The passing of Brian Bainbridge
Father Brian, Photo by Peggy Holman
The Open Space community has lost one of it’s stalwart elders, Father Brian Bainbridge, a Catholic priest and corporate consultant from Melbourne, Australia. Brian was a dear friend and colleague and offered much to the shape and form of Open Space although his contributions were quiet and behind the scenes. He trained and taught many, many Australian Open Space facilitators, wrote an informally published ebook about his experiences creating and Open Space organization in his parish and was a stalwart for the integrity of the process, curious in the multiple ways self-organization and complex adaptive systems could work. Today on the OSLIST I shared my own recollections of Brian:
Ah.
What a blessing it was to know and be loved by Brian…a man absolutely generous in his equanimity, achingly funny and self-deprecating and absolutely committed to the integrity and effectiveness of Open Space. I have several audio recordings of conversations I spent with him over the years. If I can find them and clean them up, perhaps I’ll get them uploaded somewhere.
As far as I know one of Brian’s enduring legacies to the Open Space community was the coinage of the unofficial fifth principle: Be Prepared to Be Surprised. Perhaps others can concur, but I always associated him strongly with that principle. And in his death he surprised us all! All I can think of is his mischievous smile and quiet bubbling chuckle.
The other phrase that entered my vocabulary from Brian was “It’s all good.” And indeed I notice that today his death has given me a chance to revisit my feelings of tenderness and admiration and love for him, to connect with people in the OS world I haven’t head from for a while and generally spend some time in my virtual home.
My favourite Brian story, a story he told me: Once when working with a group of Australian IBM managers he listened patiently while they told him of their struggles working so far away from headquarters in an extremely hierarchical structure with an almost dogmatic approach to things. Brian listened sympathetically for a while and then made the incisive observation: “You call yourselves Big Blue. Well, Catholic priests have suffered this same management challenge for 1500 years and ore. Call us Big Black.”
My family is finally travelling to Melbourne in May to do some work with Viv McWaters and Anne Patillo and Geoff Brown and Johnnie Moore and we were really looking forward to seeing Brian in his own place. Alas, we won’t have that chance now, but you can bet when we open space together Brian will be invoked and I will relish the chance to raise a glass and tell some stories about our patron Father, our mentor, teacher and friend.
I was a student at one of the primary schools at which Fr Brian was one of the parish priests. Although I was only young in the time I knew him, Fr Brian left a lasting impression on me with his cheerfulness, gentle nature and ability to gently guide us in the right direction with his wisdom. He was a person I looked up to, and often thought of over the years since I finished primary school. He is a great example to all with his attitude to life, and his ability to connect with and relate to younger members of our community. He is the sort of person who when remembered will still leave a smile on everyone’s face. May he Rest in Peace.
-Luke M
I met Fr Brian at Days in the Diocese in St Scholasticas parish in Melbourne as part of WYD 2008. My then girlfriend (now fiancee) and I were looking for somewhere to have lunch when Fr Brian invited us to lunch at what he called the best Chinese restaurant in Melbourne. He wasn’t lying. As good as the lunch was it was nothing compared to the company of Fr Brian and my fiancee and I fondly remember that day.We went shopping with him in a mall and we really enjoyed our day with him. I was very sad to hear of his passing. He was a kind, vibrant and charismatic man. That week in Melbourne was a fantastic week made all the more enjoyable by the wonderful leadership and dynamism of Fr Brian. RIP.
What a great man, it is encouraging to see priests making a difference in the world they lived. There needs to be cleansing , healing and renewal in our church,after hearing of scandle after scandel. Father Brian is a great example of selfless love of God and His church we all need to be examples of this in our world, especially our leaders.