Archive for June, 2008



Spitclean

Yesterday was like driving with one hand on the steering wheel and the other cleaning the dashboard with spit. But first there was a trip to my eye doctor (20/20 vision, only a slight creep up in reading glass strength), who sent me home good to go for another 2 years.

Back home I kept one of my healthy eyes on the computer for emails washing in over the transom, especially from the countries where there are people who want something from me right now. The other eye/hand had started to clean out the mess in my office and do something akin to the reset button on a screen or computer program.

I finally threw out the coursebooks of MSH training courses I gave 10 or more years ago as well as anything else I had not touched for a few years. Sometimes I did not even open the file; it was easier that way. I am not an accountant so I don’t have to worry about stuff you have to keep x number of years for the taxman. In the process I also got rid of aged dustbunnies and untangled nests of wires.

I also rearranged the furniture so I can open my file drawers again; the last vestige of the calamity arrangement in my office, which used to serve as my sickroom, is now gone. With three more weeks to go to the first year anniversary, the symbolism of all these moves is hard to miss. When I picked up the biohazard bag with the keys of the plane that is no more I started thinking about what to do with them on July 14th. I am thinking of something splashy.

All this activity was triggered by the arrival last night of the 19-year old daughter of my friends Mariette and Dirk from Holland. Aimee is here to study economics at Harvard Summer School until mid August and I am delivering her to her dorm on Saturday morning. She is spending today at our house to ‘get used to being in America.’ A soft landing of sorts. Speaking about landings, I have not offered to take her for a plane ride as I am very sure her mom and dad would not approve.

It was the state trooper at Logan who alerted me to her presence (“Where are you ma’am?” – “I am standing by the reception railing outside customs.” – “Turn around ma’am!”). Aimee has passed through immigration and customs very quickly and I had arrived much too late, because of a brain only half turned on after the great clean-up. Her Dutch cellphone did not work. She had struggled with the coin-operated phone and given up, putting her fate in the hands of our state police, who delivered her into my hands. Not a good way to arrive. It was exactly what I had wanted to prevent. I learned something about the neo-cortex and my reptilian brain; the latter to be mistrusted and shut off as soon as possible after it kicks into gear.

Joe is coming back later today and then we will have a full house again with all the rooms in our house occupied. The idea of Lobster Cove Inn is not so strange as it may have sounded before, except we like having people we know rather than paying strangers. And as I write this there is another arrival. Steve and puppy Chicha have arrived after a long drive through the night straight from London (Canada). There is much hugging and yelping as Tessa is reunited with her man and dog.

Whistling

Yesterday I was chauffeured into town again by Joe. While he was skilfully manipulating powerpoint (‘noodling’) to perfect the conceptual framework of CHS, I attended to other business, mostly related to our partnerships. It felt more like partnershits and mid-morning I was getting in such a funk because of all the hiccups in those relationships that it was time to get out of the building. Luckily the rowing club is across the street, so I left Joe to his noodling and went rowing on the Charles River for about one hour, down to the Elliott Bridge in Watertown and back. That got things right and the rest of the day went well.

After lunch we had another meeting with some staff from CHS in Cambridge and one on the phone from DC which produced iteration 8, sent out before we left the office for one more round of comments. That will be it for now. This morning Joe slept in; the early risings were starting to get to him. He is off to another job in Worcester to be back with us tomorrow night. On Monday we have one final meeting on the framework to put that baby to bed and Joe on the plane back to San Diego on Tuesday.

We left MSH late; too late, because of two goodbye parties that I wanted to attend. Thomas is leaving for business school in California. We travelled together to Nepal a few years ago. I will miss all 6 foot 10 of him. I read him a short poem and handed over lots of money from all over the world that he will pass on to a friend in Nepal. Kathleen is off to Belgium but she will come back in 3 months, speaking fluently French, at least that is her plan.

Our commute back was our slowest sofar and took us nearly one and a half hour. The worst part of the commute was that it was NPR fundraising week so the people who would otherwise have given us the news to distract us from the traffic jam were busy telling us why we should give them money for most of our slow ride home.

Back home hausfrau Axel was waiting with ‘mood adjusters’ and a chicken on the grill. Tessa joined us soon returning from a hard day of selling leather goods in Rockport. We sat outside as long as the mosquitoes let us, which was not very long. We ate our meal inside while outside continued to be a glorious evening with mosquitoes looking for blood.

