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Archive for Design – Page 4

Sacred Space in 2nd Life

If you know me or have read this blog for any length of time, you know that bringing sacred space into the online sphere has been one of my strongest dreams and passions ever since I entered this field. In my work I am always seeking to create environments of peace and beauty where silence is welcome and hearts connect, where we are aware of all our relations within the natural and spirit worlds and can enter deeply into our essential nature as Humans and relate together in the sure knowledge that we are one interconnected spirit and body.

I’ve been integrating color and images and movement into user interfaces, cultivating the practice of kindness and respect in conversational forums, and generally evolving these sensory-based language(s) as my ground-of-being online. I have been blessed with many successes, large and small, in beginning to realize my dream, but the other night my ability to imagine what is truly possible took a quantum leap.

My friend and playmate in this realm FireHawk Hulin (aka DragonWolf Goheen) invited me to join him in Second Life to explore something he and the ever-amazing David Sibbet (aka Sunseed Bardeen) had been working on with the exquisite Michelle Paradis (aka SingingHeart Amat) … something truly unique in my experience, and totally magical.

Storiesatthefire

We sat in circle around the fire in this beautiful clearing made
sacred by our intention and David & Michelle’s artistry and told each other
stories. We shared the stories of our dreams and visions, the stories
that had brought each of us to this place in this moment of no-time.
Late into the night we spoke the words that brought us each into our
full being – together in a state of honor and respect.

We spoke through a long sunset, its last rays illuminating a variety
of lush flower beds that framed and colored each of the eight gates
that stood and marked each direction of our circumference. We continued
to speak as stars filled the sky above us and the sounds of soft
singing and drumming were joined by those of crickets and the night
sounds of the clearing. We were completely there, our small circle of
four; in that time and place, in body and in spirit.

I know that not everyone would be interested in exploring a virtual
world environment, even if the learning curve for navigating it was not
so steep. In the past I’ve thought of that fact as a reason not to
focus my creative energy there, but the other night a different
realization appeared to me. If the people who do play in Second Life –
the ‘geeks’ and futurists and early-adaptor trend-setters – are able to
experience something so truly transformational there as I experienced
the other night, then perhaps some of that peace and beauty will be
reflected, even in some small way, in what they create and write and
say and do in their own First Lives, or the ‘real’ world where the rest
of humanity lives.

This realization of larger purpose and
intent would make any time I spent in Second Life completely
justifiable, but on a more personal level it was enormously joyful and
generative to just let my imagination run free and experience the pure
pleasure of unbridled creativity… tasting that bliss is worth a lot
to me and I can’t wait to see what we’ll imagine next!

Online Community

I was just at a conference (actually, it was an ‘unconference’) in Mountain View for online community professionals. The design was Open Space Technology, which means the sessions were collaboratively designed ‘on the fly’ by the people who were there. That was a gas, and made it easier to connect with the other participants, including wise, experienced, ‘famous’ (ok, it’s all relative) online community pioneers like Howard Rheingold, Cliff Figallo and  Gail Ann Williams (all from the original WELL, Gail now at Salon).

Unfortunately none of them led sessions, and since this was my
first unconference, I was a bit too shy to propose one of my own. So, until I
connected personally with these folks and others like Jay Cross and Tracy Ruggles, etc. I was
actually beginning to wonder if I was in the right place.

It seemed that no matter what the
‘title’ of the first few sessions I was attending was, every session seemed to
be about control in one
way or another.

As I talked to more people, I realized that the majority of other
professionals at this event were
managers of internal forums at large corporations or equally large and specifically-targeted non-profits and
their main issues seemed to revolve around ”policing’ and managing
aberrant behavior. There were also many folks relatively new to this whole online community world who’d been given the job of developing community in their organizations. They came for ideas & inspiration, but were also bound by rules and objectives laid out by their bosses and/or organizational structures.

It felt a little foreign to me, since the issues and questions I am grappling
with are so different. Rather than struggling to control the interaction,
the groups I am working with want to foster self-determination and
initiative. Rather than wanting to set the agenda, we’re trying to
create the conditions for co-evolution and collaboration.

