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brandon williamscraig  

Community on Purpose

On Wed, Mar 25, 2009 at 2:29 PM, I wrote:

Brandon here, requesting an assist.

My Dad has been working from Dallas as my dissertation editor, using online tech, and we have been having marvelous success working toward my Fall 2009 drop-deadline. He has volunteered to fly to Berkeley for much of April in order that we might create a writing retreat to complete as much as is possible in a month. Even though he is an amazing jazz musician with psychological savvy and good social skills, this will be even more spiffy if he doesn't have to sleep on the couch in our tiny apartment all month.

He will be arriving April 7th and leaving the 29th. Being able to put him up somewhere in the East Bay for any portion of that time would be a huge help, even if only for one or two nights. Please don't hesitate to let me know, even if the possibility of a spot is uncertain.
Come hell or high water, this dissertation will be done this year.
Many people receiving this email have been wonderfully helpful and for that I am profoundly grateful.

Warmly,

B

----------------------------------------------

Today I wrote:

Brandon here with an amazing report I thought you might want to hear.

At the end of March I sent out a request for help finding David Williams a place to stay through April (no small amount of time) while he is in Berkeley with us.

In case you ever wonder what kind of resources are available to people who intentionally participate in building community, like yourself, my request activated positive responses by at least (and with as few overlaps as possible) two intentional communities, including Crescent Sangha House community and Berkeley Cohousing; 14 families and 10 individuals in 7 cites from Association Building Community, Aikido of Berkeley, Epworth United Methodist Church, and a fantasy gaming group; the local Green Party; individual undergraduate and graduate students at UC; local clergy unrelated to any of the groups mentioned above; denizens of the worlds first dog park; and a veterinary office, not to mention people too far away to really count but who sent supportive suggestions (via Facebook, Twitter, Skype, freenode, text messages, blog comments, etc.) nonetheless.

My Dad now has a lovely bedroom in a friendly house less than three miles away, for his entire stay. And huge thanks to you all, including the 27 people who have continued to follow-up, requesting updates even after their original positive response.

And, to those critics who say building community on purpose will never become an adequate response to the alienation of an industrialized human imagination, I throw my arms wide and grin!

B

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   | posted by Unknown @ 4/03/2009 01:41:00 PM

 

 

I've declared a moratorium on lists of woes.

This was inspired by hearing myself deliver the following...
"How am I doing? My 15 month old son died with no explanation just before last Christmas. As a result we gave up our home and jobs and drove around the nation, fueled by consumer credit which is now generating major fees. My Aikido organization opted to deny my advancement for political reasons even after my teacher promoted me, a large portion of our dojo traveled at their own expense to San Diego as instructed, and I demonstrated twice. My dissertation is still in stasis, not past its first chapter, while my clock ends in December and the federal direct loan people have restarted payments (now entering default) because my school won't list me as in process until I make "acceptable progress". I am responsible for all our family earning beyond the money my wife makes to pay for her schooling and I have no reliable job yet, beyond flexible hourly labor, and lost all income from my Aikido teaching. Following a misjudgment while I was away working in D.C., Washington Mutual elected to extend "Overdraft Protection" (unrequested loans) even though I had had same removed (so no money = no withdrawls/fees) and perpetrated fraud by way of fees and penalties that deserves legislative attention.

Our van was stolen, emptied of it's most valuable contents and then recovered in time for me to pass too close to an AC Transit Bus parked in the only lane of traffic for repairs, and touch its mirror with mine such that my passenger side window exploded. Which cost $250 to replace. And the bus was apparently damaged. And a fellow claimed he got glass in his eye even though he was on the other side of the van and considerably lower down and the reporting officer was "skeptical". My passport request in April resulted in a counter-request while we were on the road for extensive additional information which was packed in storage at home so, when we got home, my packet of info crossed their "never mind - you'll have to pay $150 and start again" letter in the post. I have airline tickets for next Monday October 29th to work in Canada. The bureaucracy and paperwork cascade following all this has made other activities than working and lurching around catching up almost impossible. How are you?"

As yet another hearer became more and more horrified with this brief version of the last several months, mumbled sympathetic noises and went away shoulders slumped, I reflected that this process didn't seem to be serving anyone. I've been operating under the mistaken assumption that speaking of suffering was in almost all cases a good idea. As the litany gets longer and longer it would seem like a comic set-up if it were happening within the confines of a shaggy dog story, sit-com, or stand-up act. A concrete person saying these things is mostly an assault on the soft places in thehuman heart. Talking has probably reached the limit of its usefulness. I'm tired of most folks I know wincing in anticipation of another addition to the list whenever they see me coming. So no more.