After dinner we watched the movie Pucker Up which chronicles the run up and climax of the international whistling championships in Lewisburg North Carolina. Sita does not order hits or popular movies from Netflix. This is how we learn many things about the world we had no idea existed. Among other things we learned that Geert from Mierlo in the south of Holland was crowned the world whistling champion (in 2005 or 6). The movie follows him around in his native town which was fun as I could check the translations. Axel could too. I was also fun because none of the Americans could pronounce his name. We think Geert won because his last whistle was the American national hymn and the audience rose from their seats, hand on heart, deeply moved. After the movie was over everyone who could was whistling throughout the house for a little longer as he/she went about the business of getting ready for bed. The house was full of happy whistling sounds. I also puckered up producing a puffy sort of sound, not a whistle, but happy nevertheless.

Dizzy

Yesterday Joe and I started out again at a very early hour. Once again I was chauffeured to work. I could get used to that. Joe calls it ‘driving Miss Sylvia.’ I particularly like it on the way home when I can totally relax, nap a bit and then, if all the stars are lined up right, come home to a husband waiting with a drink and the perfect meal.

Last night that perfect meal was grilled squash (courgettes), grilled asparagus and salmon accompanied by a light summer wine overlooking Lobster Cove at full tide in the late afternoon sun. It was heavenly and worth every minute of the one hour commute each way, chauffeured or not.

Joe and I are making some progress, we think, on the model and positioning statement of the MSH center that has hired us, although we haven’t had that much input from the technical folks since they are all on the road. We are not too worried about that because we are distilling text and model from the, fairly raw, material from a retreat that was held earlier this year. We are building on that, not re-building from scratch. The model spontaneously turned into a key and a key hole; those sitting with us around the table liked it. We’ll see if it does anything for people who were not part of that conversation. The biggest handicap has been that we have not been able to have even one minute with the center’s chief and the deputy is now on vacation, so we are playing alone in the sandbox, without any supervision. It’s fun!

Axel spent another half day travelling to and fro for a half hour appointment at Spaulding’s Rehab in Boston. Three of those appointments a week eat up a considerable chunk of his time; and this is only the speech and occupational therapy. His dizzy spell in the car on Saturday has now been labeled as a vestibular disturbance that requires another therapeutic intervention. Tessa is trying to get Axel to do Kundalini yoga instead or at least start doing, on his own, one of five Tibetan rites. It certainly sounds better than going to rehab. However, what she demonstrated made me worry about finding Axel at the end of the the day crashed into the antique full length mirror in our bedroom. It requires circling 20 times with arms outstretched while keeping one’s eye firmly fixed on one’s index finger or something like that. It’s a nice idea but knowing about Axel’s pre-existing balance problems with this new dizziness on top of it all worries me a bit.

Feeling recursive

We are discovering over and over again that recovery is not a linear process – as in getting a little bit better all the time, a graph line that goes only up. We are finding new defects in our bodies that either went unnoticed or that were caused by one misalignment or another during the last 11 months. Yesterday I went back to my physical therapist because of a variety of pains and aches. That was a good thing. She discovered that my sacrum was ‘off’ as she called it. “That is no problem,” she said as she pressed and pushed it back into place. I was amazed that she could do this just like that. With the help of my breathing (“take a deep breath in – hold it – let it go”) she manipulated the bottom of my spine back into alignment. Whether it will stay that way is doubtful and so I have a new set of exercises to strengthen and stretch muscles on one side to keep the sacrum in place.

There are new therapy schedules in our appointment book on the kitchen counter. I also need to get back to the ankle doctor because the swelling of my ankle has not changed since February and it is about time to be back to normal. Axel too is going through this; a dizzy spell on Saturday is sending him back to the frontal lobe doctor again. Overall the line of recovery moves upward but there is some looping back.

The word ‘recursions’ came to my mind and when I looked it up in Wikipedia it turned out the wrong word however one sentence in the description of the word resonated, “Are we done yet? […] Without such a termination condition a recursion would go on forever.” That’s sometimes how we feel.