Maybe it is a matter of being at a different stage in the process, or at a different scale – many of the online communities I help steward or am involved with are smaller (under 1,000 people), more ‘personal’, and tend to be based on shared values and intertwined online / f2f relationships – but I think there are also profoundly different views of what an online community is, what inspires us about them and how to best engage within the field.

So I didn’t quite ‘find my tribe’ there in the way I would have liked, but it was undoubtedly exciting to have
online community be the topic of a large event like that and I
did have some fantastic conversations with the afore mentioned group of renegades. I also learned more about a few cool tools, made some
new connections and strengthened some older ones. Maybe I’m just too shy to really ‘get’ these events where everyone interesting seems to already know each other. I think I need a weekend slumber party to really get going…

At least I’m having a lot of fun with the wiki – provided by unconference sponsor  Social Text – which makes me think it’s just a matter of medium. Maybe I’m one of those aberrant people who is better suited to online conversation than in-person schmoozing in large groups. 🙂 Anyway, I’m having fun with the wiki and getting inspired about new creative ways to use the form.

Next time I’ll propose a session on the art of creating sacred space online, or the importance of beauty in supporting deep connections between people, or developing language for an earth-based internet…

A New Language

Train2dresden

Right now I’m on the train to Dresden, thinking about language. I’m on my way to Dresden to experience what’s going on at the newly-formed World Café Europe’s first pan-European gathering, and I’m thinking about language because part of my role there will be to help convey this experience to others, and I am dreaming about ways to do that most effectively.

Processes like the World Café that offer replicable opportunities for individual and collective knowing almost always employ some form of “harvesting” as an essential part of their practice. It is often the ‘gestalt’ through which the group’s knowing is achieved – a complex and precise culmination of the deep listening and identifying of patterns that run through the gathering, and a conscious pulling together of diverse threads and perspectives into an articulate whole.

What might be possible if the harvesting was shared with the entire community of practice, or with the larger networks of people that employ these opportunities for collective knowing? If we could make this vast depth of knowledge and experience visible to everyone who was interested, might there be an accelerated collective apprehension and an experience of deep unity and connection beyond the specifics of any one group’s process?

Yesterday before I left for Germany I was having a conversation with my friend Michael Jones about different sorts of language – he’s identified three: the language of action (methods, protocols, prescriptions), the language of meaning (models, concepts, theory), and the language of story. In his system, the latter is more about conveying beauty, or an aesthetic, than it is reporting data. Using metaphor, the language of story is ambiguous, its meanings presented as a multiplicity, giving the listener’s imagination something to play with and explore from different angles. It sounds to me as if, using this definition, the language of story provides the material that can catalyze knowing in the listener. Full of question, its sentences are often more like gestures than statements; it’s the language of the senses, of experience itself.

This is the elusive language I am looking for, because important as they are for conveying useful data, I don’t think the language of action or meaning alone will engage the necessary senses in understanding what is really happening in a World Café. To access a language that takes us deep into the mystery of knowing we need details; vibrant, vivid details, alive with color and music.

I personally believe that the language of the senses – of smell and taste and touch and image – precedes story, in that these are the elements from which we create and share our stories. So what is for Michael the language of story I might call the language of the senses.

Whatever one calls it, this is the task I’ve set myself. Not only to call and ride the wave of this magical language of detail, story, and catalytic elementals, but to see if I can do so in a replicable way that would help others in their own harvesting. I have some great thinking companions in responding to this challenge, and I’m excited about this creative adventure, and the stories and catalyzations that might result.

Community Technology

Online community maven Nancy White launched her new series of interviews with community technology stewards by interviewing me yesterday for my work with the World Café!  I’m thrilled and honored to have the distinction of being the first one, and it’s always a gas to work with Nancy.

What’s even more exciting is the visual that graphic practitioner Susan Kelly and I created to illustrate the way the elements of the virtual infrastructure work together, and Nancy posted it on her blog along with the podcast of our conversation. Check it out!