----by Dr. Seuss, A book for obsolete children.
One of the great experiences of having a visiting six-year-old is that books come flying off the shelves, books that you haven’t thought about since the last grandkid visited. I’d never seen this one before. The back has these four lines:
Is this a children’s book?
Well. . . not immediately.
You buy a copy for your child now
and you give it to him on his 70th birthday.
This description of a physical exam brought the most giggles:
Your escape plans have melted!
You haven’t a chance,
for the next thing you know,
both your socks and your pants
and your drawers and your shoes
have been lost for the day.
The Oglers have blossomed
like roses in May!
And silently, grimly, they ogle away.
My granddaughter and I were both laughing at the picture of being "ogled.". But the other meanings in the text were different for us. She was transfixed by the rhyming of words, words that she repeated over and over as she read. I was transfixed by the hilarious perspective on medical experiences.
There's an important relationship and communication lesson here. What one person sees in an experience is often quite different than another's insight.
A few days ago I conversed with a client who told me, in some frustration, about ongoing team experiences on the job. Even though there had initially been agreement about process, time had changed that agreement between the members. New process understanding was surfacing and he realized that there would be far more to facilitate than he thought.
I commented on the fact that context and the spacing of time nearly always create different meanings between two or more people. Since this was his first facilitation experience, he wanted to understand whether this was normal and to be expected. Yes, and the more people in the team and the more time space between meetings, the more meaning will change. We also know, I commented, that once a team gets to 12 or 13 people, productivity starts to slide and decisions take far longer.
I couldn't resist pointing out the very difficult example of health care decision-making faced by the US senate with 100 members.
What one sees and reads in one experience is different for another.