How do I know when I’m self-organizing and how do we know if our group is self-organizing?
Indicator #8: Enjoying yourself in the moment and in hindsight
I am self-organizing when I enjoy myself in the moment and in hindsight. Demonstrated in the following ways:
- Laughing and smiling
- Experiencing a sense of freedom, talking about experiencing a sense of freedom/describing a sense of freedom, and demonstrating a sense of freedom (for example, thinking from another perspective, switching roles with another, or surprising yourself)
- Expressing and demonstrating excitement
- Making fun of yourself
- Telling jokes to and teasing others you consider part of yourself
- Reminiscing
- Experiencing moments of “wow!” and “ah-ha!”
As a group, we’re self-organizing when we enjoy ourselves in the moment and in hindsight. Demonstrated in the following ways:
- Collective laughter and smiles
- Group members talking all at the same time (demonstrating excitement about what they’re doing and saying)
- Teasing each other
- Joking together
- Group members feel the work is fun and rewarding most of the time—in the moment and in hindsight
- Happily reminiscing together after the lifetime of the group
- Experiencing collective moments of “wow!” and “ah-ha!”
Posted in Indicators of Self-Organization at Work
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Tagged collective wow, excitement, freedom, fun, group spontaneity, group strengths, indicators of self-organization, laughing, reminiscing, rewarding groups, self-organizing work groups, spontaneity, wow
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How do I know when I’m self-organizing? How do we know if our group is self-organizing?
Indicator #7: Spontaneously demonstrating something, learning in the moment, and reflecting and learning more in hindsight
I am self-organizing when I spontaneously demonstrate something, learn in the moment, and reflect and learn more in hindsight. Demonstrated in the following examples:
Example 1
- Spontaneous demonstration: Using “we” and “us” to refer to a larger collective (group/division/organization) that I am no longer a part of.
- Learned in the moment: I keep inappropriately using the present tense to refer to something in my past. I wonder why that is.
- Learned in hindsight: We group members who left the division/ organization (at the time of the research study) are still comfortably speaking on behalf of the group/organization/division/district that we are no longer formally a part of. I am still deeply connected to this larger collective. I still think of it as part of myself. I still want it to succeed.
Example 2
- Spontaneous demonstration: Continuing to be open, listen, and share ideas in the moment through multiple disagreements (while the person you’re talking to/disagreeing with does the same).
- Learned in the moment: This person doesn’t see what I see. This person couldn’t possibly see what I see from her perspective.
- Learned in hindsight: Examples:
- Although the experience was difficult, I can see more today thanks to the person I disagreed with.
- I have been influenced and changed by someone with whom I disagree.
- I can be influenced and changed by those with whom I disagree and continue to be myself.
As a group, we’re self-organizing when we spontaneously demonstrate something, learn in the moment, and reflect and learn more in hindsight. Demonstrated in the following examples:
Example 1
- Spontaneous demonstration: Group members brainstorm spontaneously around an idea. They don’t all agree.
- Learned in the moment: We think from multiple perspectives. We do not agree. We still value each other more than the disagreement—enough to keep working together.
- Learned by someone close to the group in the moment: These group members keep respecting each other and working although they have different perspecitves. I’d like to work with them.
- Learned in hindsight: Examples:
- As a group, not only do we not always agree but we often do not even experience the need to agree.
- As a group, agreeing is less important than valuing each other and continuing to move together in the same general direction.
- The idea of moving together in the same general direction, without needing to agree, can be applied to other groups and people that we are working with.
- Learned by someone close to the group in hindsight: I’m as flexible as they are. I can do what they do with them. I could do this with others.
Example 2