Joe and I went to MSH early and sorted out how best to help one division of MSH in its identity search, for which they had hired him and blocked some of my time. Usually I am not in on Mondays and I stayed under the radar by being on another floor; several people never realized I was there. This was a good thing as it turned out because the assignment took all our attention for the day. Joes stays with us in what he calls ‘Sterling Towers East.’ It was nice to be chauffeured to and from work by Joe; I fell asleep twice on the way home and he took a nap when we got back home. After all, for us the day had started early. I had not been getting up so early for over a week and it takes a bit to get used to the day starting at 4:30. It means that I am ready to eat at 5 PM (dinner is never ready that early) and to go to bed at 9 PM. We did not quite stick to that schedule once home for the dinner portion. The lateness of our dinner had something to do with Sita and Jim’s setting off on a trip to Kentucky to attend a music festival

Axel’s new grill, a Father’s Day gift from me, was used for the second day in a row. My being pressured into this gift went something like this: Me: “Why should I buy him a gift? He’s not my father.” Sita: “He’s a father because of you.” So now there is this shiny new Webber charcoal grill; a replica of the one Sita and Jim burned up by putting wooden logs in it – as if it was an outdoor fireplace. Sometimes I wonder how they can be so dumb and smart at the same time.

Touchy

We started father’s Day with a Tessa-led yoga exercise in the living room for all but Sita and Jim. I have not done any yoga for years. I knew I had gotten very stiff but was dismayed at how bad it was. We did two sun salutations which is all Axel and I could handle. I repeated it this morning on my own with an intent to do this every day.

We celebrated Father’s Day in a way that was a little different from what was planned. Tessa had organized an outing on a Schooner from Rockport but the crew had called off all scheduled departures because of inclement weather. It was actually not that inclement except that the sun was not shining. Instead we went to a restaurant that claims to be entirely ‘green’ and has the best sushi in Gloucester. For the occasion Axel ordered a ‘one daughter’ sake that came in a small wooden box (nothing but sipping possible) while the girls competed for who was the one daughter. He could have ordered two drinks but he did not, getting quite disciplined about alcohol consumption, especially at midday. All our foods were served in small (tiny, according to Axel) quantities, cleverly displayed in three dimensions and unusual combinations.

We took the scenic route to Rockport, Tessa’s second home, and did the Bearskin Neck loop. We entered several shops, touching at least 20 things exclaiming how nice or how pretty or how cool and then walked out again. Tessa hates people like that. Axel counted the fathers who had been taken, like him, on a Father’s Day shopping adventure by their daughters, wives or girlfriends. You could tell they had been sold a load of goods; billed as if it was fun or lured to Rockport under some pretext or another, you could see whole bunches of them leaning against shop windows or doors, looking bored out of their minds. You could tell that they wanted to be home watching a game or rummaging in their workshops or doing something else, anything but shopping in tourist knick-knack stores.

Eventually our path lead to Val’s store and then to DJ’s leather goods store and we girls made sure we touched at least 20 things there as well. DJ is one of my faithful blog readers so he knows everything about us, sometimes even before Axel, Sita and Tessa know. Axel started saying that we had just come back from a conference but did not need to finish his sentence as DJ said, “I know.” It makes for efficient conversation as there is no need for preliminaries; you can cut straight to the chase.

Back home Axel received his present from Sita, an oil painting set. He has been admiring the paintings by John Walker (also at Bearskin Neck); we are hoping for an as yet unrevealed talent. I returned to the garden and ‘hilled’ the potatoes while Axel got the guestroom ready for Joe Sterling who has returned to the East Coast for a short consultancy with MSH and another in Worcester. The place where he built the ramp last year is still somehwat recognizable but the grass is growing nicely in, covering up memories of being wheelchair-bound.

Kids

It was heaven to wake up in a real bed and not have to walk on a scuzzy damp carpet to get to the ‘men-only’ bathroom that was the only one on our dorm floor; or to worry about the mice and giant ants that shared the space with us; or entertaining the possibility of being locked out of one’s dorm room in a flimsy nightgown with cellphone and car keys inside the room. All that is now past, until next year in Charleston where we will throw ourselves into such an adventure again.

