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Conference 7.286::digital

Title:The Digital way of working
Moderator:QUARK::LIONELON
Created:Fri Feb 14 1986
Last Modified:Fri Jun 06 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:5321
Total number of notes:139771

1208.0. "Co-dependency within Digital" by ODIXIE::CARNELL (DTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALF) Mon Oct 01 1990 12:48

    Is the cultural structure within Digital nurturing in its 
    workforce CO-DEPENDENCY, a learned dysfunctional behavior, 
    which is becoming increasingly detrimental to change, 
    creativity, empowerment, accountability, cooperation, 
    risk-taking, and decision-making, thereby impeding success 
    and the attainment of greater prosperity, adversely affecting 
    the corporation, all its employees and its stockholders?

    If so, what are the symptoms, what the are cures.
    
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1208.1a little historyODIXIE::CARNELLDTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALFMon Oct 01 1990 12:49135
    Co-dependency in society: history and characteristics

    Quotes from BREAKING FREE OF THE CO-DEPENDENCY TRAP by Barry 
    and Janae Weinhold.

    The Co-Dependent Culture
    Dominator vs. Partnership Models

    Most people in the addictions field are looking at 
    co-dependency as an individual problem or family problem.  
    Some are beginning to examine it as a "systems" problem.  A 
    few are beginning to look at it as a problem of our whole 
    society.

    The Partnership Society

    When Eisler delved into prehistory, she found numerous 
    legends and archeological records that described an earlier 
    form of civilization in which the culture was organized quite 
    differently from what we know today.  According to these 
    records, there were large areas in Europe and the near East 
    which enjoyed a long period of peace and prosperity.  The 
    social, technological and cultural development of the 
    existent society followed a steady move upward.  This 
    civilization, which she identifies as a PARTNERSHIP society, 
    was based on unity, cooperation and mutual need.  The society 
    valued the life-giving and nurturing qualities that we might 
    consider to be "feminine."

    The archeological evidence also reveals that this early 
    social structure was based on equality.  Power, risk-taking 
    and rewards were shared without regard to gender.  This 
    cooperative approach helped create unity and harmonious 
    relationships among people and between people and the planet.  
    Eisler contends that at a point in prehistory, perhaps around 
    3500 B.C., this 30-40,000 year era began to wane and the 
    qualities of the feminine were gradually replaced with more 
    masculine values that structured a completely different kind 
    of civilization that she identifies as a dominator society.

    The Dominator Society

    Dominator societies, according to Eisler, exalt the qualities 
    that we stereotypically associate with masculinity and value 
    life-TAKING and destructive activities, such as conquest and 
    warfare.  This social structure, which is based on 
    inequality, generally ranks one part of society over the 
    other.  Even though the cultural values are what we today 
    think of as 'hard' or more 'masculine,' dominator societies 
    can be either matriarchal or patriarchal.  The higher ranked 
    group holds the power, takes the risks and reaps the rewards, 
    leaving the lower ranked group to powerlessness and, often, 
    poverty.  Rather than linking people cooperatively, they rank 
    people competitively, creating a hierarchy that is ultimately 
    supported by force or the threat of force.  This creates an 
    atmosphere of distrust and separation.

    In studying Eisler's model of social structures, it becomes 
    clear that the dominator model creates a co-dependent 
    society, and the partnership model creates an interdependent 
    society in which people work cooperatively to support each 
    other.  Extending her model this way, a comparison of the two 
    might look like this:

    The Co-dependent Society creates hierarchies that are 
    ultimately backed by force or the threat of force.

	The Interdependent Society creates heterarchies in which 
        people are linked together by common need.

    In the Co-dependent Society, the higher ranked group in the 
    hierarchy holds the power of the decision making while the 
    lower ranked group is powerless.

	In the Interdependent Society, the heterarchical group 
        shares equally the decision making.