I asked my father for specific advice, a practice more or less unheard of and, in all his spiritual, therapeutic, and academic wanderings, I wondered, what had he learned of sparking life-shifts when some pattern had passed beyond being profoundly burdensome. He suggested (paraphrased) that I do everything in my power to minimize the things I can control as soon as possible and simplify parts of my life wherever possible in order to have more bandwidth to deal with sudden attacks from without. Seems a good idea. A significant part of me is beginning to disavow my responsibility in this cascade, which is against my religion. The question is not do I have influence here, but which parts of this can be brought under beneficent influence.

So I got my hair cut. Time for a costume change, hacking off what remains of my history (you are what you eat > hair is extruded protein > long hair is a metaphorical and literal record of whatever has gone before). I didn't lop off my hair during Aidan's Funeral and send it to be burned with his body just because he spent so much time riding me and sleeping with his hands in it. Every meal and nap and body transition we shared was in that hair and I want to hang on to any part of him I can for as long as I can. However, if this is in any way connected to my current dilemmas, and I'm not sure about it either way, I'm willing to experiment with altering parts of my experiential system. It will also probably help me get hired. In San Francisco I got flirted with by members of both genders, nobody got out of my way as I walked down the street, and I seem to have suddenly become more approachable. Fascinating.
I highly recommend Joyce Hair Design (http://www.yelp.com/biz/S63wjabcaTsp_Fzo8xwOnQ) There is a clear conflict of interest in writing a recommendation for a "secret among friends." Granted the desire to promote a sterling businesswoman trumps this conflict, but the dilemma persists, so please tell all your friends to go but with the caveat that it mustn't be during the same shift I am trying to find parking and get my extruded protein managed.
Joyce has that rare combination of top scores in each of the qualities I consider that can generate a highest rating. Capacity (relational, technical, and artistic), Accessibility (excellent location that presents no barriers to a good experience), and price ($18 + tip). Above all else, it is immediately evident that her primary desire and capacity is to make your head, the focus of the way humans initially perceive and remember each other, attractive. She really cares how you look, not just because it makes her look good and brings in recommendations but because it makes her happy. I asked Eric Winters where he got his excellent cut and he happened to have one of her cards on him. Now I do as well. THE REAL DEAL.

In other news...

Association Building Community's Special Purpose


Despite the rather ghostly reality governing our shared process at the moment, I realized I still carry an assumption that Beamish Process Arts, Inc. d.b.a Association Building Community (BPABC, or just ABC) carries unique and important mythic cargo, some pieces of the emerging, communitarian world view that are impossible, or at least very difficult, to find elsewhere. I think this is true of many other organizations as well but I am hunting our specific pieces in conscious opposition to the voice that says "we haven't made a noticable difference yet. What could we have to offer?" As we make decisions about whether to continue, I've been searching where I usually search for evidence of this kind of thing - in our story.

One piece of this became clearer to me on reading in a good friend and colleague's email:

went to a spiritual and activism exploration kind of thing today...why
do i do this?
was actually crying to think i spent so much time traveling to it....in
NYC. really nice people, nice speaker, but woe woe woe. does every one
have to try and reinvent the wheel, or at least think that they are
onto a New Idea?
ok ok ok.
When I tell people stories about ABC I often mention that we are oldish. I am the only member of our group under fifty-five and the others have been a part of either the upper management corporate world or peace and community activism since before The 60s in Berkeley were the 60s. There is a strong refrain in our history and dialogue that emerges from a history of disappointment with perfectly sound efforts to make peace or some related meaningful difference undermined by poor process despite existing expertise and stated commitments otherwise, by friction that could have led to self discovery and innovation but led instead to dissolution and even betrayal of partners and purpose.

There is something essential in a council of elders who have Been There and won't easily tolerate repetitions of those dilemmas, if we can gather young energy as well dedicated to building community on purpose and if we can still move forward through our fears that we won't have enough time and listening and clear enough communication to be faithful to our callings This Time.

When I go to progressive conferences to record them I study the form, content, and participants for traces of the developing Process Arts underlying our emerging world myth. A part of me despairs of getting paid for my real gift but wants to offer it anyway - an independent (third party), ongoing, facilitated, autocritical process that is a sophisticated debrief, inviting all voices to be heard before, during, and after. There are so many important developments missed or misunderstood which could be captured and understood if there were Process Arts in play throughout these "progressive" events. Otherwise "alternative" luminaries are satisfied with their own process savvy but don't identify the practice of the Process Arts as a whole as a value, therefore it sneaks in "by the way" in the same way that community is simply expected to happen when people get together, even when those involved know from experience it must be built on purpose at the cultural level. Still there is "no time for process" they've got to "focus on targets and goals"...and other corporatisms that keep all voices from coming forth and keep us repeating the same old shit woe woe woe.