Yesterday Ed Schein delivered the closing plenary in the conference with a reflective piece, what else could one expect, on teaching. He had sketched out his own learning journey. Sita was stationed in the back of the room and recorded his journey on two foam board panels while he talked. She had her own group of fans and curious people sitting close by watching intently as she turned Schein’s words into pictures and key words. Right in line with the conference slogan (we’ll blow their minds), she blew everyone’s mind there. For Axel and me it was an experience that is hard to turn into words: to see your child doing something that is so truly masterful is the best gift one can get as parents. Many people here knew Sita and Tessa from Caringbridge and greeted Sita as if she was a relative or close friend. OBTS was another one of those communities that circled its arms around us, eleven months ago.

Going home after such an intense week is both wonderful (own bed, own stuff, kids) and a let down. I was also intensely tired from having been ‘on’ for an entire week. I was also nervous about the coming two weeks and all the work that has to be done between now and then before I take off for two back to back trips to Ghana and Haiti. I did not dare to open my mailbox which had filled up to overflowing again, just as I had been getting the contents down to below stress levels.

I ended up gardening and had my first mosquito bites of the season. I discovered another two tiny asparagus spears which raised our success level in getting the plants started to 25%. I thinned the seedlings and put them in a salad with the romaine lettuce that had reached adult proportions. It was the first meal from our garden this year.

I still have not seen Tessa who came home after I left for Babson a week ago. She has a Father’s Day plan that brings us all together for an outing on the water. Right now it is raining which is good for the garden but not for the outing; still, being together in the rain sounds better than being separated in the sun.

Eleven

I have no time this morning to read all the previous 10 entries for the 14th of the month as I usually do. The last day of the conference has arrived and there is much, too much to do for such an indulgence. It will have to wait for later this day, when we get back home.

The biggest joy of yesterday was having Sita ‘scribe’ my session on MSH’s leadership program. I marvelled how she turned my words into this awesome storyboard.. And then of course introducing her to people here who mean so much to me and who feel they know Sita (and Tessa) from Caringbridge. They are part of the grander family without even knowing it.

Our evening talent show, our last evening together before we part ways later today, is a longstanding OBTC tradition. It was phenomenal this year, with talents ranging from stand up comic, cowboy yodeling, opera, magic on rhyme, skits. I somehow managed to produce my chronicle of the conference in poetic form. I am now expected to do this, so I was put on the program before the conference started. There’s always a lilttle bit of anxiety; will I be able to do this again this year? I first started to write a poetic chronicle in 2002 and somewhere along the line it became a tradition. I have fun collecting the impressions and then turning them into verse.

An now it is time to go see the doctoral students who have created a workshop session out of their learning earlier this week; that too has become a tradition, as well as me having to run because I still have to have breakfast and it is late.

And in between events I will think back on those eleven months that have passed and all the people who helped make it pass so well for us.

Learning

The piercing headache from yesterday was accompanied by severe nausea. Nothing is worse than having to throw up when you are in a dorm that does not have its own bathroom; a bathroom that says it is only for men and you are not one of those. Suffice to say I ended up sleeping an Excedrin-induced sleep till lunch and thus missed the star speakers (Tichy/Schlesinger) and workshops I had so carefully selected.

I attended an afternoon workshop with my OD counterpart from Pathfinder, a sister organization from Boston. Together with 40 other people we were led in 45 minutes through 8 experiential excercises. Good thing the last one was a relaxation exercise that took us down a stair, to our childhood beds, out of the windown, through the clouds, to the moon and back, all very relaxed, in a darkened room. It was an hour well-spent.

I walked out of two other sessions and learned later that my walking out had contributed greatly to some people’s learning; my motives the object of intense speculation. My own learning was more about connection, as it usually is, in spontaneous mini workshops, self-organized and led, outside the formal program, at a picnic bench in the sun.

A Boston harbor cruise took us out past the islands, with planes departing and arriving overhead, sailboats everywhere and a land- and seascape I am used seeing from the air as I fly in and out of Boston. The return into Boston harbor towards the well-lit skyline was spectacular; it also showed where we can save some energy.

I am the unofficial poet laureate of OBTC and so I am constantly collecting images to later turn into verse. This happens usually around midnight. Tonight is our talent show and I will be called on stage for a product that is not finished yet and constantly being re-written. This always creates a slight panic which does seem to enhance the creative process, albeit at some cost.

