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Home from The Burren

January 17, 2012 By Chris Corrigan Poetry, Travel 2 Comments

An incredible trip to Ireland and England with my dad, and yesterday I have returned home.  We were in The Burren in Co. Clare for an Art of Hosting and then my dad and I drove to Armagh to see the house his great grandfather was born in.  Along the way we met some distant cousins, found the graves of our ancestors and drove through the landscape of our history.  Afterwards we went to Engalnd and stayed with friends in Hertfordshire where we lived 30 years ago.  Met up with some old school mates, saw Spurs play a dreadful draw at White Hart Lane and caught up with old friends and colleagues.

Today one of our Art of Hosting participants sent this lovely John O’Donohue poem along.  O’Donohue was a poet closely associated with The Burren and I read his work on friendship the whole time I was in Clare.  This is a good way to come back home, with the memories of a great trip behind me.

Fluent

I would love to live

Like a river flows

Carried by the surprise

Of its own unfolding

That is me at the moment, in the moment.


 

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Happy solstice

December 21, 2011 By Chris Corrigan Uncategorized

20111221-222237.jpg

Happy Solstice

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From the feed

December 16, 2011 By Chris Corrigan Links

Florida foliage

A plant by the Marriot near the Tampa airport.

A busy and packed trip to Baltimore and Tampa this week prevented much in the way of blogging, but there were several links of note that crossed my attention.

  • A Metis blogger called “âpihtawikosisân” has been producing some incredible stuff on Attawapiskat and the decline of useful conversation in the public sphere.  I have much more to say about this.
  • Related to this, some youth at Rosebud have asserted their desire not to be a part of the poverty pornography industry, indulged in by network TV news.
  • You need power to change things of course, but when you don’t have it, their are some options.  Tom Atlee processes lessons about power from the #Occupy movement, while Seth Godin talks about what you can do in more mundane organizational settings.
  • And if you’re really down and out, you’re probably already in the majority of people in the world making a living under the radar.  Robert Neuwirth thinks you’re leading edge.

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From the feed

December 9, 2011 By Chris Corrigan Community, Improv, Links, Organization 2 Comments

Frosty mornings

A review of things that caught my eye this week:

  • In #Occupy news, three articles of note: The Good (an #Occupy Wall Street Open Space), The Bad (an #Occupy LA arrest and torture) and The Ugly (Republican messaging regarding #Occupy).
  • And The Helpful.  A story about the choices cities make in dealing with #Occupy camps
  • And in related news, a beautiful story about Pancho Ramos Stierle and his commitment to generosity.
  • Two fantastic TED talks: Louie Schwartzberg on Gratitude and Luis von Ahn on how to make good use of useless tasks.
  • MIT reports that improvisation may be the key to managing change (duh!)
  • And finally, Jay Nolly who was the much loved starting goalkeeper for our Vancouver Whitecaps for three and a half years, was traded this week to Chicago.  My favourite memory of him was in the 2010 season at Swangard Stadium when he made this crucial save.

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Please don’t buy 3M post it flip charts

December 8, 2011 By Chris Corrigan Facilitation 4 Comments

You know the ones. 3M, the makers of the greatest facilitation invention ever – the post it note – decided a number of years ago to do for the flipchart what they had done for the scrap of paper: add an adhesive to it.

Now instead of taping flipchart paper up on a wall, all you have to do is peel it from a pad and affix it to a wall.  Neat and tidy.

And almost completely useless.

For anyone who does any amount of creative facilitation, the only thing better than a piece of white, clean, plain flipchart paper, is a roll of white clean, flipchart paper.  With plain flipchart paper you can do the following:

  • Take notes on an easel
  • lay it on a table top and make mind maps
  • write on the back of it
  • tape it in landscape portrait on a wall to make mind maps
  • cut it into pieces for Open Space topics
  • fold it into huge paper airplanes
  • lay it on top of cafe tables for participants to write notes and draw on
  • fold it up and easily separate it later
  • roll it up, and unroll it again
  • tape together several pieces to make a mural.

It’s amazing.  You can make it bigger or smaller, tape it any which way you like and write over every part of the surface.  And the stuff is pretty cheap, coming in at 50 sheets for about $12 if you buy the pads individually, 24  cents a sheet.

Contrast this to the 3M sticky post-it flipchart.  On the surface, these things seem to be the miracle we have all been waiting for.  But unless you are using a single sheet and hanging it in a vertical position, and not needing to do anything with it later, these beasts are compromised by all kinds of design flaws:

  • You can only hang them one way without using tape.
  • You cannot write on the top, because there is a glossy strip there where the adhesive was stuck on the previous sheet.
  • You can’t really use the back (at least people don’t).
  • you can’t roll or fold them without a mess (and sometimes an impossible sticky tangle, with ripped sheets as a result).
  • You can’t place them in a heap without them sticking together, making later sorting out a massive chore.
  • You can’t cut them up without first removing the sticky top
  • You can’t make them into murals (see glossy strip, above)
  • Not useful for cafe table tops, as they stick and you can’t write something and then rotate the sheet.

And on top of that, for all that inconvenience, they will set you back a whopping $42 for only 30 sheets.  More than a DOLLAR a sheet.

So, meeting organizers, I know you are trying to be professional and innovative by buying the latest and greatest from 3M (the post-it people after all!) but please take a pass on these pads.  Plain white paper wins every single time.

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