23, 2007 #

  3. Brenna…the feeling in entirely mutual…it is always fun working with you and a great privilege to be walking this path alongside you guys.

    Comment by Chris Corrigan — April 23, 2007 #

  4. Hi Chris…and everyone else reading this :)
    As I sit back and reflect on last week, I want to thank you for sharing your gifts with our organization. I had not heard of Open Space while living in my lil village in N.Ontario, but I’ve always believed that it’s much better that people do most of the talking to find their own solutions and mold their own spaces. Cheers and safe travels!!! Sherry aka “Bannock Spice”

    Comment by Sherry Moreau — April 24, 2007 #

  5. [...] chris corrigan’s been out tuning the bass notes, the buzz or the spirit, in organization. i would tune his story a bit and say the buzz, the bass note, is pulsation. i think he’s right, it’s not culture. but it’s also not deeper than culture. it’s before culture. [...]

    Pingback by Michael Herman » Pulsation and Practice in Organization — April 28, 2007 #

  6. [...] Among many lovely things from the other Chris Corrigan is this note, which says so much about the net: “I’ve been out of touch all last week, ensconced in a fascinating five day retreat with an organization that is working hard to make Open Space Technology a part of their basic operating system. We were working at a fishing lodge in Campbell River BC all week overlooking the Discovery Passage, which was filled with sea lions, eagles and a small pod of killer whales. I had very limited internet access, and it was actually a great gift to be unplugged during that whole time.” [...]

    Pingback by Barista » Blog Archive » staggering about instead of working — May 14, 2007 #

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