Difference between revisions of "Liberating constraints"

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==Sources==
==Sources==
*{{web|url=http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/eekim/~3/mH7ETcS99Wo/|site=EEK Speaks|person=Eugene Eric Kim|title=Eight Lessons on Facilitation from Photography}}
*{{web|url=http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/eekim/~3/mH7ETcS99Wo/|site=EEK Speaks|person=Eugene Eric Kim|title=Eight Lessons on Facilitation from Photography}}
*{{web|url=http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/eekim/~3/mH7ETcS99Wo/|site=EEK Speaks|person=Eugene Eric Kim|title=Eight Lessons on Facilitation from Photography}}
*Conversation about goals between Theo Gerrits and Martien van Steenbergen.
*Conversation about goals between Theo Gerrits and Martien van Steenbergen.

Revision as of 16:33, 27 March 2013

…any number of people envisioning the future, solving a problem, on a collective journey.

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{{{wish full}}}

The lack of flexibility is actually a boon, not a burden. Prime lenses are, by definition, constrained. They force you to make choices as to what to shoot and how. Forces you to be more thoughtful about what you want to shoot, which is resulting in better pictures. They enable you to focus on what’s really important, which also makes a facilitator’s job easier. Simply timeboxing a conversation can be far more productive than having a facilitator try to intermediate.

Therefore:

{{{therefore full}}}

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Sources