    In the Co-dependent Society, the higher ranked group assumes 
    responsibility, risk-taking, the means of production and 
    reaps the rewards, while the lower ranked group provides the 
    support and labor and reaps minimal rewards.

	In the Interdependent Society, the heterarchical group 
        shares equally in the risk-taking, responsibility, 
        capital investment, means of production, rewards, labor 
        and support.

    The Co-dependent Society uses comparative 'you OR me' 
    thinking.

	The Interdependent Society uses cooperative 'you AND me' 
        thinking.

    In the Co-dependent Society, a co-dependent form of 
    relationship between the two holds the system together.

	In the Interdependent Society, an interdependent form of 
        relationship within one large group holds the system 
        together.

    The Co-dependent Society values life-taking and destructive 
    activities such as war and exploitation.

	The Interdependent Society values life-generating and 
        nurturing qualities such as compassion and nonviolence.

    The Co-dependent Society utilizes rigid sex roles.

	The Interdependent Society utilizes fluid sex roles.

    The Co-dependent Society treats diversity judgmentally.

	The Interdependent Society treats diversity 
        NONjudgmentally.

    The Co-dependent Society uses fear to create separation.

	The Interdependent Society uses hope to create unity. 

    Throughout modern history, most societies have been 
    structured so that some groups are ranked above others, such 
    as men over women and management over labor.  With one group 
    more powerful and in control of the resources, co-dependent 
    relationships can be easily created and maintained.  [But] If 
    people begin to change their co-dependent patterns, it will 
    bring changes to the LARGER social structure.

    I as author of this VAXnotes reply would ask everyone to 
    think about which type of society structure within Digital 
    would truly benefit all of us more, ensuring our future 
    prosperity, employees and company alike.  And would suggest 
    that it is those business organizations now changing to 
    Partnership interdependent organizations (Toyota, Kodak) that 
    are proving to be MORE EFFECTIVE in today's world.
    
1208.2some characteristicsODIXIE::CARNELLDTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALFMon Oct 01 1990 12:50133
    Characteristics of Co-dependency

    Quotes from BREAKING FREE OF THE CO-DEPENDENCY TRAP by Barry 
    and Janae Weinhold.

    When you look closely at the main characteristics of a 
    co-dependent person, you begin to see an unmistakable pattern 
    of behavior that is more characteristic of an infant than of 
    a fully functioning adult.  Below is a list of of the common 
    characteristics of co-dependency.

    If you are co-dependent you tend to:

    * be unable to distinguish your own thoughts and feelings 
    from those of others (you think for and feel responsible for 
    other people)

    * seek the approval and attention of others in order to feel 
    good

    * feel anxious or guilty when others "have a problem"

    * do things to please others even when you don't want to

    * not know what you want or need

    * rely on others to define your wants or needs

    * believe that others know what is best for you better than 
    you do

    * throw temper tantrums or collapse when things don't work 
    out the way you expect them to

    * focus all your energy on other people and on their 
    happiness

    * try to prove to others that you are good enough to be loved

    * not believe you can take care of yourself

    * believe that everyone else is trustworthy.  You idealize 
    others and are disappointed when others don't live up to your 
    expectations.

    * whine or pout to get what you want

    * feel unappreciated and unseen by others

    * blame yourself when things go wrong

    * think you are not good enough

    * fear rejection by others

    * live your life as if you are a victim of circumstances

    * feel afraid of making mistakes

    * wish others would like or love you more

    * try not to make demands on others

    * be afraid to express your true feelings for fear that 
    people with reject you

    * let others hurt you without trying to protect yourself

    * not trust yourself and your decisions

    * find it hard to be alone with yourself

    * pretend that bad things aren't happening to you, even when 
    they are

    * keep busy so you don't have to think about things

    * not need anything from anyone

    * experience people and life as black and white -- either all 
    good or all bad

    * lie to protect and cover up for people you love

    * feel very scared, hurt and angry but try not to let it show

    * find it difficult to be close to others

    * find it difficult to have fun and to be spontaneous

    * feel anxious most of the time and don't know why

    * feel compelled to work, eat, drink or have sex even when 
    you don't seem to get much enjoyment from the activity

