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Oh, Hare.

October 26, 2007 By Chris Corrigan Travel, Uncategorized

Chicago, Illinois
It comes off almost as a sigh.
Chicago-O’Hare is well known for being a finicky place to make connections, due to weather or traffic.   I’ve mostly had good luck coming through here, with only one weather delay.   Today though I have enjoyed the hospitality of   the C concourse for most of the day, compliments of a United flight to Vancouver that was cancelled at 9:00.   I’m now awaiting the call for the 3:25 flight home.

So what does the C concourse have to offer the stranded traveller?   There are Starbucks outlets, but they lose their appeal after a couple of shots of watery espresso.   Hudson News is omnipresent but despite selling The Atlantic, The New Yorker and The Economist, they seems suspiciously short on Harper’s.   I am half imagining that the reason is political, given Harper’s stinging rebukes of establishment American politics of late.   Whch is why I want to read it.   Instead, I bought a copy of Best American Short Stories 2006, edited by Stephen King who provides an entertaining and honest assessment about the state of American short stroy writing: alive but not well.   His selections for the anthology are great.

Food…so not much around here of note.   I’ve always appreciated the fact that you can get Odwalla juice pretty freely around here.   I’m loaded on some kind of blueberry B-vitamin power mix.   Of the outlets, the Corner Bakery has the nicest sandwiches, freshly made pannini.   When I need a fill, the Manchu Wok offers heaps of non-descript Chinese food, MSG free at least and it fills the belly for the four hour flight to Vancouver on United, which I have redubbed “The Hungry Skies.”

Wireless is cheap, at $6.95 a day which is a steal if you’re logged on for as long as I have been, and there are these power stations that are nice to work at.   Power plugs in the waiting areas are scarce and nearly all in use by businessmen sucking down the watts while they make uberimportant cell phone calls.

And so the day proceeds, slowly, without any remarkable incidents, watching the crowds ebb and flow and waiting for UA1119 to spirit me to the west coast, eight hours later than I expected to get home.

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Another week, another open space happening online

October 25, 2007 By Chris Corrigan Open Space 2 Comments

Burlington, Vermont

Opened Space this morning along with my colleague Lenore Metwon with around 150 community planners who are interested in the heart and soul of place. You can follow along on the conference wiki at CommunityMatters07.

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The responsibility of love in the real world

October 24, 2007 By Chris Corrigan Being, Leadership

I’ve been in this inquiry lately about the responsibility of love, by which I mean that the work of supporting open heartedness comes at a cost.   It;s not that we need to stop supporting open heartedness, just that we have to do it with a degree of care and consciousness.
Rob Paterson today posted a photo that captures this dilemma, along with a post about NGOs in a messy world.

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Over forests of red

October 24, 2007 By Chris Corrigan Travel, Uncategorized

Burlington, Vermont
I grew up in Ontario and this my favourite time of year in Eastern North America for many reasons.   But chief among those reasons is what happens to forests out here in the fall.   It is hard to describe to anyone who has never seen them, a maple forest in the fall, where the colours are bright yellow, orange and red.   Pitched against a blue sky, the scene is iconic, beautiful and stirs up a nostalgia in me for home.

Flying from Choicago to Burlington today, we crossed over the maple woodlots of the farming country of southern Ontario and upstate New York which were alive with the colour of turning.   Then over the Adirondacks, past Mount Marcy and Skylight, two peaks I have climbed upon, these ancient worn down mountains, 20 times older than the ones I live on now but still showing their grandeur and the shape of peaks and valleys covered with pine and spruce with pockets of yellow birch and red maple.   Over Lake Champlain, and into Burlington, a lovely older town on the lake, biger and more modern than I remembered it from a previous visit in 1993 but still small enough to have a main street feel about it.

Met up with my Art of Hosting mate Lenore Mewton and we stopped in at the CommunityMatters reception at the Echo Centre and then on for an excellent meal of contemporary Cantonese food at A SIngle Pebble.

Beautiful part of the world to retrun too, and I’m eagerly looking forward to the gathering tomorrow.

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Off to practice the art of Open Space again

October 24, 2007 By Chris Corrigan Art of Hosting, Facilitation, Open Space One Comment

I’m on the road again, travelling to Burlington Vermont to Open Space at the CommunityMatters07 conference.   This is a great conference, working with really interesting people focused on innovative and artistic practices for community planning.

It seems that I’m doing a fair amount of work these days with artists and with those who see themselves as practictioners of an art, whether it is my colleagues in the Art of Hosting, the community artists from the Art of Engagement or these community planners.   I have a sense that there is an emerging consciousness around work: that people increasingly see themselves as practitioners and as artists, even in traditionally scientific disciplines like community planning.

I’m curious if you are thinking of your practice as an art, or, if you are an artist in other aspect of your life, what does it mean to bring your artistic sensibility to traditionally “non-artistic” fields?

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