With corporations under severe scrutiny for their role in the unfolding global environmental and social crises and workplaces full of disengaged human beings burdened by soulless work, there are however signs of heartening green shoots that have the potential to transform business and society.
Last fall (October 2015) I have been fortunate to find myself involved in a seamless confluence of 2 responses to the current malaises of 21st century organisations.
As a Coach, Facilitator and Mindfulness trainer and member of Impact Hub Kings Cross in London, I was asked to help host its U.Lab: Transforming Business, Society, and Self course. The Presencing Institute (an awareness-based action-research community) and the Impact Hub network (of social enterprise co-worker spaces) have formed a partnership to bring the U.Lab online course into hubs of collective study and exploration in over 42 Impact Hubs around the globe. The idea behind this is to create in-person communities as well as an online global movement that can “build a new economy by co-sensing and co-creating the emerging future.”
Being immersed in the U.Lab course, meeting in person weekly with a local community of changemakers, whilst being connected online through course material and livestream broadcasts to 40000 participants from every corner of the globe has felt like a glimpse into an amazing future for our planet.
This combined with being involved with the London Teal Community of Practice that has evolved out of Frederic Laloux’s work on “Organizations Inspired by the Next Stage in Human Consciousness” has provided an incredible backdrop for insights concerning organisational and systemic change that I’d love to share with you here.
The first major message vectored by both Theory U and the Teal organisational perspective is that it’s our level of consciousness that creates either systems of wellbeing or malaise. It all starts with the way we use our human awareness.
In U.Lab we’ve been seeing how downloading – operating from preformed judgments and out-dated assumptions about any given personal, organisational or societal situation creates a disconnect between our perceptions, actions and the actual reality of a situation. The results of this are the Ecological, Social and Spiritual divides seen in the world today and described in Otto Scharmer’s work.
Now I’m sure if you read the paragraph above you’ll understand how operating from preformed ideas rather than from what’s really happening could be problematic in any context. And I, as an ex-Buddhist monastic, having spent years doing self and group awareness practices, was under the impression I did too!
But the eye-opening surprise that the U.Lab course has brought me so far is in revealing the extent to which we are downloading most of the time. Through listening assessment exercises, stakeholder interviews and particularly group coaching circles with case studies, one gets to appreciate just how limiting our individual perspectives are.
Through heart centred meditative practices that are integral elements of the peer coaching circles, collectively intelligent and wise thinking processes emerge. In last week’s U.Lab here in London the person presenting his case clinic was able to receive feedback that shifted not only his thinking about how to communicate regarding his social enterprise, but enabled us all to come out of it with new insights.
For myself I understood that upgrading our organisational systems is not merely a logistical or technological issue. Instead it requires a shift to deeper level of attention that creates an authentic and nourishing human connection. By lifting these conceptual barriers (imposed by projections of role, class, sex or function) we are able to think collectively. This is what Theory U describes as the shift from Ego to Ecosystem awareness. From this perspective we can create enterprises and institutions founded on actions where everyone wins.
My involvement in the Teal Community of Practice for “Reinventing Organizations” has revealed how deeply complementary the Theory U and Teal approaches are. The former provides a toolkit of self and collective development practices whilst the latter looks at the patterns shared by organisations that are already demonstrating elements operating from “next stage of human consciousness.” U.Lab helps us to travel from A to B, whilst Teal describes what B already does or can look like.
The patterns identified by Laloux in what he terms as Teal organisations provide a sustainable solution to disengagement by promoting a culture of self-management where teams themselves rather than a management hierarchy co-create a purpose-led work environment that can respond quickly and effectively to challenges.
Further breakthroughs of organisations operating at the level of Teal are: an appreciation for wholeness in which employees are able to bring all of who they are to work and an acknowledgment of evolutionary purpose where the organisation is seen as a living being with a life and a sense of direction of its own.
In order to follow this evolutionary purpose the role of its members is to listen to what it wants to become via large group sessiontheoryu_us and meditation practices. Although this may appear unusual in today’s mainstream business world such practices are proving successful for a number of thriving, cutting edge organisations. Indeed U.Lab mirrors this in encouraging the similar practices of getting quiet and ‘letting come’ – waiting for what wants to emerge in order to create new prototypes based on inspiration and intuition. This is seen as a way to create structures that are robustly aligned to the deeper realities of a given situation.
Both the U.Lab course and Teal community are forging, for myself and a growing number of others, a journey of self-discovery within the context of organisational and systemic structures. Both create an impulse to move us from our blinkered individual perspectives into dealing with problems and finding solutions from the level of systems themselves. By freeing and enlivening the individual players through presence and authenticity our organisations become self-cognisant and thus able to evolve in ways that benefit everyone. The fact that U.Lab and Teal organisations are now capturing the imagination of so many around the globe gives me hope for our future!
“If you have an experience or interest in both U.Lab and Teal Organisations then we’d love to hear your thoughts on this promising synergy in the comments section on Enlivening Edge where this article was originally posted.”
Andy Paice is London based Coach, Facilitator and Mindfulness trainer. The focus of his work/play is facilitating and catalysing new ways of working and living that are fit for the realities of the 21st century. One of his major passions is the creation of participatory democracy initiatives and amplifying awareness of new politics through the
Reinventing Democracy YouTube channel . He teaches Mindfulness in community and corporate settings and facilitates community meetings. Andy is passionate about authentic human connection and the emerging collaborative commons paradigm. Prior to these activities he lived and practised as a monastic in the Tibetan Buddhist tradition in France from 1998-2007 where he accomplished a traditional three-year group meditation retreat. In his spare time he enjoys Contact Improvisation dancing, eating curry and running From Me to We a meetup group he created. You can check out his website www.andypaice.net and follow him on Twitter @andypaice