    * worry that other people will leave you

    * feel trapped in relationships

    * feel you have to coerce, manipulate, beg or bribe others to 
    get what you want

    * feel controlled by the feelings of others

    * be afraid of your own anger

    * feel helpless and powerless to change yourself or your 
    situation

    * feel like someone else needs to change in order for you to 
    feel better

    Co-dependency in a relationship occurs when two people, each 
    seeking from the other what they feel they don't have, come 
    together to form one complete person.  Each feels that he or 
    she cannot function well without the help of the other 
    person.  This prevents personal growth and development.  
    Eventually one of the two grows tired of the unholy alliance 
    and tries to change things.  Lacking information on the cause 
    of co-dependency or the tools and support necessary to break 
    the pattern, he or she normally will fail and fall back into 
    a co-dependent relationship once again.

    In the opinion of the author of this VAXnotes reply, all of 
    us, including myself, have been raised in today's society to 
    be co-dependents, with co-dependency reinforced by its 
    organizations in which we work, with all of us meeting at 
    least some of the characteristics listed above.  As indicated 
    at the end of the previous reply, we can change our society 
    and our organization if each us, with information on the 
    causes of co-dependency, begin to change our patterns, and 
    thereby influence change elsewhere by our attitudes.
    
1208.3GOOBER::ROSSAnd baby makes fourMon Oct 01 1990 14:266
Another "Buzzwords R' Us" entry.

Pretty soon we'll be hearing that Digital's management structure is 
responsible for high cholesterol.

 
1208.4"Neuroses R' Us"?ESCROW::KILGOREWild BillMon Oct 01 1990 14:513
    
    ...or at least high blood pressure.
    
1208.5That archeology is highly suspectTLE::MINAR::BISHOPMon Oct 01 1990 15:5316
    The myth of a more "feminine" or more peaceful past is very old
    (Robert Graves was responsible for its popularity in the pre-WWII
    era, but is not its inventor), but it is ungrounded in fact.
    
    The people of prehistoric Europe left no records and not much
    in the way of physical remains.  We can guess at their culture
    where the physical evidence allows (i.e., they had the techniques
    of pottery, and used it to make large jars, so we can assume they
    had something to store in them).
    
    Other attempts to describe the culture depend on legends and stories
    written down much later (and by people of a different culture--it's
    somewhat as though our only knowledge of Medieval English culture was
    sword-and-sorcery movies).
    
    			-John Bishop
1208.6beware of generalizing from specific casesSALMON::BRISCOEMon Oct 01 1990 16:0812
    This conference belongs in Psychology.
    
    By the way co-dependency in it's most common usage describes inter-
    personal relations.  It is highly suspect to extend that usage to
    intra-personal contexts.  Although the common usage of co-dependency
    does has a negative connotation (as in dysfunctional co-dependency) the
    plenum of possible co-dependent relationships includes all possible
    inter-presonal bondings, many of which are quite functional and
    rewarding.
    
    Have Fun!
    
1208.7KEYS::MOELLERDEC-rewarding successful risk takersMon Oct 01 1990 17:328
    So the management matrix of a large company is not exactly Mental 
    Health Land.
    
    What a revelation.
    
    I'm stunned.
    
    karl
1208.8MU::PORTERNature Abhors a Vacuum CleanerTue Oct 02 1990 00:1512
    >By the way co-dependency in it's most common usage describes inter-
    >personal relations.  It is highly suspect to extend that usage to
    >intra-personal contexts.  
    
    	Oh I don't know.
    
    	"Intra-personal" means "occurring within the person".
     	I suspect some parts of me aid and abet other parts
    	of me in whatever they're up to today, so it seems
    	that it's a perfectly proper context.
    
    
1208.9LESLIE::LESLIEleslie%leslie.enet@decwrl.dec.comTue Oct 02 1990 03:135
    
    RE: .0 et al, Let's work on the real problems eh?
    