It is the same dilemma John Abbe articulated so well while addressing the issue of the use of technology during the Nexus for Change events, thus far held once in Bowling Green, OH.
I agree with what Gabriel said, "Technology must serve the purpose of the event," *and* want to call our attention to the fact that some of what is being offered here is not simply technology, but processes (eg wiki) with their own history and philosophy, every bit as deep and powerful as, say, Open Space. So one could just as well say, "Open Space must serve the purpose of the event." This points to how we might modify pure Open Space - or wiki - to serve the event, and to the idea that we choose some processes because of the values they embody, and we may want to stick with them even if (maybe even because of how) they stimulate discomfort, and may involve some learning for conference participants.

One may as well say "the event must serve" or "processes must serve the event" at which point you run the risk of making a statement so general that it becomes a platitude. Time for process (deep listening/dialogue/deliberation/etc), as an art, for its own sake is a cultural value cultivated in the presence of the inescapable. There will be a way that we are doing things. Process Arts simply make structure, method, and critique as conscious as can be arranged. Process time is not an option. It is not a question of if there will be structural choices but of how they will be made - habit, design, etc. Nexus is already using technology, so it is not an if proposition. The question is how to do that so that it serves best and sparkles most beautifully.

The question is ever: how to prepare and then authentically process difference and parallels such that "progress" doesn't simply rehearse the same tired and ever present power dynamics? I think it has to do with Elder voices, but in the literal older folk and inside the younger ones of us who have suffered set-backs and loss and have learned a bit of how to grieve. It is from that place that conflict may be practiced and processed with integrity and centered dynamism.

Up(&)coming

This Wednesday I'll help record the beginning of the Foundation for Human Enrichment's "First International Annual Somatic Experiencing® Conference" at the Claremont in Berkeley. I'll be at the Pangea conference Th-Fr solo recording and video taping their work toward pediatric wellness. Then it is on to Vancouver for BMC software's monster annual do. I'll be in Canada Oct 29-Nov 3.

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   | posted by Unknown @ 10/22/2007 10:31:00 PM

 

 

Nexus Report

The Nexus For Change conference has just reached a finish at Bowling Green State University in Ohio. This went out as an email to the Association Building Community list of over 6,000 people.

Iris McGinnis
,
John Abbe
, and
Brandon WilliamsCraig
(among over three hundred others) participated in this proto-community of Process Arts practitioners from the relatively unknown to the (in?)famous worldwide. This collaborative message reflects Iris' and Brandon's experiences and becoming aware of the expanded possibilities for the future emerging from this kind of gathering..

A certain
"Alice down the rabbit Nexus" feeling pervaded our time in Ohio. We lost three hours across time zones, went to bed late and rose early to be a part of the teams dealing with Logistics, Photography, and IT. By turns, Nexus was frightening, exciting, exhausting, invigorating, disappointing, and wonderfully exceeded both our expectations.

Nexusians provided several suppliants with financial help in order to work toward diversity, as well as giving gifts of friendship and collaborative inspiration. We received round trip airfare and a place to stay so that we might participate, and paid for reduced registration costs and related expenses from matching money raised within the ABC community. We feel profoundly grateful, in particular, for Leon Regelson and Marilyn Madsen within ABC, Bill Adams of
Maxcomm, Peggy Holman and Steve Cady, Joe Matthews, Cheryl Honey (Nexus Share and Care) of Community Weaving and the Family Support Network, and the M.O.D. students from BGSU who created the morning-after Ancient Wisdom Circle.

The event itself was a fundamental gathering, for the first time on this scale, of whole systems changers, researchers and authors, organizational development professionals, community builders/weavers, academics, human systems innovators, playback theater and graphic artists, and a multitude of other corporate managers, consultants, and facilitators - all apparently desiring open circles to
struggle fruitfully with change-work and make a positive difference in the world. Hopefully this kind of gathering will continue and deepen, find its way around the nation to a different area each year, and reach beyond its currently limited scope to consciously support the face-to-face building of communities of understanding in specific locales - beyond the intense days of cross-pollination.

The opening invocation for the Nexus was a "Samoan Circle" in which each of five chairs was labeled with a role:
Jean Bartunek ( professor of Organization Studies at Boston College and former president of the Academy of Management) began in the Scholar chair, Henri Lipmanowicz ( retired CEO of Merck subcontinental, and co-founder of the Plexus Institute) began in the Leader chair, and Carolyn Lukensmeyer (creator" of AmericaSpeak's 21st Century Town Meeting) began in the Practitioner chair. Peggy Holman offered the following words to introduce my presence in the Activist's chair: " Brandon WilliamsCraig is of the new breed of activists, who, rather than advocating for or against something, are process activists – bringing people with diverse perspectives together so that wise answers emerge." Most gratifying of all was the briefly empty " Wild Card" chair for the rarely heard voices the future/the artist/the natural world/the unknown/the child, etc. The opening was both hopeful and problematic and, in so being, a fine place to start as a metaphor for the whole endeavor.