Today is also my session which I will be presenting with Sita scribing in the back. It was a last minute idea from Axel and Sita agreed. She may well be the draw for my session. I realized I did not make any handouts and feel somewhat underprepared.

Mindblow

I woke up with a piercing headache. This conference is about having your mind blown. Something like that happened last night in the opening session when I found myzelf exploring Plato’s cave with Indian gentlemen. How’s that for starters? Or maybe it is simply the thick yellow pollen that covers everything.

Yesterday we used up our allotted Board time, not planned but still all the way up to lunch. Finally there was the long awaited process check. Not always easy but quite honest and direct. We ended on a high note, waved goodbye to our outgoing members and transferred voting right to the newbies.

I left to pick up Axel in Manchester and we returned just in time for the opening reception. Word about our accident had reached some and not others and so there were some gasps and then a quick up and down scan, “What? You look just fine!” A fellow pilot drew a small Piper Cherokee on my name tag. One of my dorm mates is also a pilot. They are everywhere!

The after dinner kick off session by Bill Torbert and Joan Gallos was staged to ‘Blow our minds,’ as per the conference slogan. It did, and so now this headache.

I am trying to introduce this crowd to the notion of public note taking and, in its more advanced form, graphic facilitation. What better way than to invite Sita to scribe my session on Friday? She has agreed. It may be more of a draw because of her.

Teach Thyself

After a second long day of board deliberations we sampled another of Wellesley’s restaurants, this time Italian. Each time we are collectively eating too much and once again I returned with a doggy bag. Some of the Thai food was consumed during the night, with permission, by one of my dorm mates. Now that participants to the conference are streaming in there is no way of knowing or controlling what happens during the night. I still plan to drive home with Thai and Italian meals in the cooler on the back seat but I am not so sure about the quantities.

It is tricky to be on the board of an organization that is about organizational behavior and teaching others how to ‘behave’ organizationally in ways that are productive, affirming and satisfying. I cannot help reflect on how we behave ourselves in this organization and I see others do the same, although mostly in private. Collectively we know much about group dynamics, including safety. We have done research and published about this in theses and papers. But that is, of course, always about other peoples’ behavior. Here it is us. I have found that when my reptilian brain get involved (when my emotional buttons get pushed) stuff becomes trickier to handle. In private conversations I discover that, although we follow Robert’s Rules of Order, some people question this and other processes we use. They are inherited from the mother culture (academia), which I do not share. It is not clear to which degree they are adopted consciously or unconsciously. I have so far not dared to question this practice but am emboldened by the private revelations from others. We are all teachers and we are creating many teaching moments in our deliberations; there’s a whole bunch of them slowly dying on the floor.

Yesterday we debated long and hard about our relationship with another group that has a longstanding and rich connection to the conference. There is much emotion that colors the conversation; we ignore it. Times have changed, I hear. What I also see is that the ever increasing complexity and busy-ness of our lives diminishes tolerance and concern for the other; there simply is no time to ‘just talk and work things out the old fashioned way.’ And thus this old relationship is on the block; personal irritations are braided together with rules into hard substances that feel to me more like weapons than the tools they are intended to be. I wish I could be as perseverant as Henry Fonda about our uneasy group dynamics but I have no guts for that.

Our agenda not completed we have to meet again this morning. There is other stuff that is bubbling up, about expectations not met, causing more feelings to come to the surface. I am finding that the stronger the feelings, the more assumptions are attached about ‘the other’ who is (supposedly) causing these feelings. It takes more and more determination to keep separating assumptions from facts.

I had planned to go rowing before picking up Axel but I am beginning to sense that this may not be in the stars. Meditative exercise would be good for all of us.

Yesterday, between meeting and eating I had some free time to work my mailbox and then study the conference program. It was amazed to see that my session is listed right after a session about what we can learn about decision making from an aircraft accident investigation. It is a simulation, not the real thing. Even if I had wanted to go to that session I cannot because it happens at the same time as mine.

A day of sitting for hours on end, and eating too much, is not good for my body. I am hurting all over and the dorm room set up does not help. My room is in the basement and the carpet feels damp when I take off my shoes. Large ants, the size of African termites, traverse the room and halls. Even though I know they carry a message of patience, both Susan and I have crushed a few. We just don’t want half inch ants crawling into our bed (or pants).


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