    
    /andy/
1208.11Why did this wonderful society die out?WINGIT::TURNQUISTGreg TurnquistTue Oct 02 1990 20:4019
    RE: .0,.1,.2
    
    If this wonderful "partnership" society is so great, why is the world 
    made up of mostly "Dominant" societies? 
    
    Also, I don't know much about Kodak, but I can't see Toyota as a  
    "partnership" culture, based on the definitions presented. Despite 
    all the "quality circles" and other supposedly "Heterarchical" aspects
    of japanese companies, they are as dominant a culture as any I have 
    seen or read about. 
    
    Based on the excerpts posted here, IMHO I don't think this model has 
    any relation to the real world. Or human nature, for that matter.
    
     
     
    
    Greg 
                                                    
1208.13Think about the ideas.POETIC::LEEDBERGJustice and LicenseWed Oct 03 1990 15:4723
	The problems here in DEC seem to be everywhere, we need a 
	new/different way to look at problems.  The old ways have
	not brought about satifactory change.

	Who cares is the pre-history story is based on fact or 
	fiction?  It is a new or at least different way to phrase
	some of the major problem we (DEC) have to deal with.

	Mangement seems to not be listening to the worker-bees,
	nor does management seem to understand how to communicate 
	to us.  There needs to be a platform to start from and I
	think that the concept of "partnership" (management and
	individual contributors - amoung and between) might be
	a good place to start.

	This is how I choose my immediate managment and co-workers
	when I change jobs.  I look for a group that works together
	for at least 2 levels up and down.  And this is how I try
	to function with other groups.

	_peggy

1208.14Of course it matters whether it's trueTLE::MINAR::BISHOPWed Oct 03 1990 17:0925
    We care about the truth of the prehistory story because it makes
    a difference:  if I say I have a wonderful idea for organizing
    a large group of people, and it has been tried before and works,
    then you are going to be a lot more willing to try the idea than
    if I say it's never been tried before.
    
    If I tell you that the idea was tried by people far away in time,
    and say it worked fine--but I have no proof that they tried it or
    that it worked, then how much do you believe me?  And how much do
    you respect my mind if I buy that argument myself?
    
    Consider what you might think if I said "The ancient people chose
    their supreme executive leaders by lottery, and they did real well
    living a life of peace and plenty until some nasty invaders came
    along, so we should choose our management by lottery."
    
    Now imagine that some on-looker objected that I had no proof of
    this ancient practice, and I then said "But just look at the idea,
    wouldn't it be nice to live in peace and plenty!"
    
    .13's practice of looking at the actual behaviour of prospective
    management is sensible, but not at all proof that a "non-co-dependant"
    system is the way to go.
    
    			-John Bishop
1208.15Use it where it's intendedMUSKIE::BRISCOEWed Oct 03 1990 19:2023
    The utility of many model is determined by;
    
    1) it's predictability
    2) it's reproducability
    
    co-dependency (part of family systems theory) is brand new. Bradshaw is
    big on the idea.  But, to date there is little (as in none) data to
    substantiate the predictability or reproducability of this model.
    
    Further more, the model is suspect in the case you describe because it
    is a model of inter-personal relations versus group/organizational
    dynamics.  Applying co-dependency theory to cultural/organizational
    situations is tantamount to applying numbers theory to theology -
    highly suspect!
    
    I personally believe that co-dependency theory has value in predicting
    and intervening into dysfunctional inter-personal relations - as far as
    the dynamics of the relational interactions perpetuating dysfunction is
    concerned.  I don't have much confidence in it's applicability in
    predicting or intervening in Digital's organizational challenges.
    
    TJB
    
1208.17attitude =/= behaviorSALMON::BRISCOEFri Oct 05 1990 16:2124
    Not really.  A company's organization is an attempt to plan/control for
    and respond to a number of internal and external stimulii (system's
    theory) hopefully with the intent of fullfilling the goals/charter
    of the organization.
    
