Action theatre, revisited

Johnnie Moore

Johnnie Moore

I’m Johnnie Moore, and I help people work better together

A lot of conversations about the need for action frustrate me as I’ve blogged before. So Ton’s reflections on Reboot 11 which had “action” has its theme, make a lot of sense.

He says:

To me the whole Action theme this year was about your radius of action more than actual acts… So Matt Webb talking about scope in his opening key-note was spot on for me. Matt talked about how big visions and dreams (touch the moon with your fingertip) look differently when realized in a centralized command structure or in a decentralized network-sourced effort. Calling upon the Reboot participants to give the world a new ‘macroscope’ by taking 100 hour steps, he brings action and change down to the level where you can act confidently now.

I really warm to this notion. I easily tire of conversations where people come up with top-down solutions which often involve lots of angst about how to make other people change. These are bad enough from people at the top of a hierarchy. Even more strange are the times I hear people doing this where I suspect the real issue is that they can’t get the powers-that-be to listen to whatever grand plan they generate. The question “but what is my part in all this?” seems to be missing.

I think Ton’s in similar territory when he describes two ways to frame issues so that you are impotent:

In the former, you say you would want to change but put forward a version of the problem that is simply too big to handle, allowing yourself the excuse to do nothing. In the latter you say the problem is something you can handle, but only if all others listen to you to get it done… Again this is used as excuse for inaction as ‘obviously’ it is impossible to get all others on board (= back to the ‘too big to handle’ end of the spectrum).

Yes. I think a lot of apparently virtuous demands for action could more honestly be described as demands for control. And behind the need for control is probably some vulnerability the person is either unaware of or (perhaps for very good reason) unwilling to express.

And the “person” where I’m most aware of this syndrome in action is me, by the way. So being a facilitator is good practice for me at monitoring my own inner control freak…

Share Post

More Posts

Bunny Bunny

A funny game illustrates what we may be missing in many of our meetings

Leading from the clown

I shot this in a single eight-minute take, which is in the spirit of an experience of Ralf Wetzel’s workshop, Leading from the Clown. Clown training is probably the deepest and most challenging work I’ve done. Enjoy.

Noticing

The power of small gestures and noticing

More Updates

Emotional debt

Releasing the hidden costs of pent up frustrations

Aliveness

Finding the aliveness below the surface of stuck

Johnnie Moore

Serious or just solemn?

Over the past few weeks I’ve done a fascinating course in clowning skills run by the delightful Carol Thompson of Nose to Nose. I love work that takes me to

Johnnie Moore

On frustration

Prompted by some recent experiences of meetings where a lot of friction was on display including by me I searched this blog to remind myself of this quote from Donald

The Practice – November 20th to 22nd

I’m developing a new workshop/retreat with my good friend Nikki Hinksman. (Viv is also helping with the design, as we’re planning to offer an Aussie version in a few months) We’re

Johnnie Moore

Open Space and Sugar

On Thursday I facilitated a workshop for the BBC and AHRC on the theme of User Generated Content and its implications. I used Open Space and it seems as though