That so-called “shaman” is actually Harrison Owen
One of the hundreds of Open Space Technology Principles posters I have used in my time, this one from an Art of Hosting training in Minnesota in 2012, and designed by a team member.
NOTE: I edited the title of this to make it clear that I’m not calling Harrison a “shaman,” but rather trying to correct a meme that has been going around which has appropriated his work.
There is a post going around on the internet called “The Four Laws of the Shaman” or the “Four Laws of Spirituality.” The four laws are ascribed to some unknown shaman or some exotic culture like “Indian spirituality” or “Native American wisdom.” You can visit the links I’ve provided here to get a sense of the text. And, of course, this stuff is all over Facebook, where it gets shared endlessly. The earliest reference to these “Four Laws of a Shaman” I could find is from a Facebook page in 2011.
This kind of thing always gets my hackles up because it is possible that these sorts of sayings are attributable to a person who may be a specific teacher in a specific spiritual lineage or tribal community. Erasing their voice is a kind of colonization, so please don’t share these kinds of unattributed nuggets of wisdom unless you can quote a source.
In this case, however, the source is not a tribal elder from an exotic locale, but is Harrison Owen from Maryland, USA and the “Four Laws” are actually the original four principles of Open Space Technology. Here is one version of these “four laws of a shaman” from the posts:
- “The person who comes into your life is the right person”
- “What happens is the only thing that could have happened”
- “Anytime it starts is the right time.”
- “When something ends, it ends”
Anyone familiar with this blog or Open Space Technology will recognize right away that these are the original four principles of Open Space Technology, to whit:
- Whoever comes is the right people.
- Whatever happens is the only thing that could have.
- Whenever it starts is the right time.
- When it’s over, it’s over.
(And there is a fifth principle that was added within the last decade or so which says “Where ever it happens is the right place” but I’m old skool and the truth is I forget that one all the time)
The original reference for these principles is Harrison’s “Open Space Technology: A User’s Guide, first edition” originally published in 1992. The principles and the law of two feet are outlined in Chapter Five, pp 68-74. Before that, these principles were articulated in the late 1980s and published in the original set of notes Harrison wrote about the process sometime in 1987 or 1988. You can find that document at the worldwide archive of the Open Space Technology community of practice.
Harrison is incredibly generous with his work, and you can find much of his out-of-print work available at the Harrison Owen Library at openspaceworld.org. There is a library of his papers there too.
Sometimes, it is asserted that Harrison got these principles from a Liberian village. This isn’t true. Harrison did a stint in the US Peace Corps in the 1960s and documented village life in Liberia while working on community projects. You can read a beautiful photo essay of his observations in “When the Devil Dances” at the Internet Archive. He never claimed to see Open Space in action there. Rather, he was taken with how the community addressed a complex agricultural issue, and he cut his teeth on designing participatory processes in that work, which is documented in some detail in The Practice of Peace.
The Organizational Transformation conferences he helped run in the early 1980s (documented here) were the first use of the method, specifically at OT3 in 1985. His story of how he came to develop and use the method with many others is documented in his many papers and books, especially Expanding Our Now. He has been interviewed countless times, done TEDx talks and is always up for a chat, so if you want to hear the story from the horse’s mouth, you have abundant opportunity to do so.
Harrison is an incredible guy, a deep river of experience and knowledge. His folksy manner and his constant exhortations to simplify one’s facilitation practice don’t come close to giving the full breadth of his life’s work its due. He is a priest, a theologian, a scholar of Near East religion, myth and culture, a former bureaucrat, community organizer, consultant, teacher, and author, and his whole life has only partially been about Open Space. I’m pretty sure he wouldn’t describe himself as a shaman but he was an important mentor in my life. He was the first person to introduce me to complexity theory, to spirit in organizations and to the dynamics of self-organization which transformed my facilitation practice.
So. The next time you see these “shaman’s laws” shared in your circles, feel free to bring these receipts and give Harrison his due.
Thanks for writing this. I loved reading THE PRACTICE OF PEACE and know something about Open Space Technology from Art of Hosting trainings. Another Harrison Owen thought which I have been unable to find but always attribute to him is something about the function of all the major religious traditions being to answer the question ‘what do we do with the pain?’
In SPIRIT, he talks a lot about the grief cycle, myth and religion, and of course, he has written about that extensively in his understanding of Open Space Technology. I couldn’t find that reference in the book, but you can go diving in here: https://archive.org/details/spirittransforma0000owen/
Thanks Chris. Yes, do anything that is particularly original and succinct and it will be stolen, or appropriated and attributed to some wise ancient source. I will be sure to correct the record whenever I hear this ‘shaman’ story.
The Venn diagram that I developed in 2007 and published in my book Finding the Sweet Spot, about finding the intersection of your gifts, your passions and your purpose, has now been misappropriated (with one of the circles split into two) and attributed to being part of the ancient Japanese concept and practice of Ikigai. (https://ikigaitribe.com/ikigai/ikigai-misunderstood/). I don’t particularly care who gets credit for my models (we all stand on the shoulders of giants), but the Japanese deserve better than to have the word for their important concept and practice misused in modern business ‘self-help’ books.
Original thinking, fortunately, is its own reward!
It’s so funny to see the way actual memes travel eh? That Ikigai post is very interesting!
Thanks. I saw the initial post and your responses on FB. Thanks for setting the record straight.
Thank you Chris. That Shaaman title is a little heavy!!
Ha ha! I’m not giving YOU the shaman title. Other people were. I’m just correcting the record.
Thabks, Chris. It is only fair that we acknowledge properly our teachers.
Thanks for this and your previous posts on Harrison Owen, Chris. I interviewed Harrison over coffee decades ago for a paper in my Master’s program. Sure, I remember his insight and depth of thought, but I most remember his humor and how lightly he held our conversation. He asked as many questions about me as I did about him and his work. I have incorporated Open Space into my practice as much as I can. Getting large organizations to suspend disbelief and cede control has always been a challenge. But it has always been worth it to see their delight when they witness Open Space working.
It’s funny that even after 40 years, companies still have this weird aversion to a well established method. But it’s all down to lack of control. After 40 years there is really nothing else like Open Space that has evolved to do the work that the method does.