    In the case of DIGITAL those goals are to realize share-holder return
    on investment.  That's it - nothing more!
    
    To some small extent, the interations between individuals will effect
    the performance of the organization.  But, for the most part other
    (larger) forces control and direct performance.  For the most part,
    individual interactions (and even overall morale) do not significantly
    effect organizational performance.
    
    It would be "nice" if the converse were true - but Case study after
    Case Study has demonstrated that corporate fiscal performance is not
    significantly affected by workforce attitudes.  (as I mentioned earlier
    there is no true correlation between attitude [what you think about a
    subject] and behavior [how you act/react].
    
    Have Fun!
    
    TJB
    
1208.18What do we do because we are doing something *else* wrong?SVBEV::VECRUMBADo the right thing!Mon Oct 08 1990 14:3739
    re: last several, & Bradshaw

    We're missing the point, somewhat, about codependency here.

    Bradshaw isn't one of the originators of the term, but he's been one
    of the better ones at expressing what codependency is and how it comes
    about. He did an excellent PBS series, with a great visual aid -- it
    was a (hanging) mobile.

    Codependency is what happens within a unit of people when something
    goes wrong -- when someone has a problem -- and the other people modify
    their behaviors to keep things in balance.

    If you pull on the mobile in one place, the rest of it will move to
    balance the force. The trap is that the people "keeping things in
    balance" then feel a responsibility to *keep* keeping things in balance.
    In reality, though, if they stopped, things would return to their
    natural balance.

    Somewhat simplified, but it gets the point across. What "codependency"
    really questions is:

    	-  What are the things we are doing wrong?
    +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
    |   -  What are the things we are doing to *counteract* the things we   |
    |	   are doing wrong?                                                 |
    +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+

    The first step of a fix is not to stop the former, but the *latter.*

    And the more painful or unthinkable stopping the latter is, the more
    necessary that very (in)action is required for restoring true balance.

    Not a particularly pleasant concept for those seeking to solve problems
    without inflicting "more" apparent pain, but one that does deserve some
    serious reflection and thought.

    /Petes
1208.19dysfunctional addictive/co-dependency behaviorsSAHQ::CARNELLDDTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALFFri Oct 12 1990 20:2332
    
    Here is a excerpt (plus memo, which "could easily" have been written by
    a Digital employee), which was included in THE ADDICTIVE ORGANIZATION
    by Anne Wilson Schaef and Diane Fassel.
     
    "As a friend of ours at a Fortune 500 company states in an internal
    memo, we are confused about something, and it is not clear what it is. 
    In an in-house memo she wrote:
    
    "'What is a productive organization?  We have been inundated in the last
    few years with books, articles, case studies, and news stories that
    describe the attributes of excellence and successful organizations.  As
    a country of business people we have studied our competitors.  At
    various times with various voices we have touted high tech, robotic,
    and electronic solutions.  From Europe we have accepted a need for
    cooperation and collaboration with our employees by starting
    quality-of-work-life and employee-involvement efforts in major
    companies like GM, AT&T, and Ford. [and Digital]  Unions like the UAW,
    the Communications Workers of America, and the Steel Workers became
    leaders in the changes.  Yet many of these very hopeful programs have
    lost their initial charge.  We have looked to the East and started
    Quality Circle, Just In Time delivery programs, Total Quality Control,
    Statistical Process Control, and Company-Wide Quality Control.
    
    " 'Yet, through all of our writing and research, we still seem to be
    missing something.  We are attracted to these demonstrations of
    excellence; we recognize that there is something that we do not have,
    yet the majority of executives and managers in the United States are
    unable to implement significant permanent change incorporating these
    ideas.  What is it that we are attracted to?  What is it that eludes us
    when we try to implement these changes?' "
    
1208.20rules in an "addictive system"SAHQ::CARNELLDDTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALFSat Oct 13 1990 12:5126
  Another excerpt from THE ADDICTIVE ORGANIZATION by Anne Wilson 
  Schaef and Diane Fassel.