Iris met many wonderful people at the various formal and informal conversation 'cafes', attended numerous workshops, and hopes to write about them later on her blog. Brandon convened two Open Space sessions entitled, respectively:
- Process Arts: culture-making, Healing Friction, and guardianship of peace
- Grief Before Beginnings: essential depths without which changes are unsustainable
and was happy to be
interviewed about the Process Arts by Michael Gaciri.

We wish we had understood, ahead of time, the full scope of the collaborative and emergent Nexus design process, so we might have sent a clear invitation, so you might have watched the invocation process, since the invocation circle was streamed internationally and now is part of growing archive on the web. Everyone involved would have benefited from your feedback and encouragement and we would like to invite you to review the Nexus material on the web, to consider attending next year, contact us with council, suggestions, issues to raise, etc. Please send any thoughts, desires, inspirations and let's continue our conversations into making the next event sparkle even more brightly than the first.

With Nexus behind and before us, the nationwide walkabout to grieve what is past and build the Guardians of Peace begins soon. Iris may also wander, grieve Aidan, and (if financially manageable) go to conferences to continue connecting with other process artists. The better part of a decade has passed in building our small ABCommunity slowly and our core desire now is to grow in size and depth, share the fruits of our modest learning, and be changed by new people. We'd like to send more regular reports and invitations.

Your creative and financial contributions (see below) will help take this work further into the world and empower more folks participating in this culture shift toward peace (conflict done well). If this interests you and you have the ability please contribute what you can to make it possible to take our work out in the world. While attending conferences can be very rewarding it is also financially and physically exhausting. Although this one was largely covered by gifts of various sizes, the overall cost to others to get us there was about $1,500. In the near future we'd like to offer community building circles, classes for adults and children, and raise funds for even more folks to participate in training and intense gatherings like Nexus For Change. Let us know if you are in the San Francisco Bay Area and are interested in getting together on a regular basis to learn and practice Process Arts. We would love to expand our face-to-face community. Also let us know where you are outside the Bay Area so we can connect when we are in your area, with you and with others with a will to practice and learn from each other.
We are profoundly grateful for our time out in larger circles this year and look forward with particular energy toward being together during the Next Us For Change. Particular thanks to Peggy Holman and Steve Cady - to Peggy for revealing herself in the Ancient Wisdom Circle created with students on the morning after as being a "nexustentialist," and to both for their warm welcome and desire to collaborate - making local ripples swell into waves of global change.

We hope to work more with you on the questions this work inspires and the responses and learning we all carry. For us, the core framing question emerged in Peggy's words from the Day-After Circle and we deeply desire to share its unfolding with you and the wisdom you represent. The core question underlying this entire field seems to be: " In Service to Whom?"


Warmly,

Brandon and Iris
from Association Building Community a.k.a. Beamish Process Arts

A list of links mentioned above:
  1. The largest cache of beautiful photos including people, graphics, charts, etc. http://www.flickr.com/groups/nexusforchange/pool/
  2. for Session notes mentioned above go to http://www.nexusforchange.org and select "Conference Central" and then "Session Notes Library"
  3. for Video go to http://www.nexusforchange.org and select "Conference Central" and then "Media Streams"
  4. Iris' blog is http://mythinginaction.blogspot.com/
  5. John Abbe's blog http://ourpla.net/cgi/pikie?ObBlog
  6. Brandon's blog is behind http://bdwc.net. Search the word "Nexus" or click on "Recent Blog"
  7. Process Arts interview http://www.nexusforchange.org/index.php3?object_id=GME_Vault&function=download&item=8c1b83db43b595d09ce2082f333a59cf
  8. Walkabout (the Little Fire Burns) http://abcglobal.net/LFF.html
  9. Guardians of Peace project http://abcglobal.net/GPx.html
  10. Please donate via http://www.justgive.org/giving/donate.jsp?charityId=6530
  11. If you are having trouble seeing this, it is reproduced with links intact at http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhrh8swg_6fkjmgq or http://abcglobal.blogspot.com/2004/06/potential-ways-of-renamingvisioning.html

As always, all feedback is very welcome – the chewier the better.

The organization name will read "Beamish Process Arts" - which was the founding name of Association Building Community.

Please make your desire clear on the Just Give form

Membership (whatever appropriate offering you would provide to support any vital organism growing these changes)

Program: Guardians Of Peace (Process Arts Community for Training)

Program: Little Fire Burning (walkabout and national outreach and teaching)

Program: Training Scholarships (to help develop process artists)

Administration (to further the survival of our community infrastructure)


If you would prefer to write a check, please write your purpose in the memo line and post it to ABCGlobal, 181 Farrelly Dr., San Leandro CA, 94577.

Toll Free (866) 236-0346
administration at abcglobal dot net



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   | posted by Unknown @ 3/28/2007 11:23:00 AM

 

 

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