March 27, 2023

New wine, old skins

No items found.
Transformation
Personal Growth
Systemic Change

No one sews a patch of unshrunk cloth on an old garment, for the patch will pull away from the garment, making the tear worse.

Neither do people pour new wine into old wineskins. If they do, the skins will burst; the wine will run out and the wineskins will be ruined. No, they pour new wine into new wineskins, and both are preserved

Matthew 9:16-17
Photo by

In the 2010’s, I helped kick off two programs that had a tremendous impact on my professional experience and on the people who participated; a listening circle training and mentoring program in California state prisons and a global employee wellness program for a significant tech “unicorn.”

These were exciting, transformational, and moving for all involved.  

My experiences and learning and the feeling of success in this work deeply moved me, and I know this was true for most who were involved.

I also vividly remember a former prison warden commenting on the prison work: “we are just putting window dressings on the cell walls.”

I wanted to dismiss the comment as the words of a tired cynic, but they stick with me still. There was, and remains, truth in it.

We did great work in creating spaces for listening and connection. We helped open hearts and minds.  We participated in the personal healing work needed worldwide in many different contexts.  But we only did half the job.  

We were helping make a new wine, but the skins (the social, cultural, and economic structures) remained largely untouched. It took a  great leap of imagination to believe that our impact in these circles would materially change the circumstances of either situation. It was okay with me that this wasn’t the point of our work, until it wasn’t.

The inmates would leave our meetings and return to prison yards that are, with few exceptions, sites of a cold or hot war between the “good” officers and the “bad” inmates (as well as between races, gangs, and individuals in the inmate population). All sides are playing a game that cannot be won.

The corporate staff would return to the rat wheel of life and work driven by profit and a closed system of achievement (climbing the corporate ladder, filling the bank account, adding notches to a resume, and even competing over the strength of the value signal). Many of these employees worked for many years, regurgitating company lines, building workplace community, dedicating the vast majority of their life energy to the company, and have now been laid off.

In both situations, the intentions of everyone involved were good, but the gap between what we wanted to be doing, what we said we were doing, and what was happening, was huge.

In fact, I believe our programs were part of maintaining a broken system, rather than working on the root causes of the problems we said our programs were solving (disconnection, overwhelm, overwork, depression - all of which have increased since the pandemic).  We were only temporarily relieving the pain symptoms that created the need for these programs in the first place.

We were putting new window dressings on the cell walls. New wine, in old skins.

On the other hand, plenty of consultants, activists, politicians, and leaders focus on changing the structures and practices of society, organizations, and teams, but disregard the internal, psychological, and cultural shifts that make these changes stick, or that these changes actually instigate. They put the old wine in new skins.

Think of all the great solutions to social, economic, organizational, and team issues.  How many water cooler conversations have solved the problems of an organization?  How many celebrity experts espouse how people should lead in their books and social feeds?  How many great systems for organizing teams, countries, and economies have created as much pain as they have good? All of them?

The external solutions don’t touch the inner lives and inter-relationships of the people that comprise the system the change. In fact, they too often increase the sense of disenfranchisement, powerlessness, and disengagement from the change process because they invite too little participation, if any.

We are Open Circle was born to solve what we experienced as the great inadequacy of the either/or approach to change.  We work on the inner experience and connection and trust of the team or group before we work on systems change. We develop a capacity to turn toward tension (and conflict) rather than away from it. We examine a broad range of possibilities in power, decision-making, and structures. The structures start to shift on their own because participation and awareness grow. Then, when deliberate structural and systemic intervention happens, the participants in the change are ready, and these transformations support the ongoing community and team building.

It is a cycle that is renewed from within, not from outside or from the top.  

“We are open” because while we have our principles and toolbox of methodologies, we are always learning, and striving to meet each situation with a spirit of not knowing when we start what will be best by the time we end..  Rather, we strive to be ready and available for whatever we encounter, to serve a group’s or team’s evolution in the direction they are already changing.

We sew the skin as we make the wine, together.

More posts

December 9, 2024

A Dry River

In this article, Adam explores how the gradual loss of what sustains us not only depletes the environment but also points to the danger of erasing cultural memory, leaving future generations disconnected from the abundance of our world and humanity. The article emphasizes the danger of complacency and calls for meaningful action to preserve nature, memory, and the possibility of a better future. It’s a powerful reflection on stewardship, loss, and the urgency to reconnect with the stories that shape our future.
Leadership
Transformation
Finding Balance
September 14, 2024

Fear, the Tax Collector: The Stakes of Change and the Costs of Avoiding It (Part 2)

Change is inevitable, but our reaction to it is often driven by fear—fear of what we stand to lose, whether those losses are real or imagined. In this blog, we explore the concept of horizontal versus vertical change, and how individuals, organizations, and cultures navigate the stakes of transformation.
Leadership
Systemic Change
Transformation
September 9, 2024

Vertical and Horizontal Change: Beyond the Window Dressing

Explore the transformative power of vertical change in both personal and organizational life. In this first part of a three part blog series, we delve into the difference between superficial (horizontal) changes and foundational (vertical) transformation.
Adaption
Leadership
Transformation
April 5, 2023

For the children

Explore the challenges of parenting, the fragile balance of love and fear, and the responsibility to transform societal narratives for our children's future.
Parenting
Finding Balance

Stay in Touch

Sign-up for the Open Circle newsletter to receive updates on upcoming classes, events, and much more.

Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Sorry, something went wrong while submitting the form. Please try the contact page if you continue to get this error. Thank you!