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    Current Revision posted by Sue Woehrlin on May 8, 2011 08:16:53

    Showing changes from revision #36: Added | Removed

    Creating a container can perhaps best be thought of it in terms of spirit, which doesn’t lend itself to definition or specificity. To many it’s the embodiment of the intention and the purpose that was set.

    "If you think of holding space as being in the center of the wheel, it’s being in the center and holding the energy of what’s both inside the bounds and outside; it’s magnetic – you draw in what’s most coherent to the intention."
    (Margo Adair)

    At the same time, it's also very practical, with a large element of creating a container referring to the psychic and physical conditions within which the group meets.  Failure to attend to the creation of the container leaves openings for potentially disruptive, unconscious processes.

     

    Instructions & Variations

    • You start to create the container with [[Invitation]] and [[Purpose]].
    • The container is energetic, verbal and material.
    • Timing - Announce clear starting and ending times, although [[Creating a Container]] can extend beyond ending times especially in multi-day events - caring for transitions of people coming late and going early – what’s going on at the boundaries
    • Invite [[Beauty]] – create a centerpiece | pay attention to the [[Power of Place - old]], environment and setting, be in nature or where you can see nature whenever possible
    • Make sure the accommodations are comfortable, that there are enough chairs, the temperature is right, the windows can open, there is food and drink available, etc.
    • Create initial unity through a common act – chanting or a moment of silence, reflective meditation, lighting a candle. [[Ritualize the beginning]]. 
    • Let people know what to expect – if they’re going to be called on, etc.
    • Setting clear Norms & [[Ground Rules]] in order to [[Group Culture|create a culture]]. Use [[Ant Rules]] – simple instructions that lead to self-organizing systems, like Open Space uses
    • Seating arrangements and the energy flow in the room/s are important – sitting in a circle or around a round table sets up a different intention than sitting in rows or sitting at rectangular conference tables.
    • If some people don’t seem to be engaged, don’t ignore it.  [[Creating a Container]] implies a responsibility for the [[Energy Flow]] and a connection to [[Witnessing[[Witness with Compassion]].
    • There may be occasions where we need to make space at the boundary for people to be half-in and half-out.
    • Creating a container is based out of a deep relationship of shared trust with the culture. The facilitator is responsible for investigating the culture in which the container is to be built in order to have the necessary cohesion & context
    • Establish a clear contract between facilitator/host and client as a pre-condition for creating an effective container.  See [[Purpose]].

     

    Cautions and Caveats

    Absence

    • Boring, sterile environment. Lack of focus, disorientation. Lack of safety. People tend to drop out or not be engaged fully when the container is not held well (if no one is not engaged, is that a matter of there not being adequate holding of the container?)
    • The timing is "off" - you consistently run out of time or find yourself interupting the flow when something powerful is trying to be born

     

    Learning Edges/Questions

    • What creates a leak in the container, and what catches and repairs that leak?
    • What are the design criteria for creating a container in different situations? What’s always involved, and what are the variables for different intents?
    • What needs to happen before the event to create the container, and what is the follow-up after the event that keeps the container intact if that is the desire?
    • Creating a container may look different in every culture, so how do we establish a container when not in our root culture?
     
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