     On page 49 we mentioned Robert Subby's nine "rules" of the 
     dysfunctional addictive family system.  We often find these 
     rules operating in the organization as well:

     1. it is not okay to talk about problems;

     2. feelings should not be expressed openly;

     3. communication is best if indirect, with one person acting 
     as the messenger between two others;

     4. be strong, good, right, and perfect;

     5. make us proud;

     6. don't be selfish;

     7. do as I say and not as I do;

     8. it is not okay to play or be playful;

     9. don't rock the boat.
    
1208.21long note but worth reading for understandingSAHQ::CARNELLDDTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALFSat Oct 13 1990 12:53243
  Another excerpt from THE ADDICTIVE ORGANIZATION by Anne Wilson 
  Schaef and Diane Fassel.

     COMMUNICATION PROCESSES

     Because communication is so basic and so central to 
     organizational functioning, it is very sensitive to any type 
     of dysfunction.  In many organizations, people admit they 
     have communication problems.  We would dispute that.  
     Communications are usually terrible in a dysfunctional 
     organization, but they are also more likely the symptom of a 
     larger, more pervasive problem.  Let us look at some of the 
     typical ways communication functions in the addictive 
     organization.

     Communication in the addictive organization is frequently 
     INDIRECT.  This indirectness takes many forms.  People who 
     feel they have conflicts with one another refuse to state 
     their conflicts openly to the person concerned.  They are 
     also unwilling to discuss these conflicts in a group 
     setting.  Instead, they avoid the significant parties, carry 
     tales to others, and spend inordinate amounts of time 
     justifying their position.  They discuss the conflict with 
     persons who can lend a sympathetic ear and who are often 
     powerless to do anything other than listen.  (We realize 
     here that it is tempting to say that this is just how people 
     function.  It is NOT how people function; it is the way 
     people have learned to function in an addictive system).

     Indirectness does not exist only in relation to conflict.  
     Communication in these settings is usually VAGUE, CONFUSED, 
     and INEFFECTIVE.  Communication in an addictive organization 
     is often characterized by abundant production of paper 
     memos.  We once watched a maintenance man who needed to be 
     reimbursed seven dollars for delivering some materials spend 
     one hour going to eight different persons to sigh the 
     voucher so he could get his money.  Complex procedures often 
     mask in inability to communicate.

     WRITTEN memos are frequently used in addictive organizations 
     to avoid face-to-face confrontation on touchy issues.  
     Sometimes memos are the main mode of communication in larger 
     companies, leading to feelings of isolation.  Since addicts 
     cannot be trusted to communicate clearly or remember what is 
     communicated, memos have become a necessity and functional.

     TRIANGULATION is a characteristic process of addictive 
     communication.  If Joe wants to get a message to Sue, he 
     does not speak to Sue, call Sue, or send her a direct memo.  
     He asks Mary to tell her.  Except for routine messages, Joe 
     uses triangulation because he does  not want to come into 
     direct contact with Sue.  He does not want to face her 
     disappointment, refusal, or QUESTIONS.  Joe is aware that he 
     has feelings when he faces Sue directly.  Rather than deal 
     with those feelings, he avoids them and gets someone else to 
     do his work.  The "someone else" becomes a good co-dependent 
     the minute he or she agrees to relieve Joe of the task he 
     needs to do himself, and Joe becomes dependent on 
     cooperation, translation, and so on.  We realize that in 
     large corporations, communications cannot always be direct 
     [unless everyone were connected via an electronic computer 
     network ?].  This is not what we are discussing here.  We 
     are talking about those instances in which direct 
     communication is indicated and would be more efficient and 
     helpful.

     There is a lot of GOSSIP in addictive organizations.  
     Sometimes there is gossip because there is very little 
     communication in any direction.  When there is no functional 
     direct communication, one hears about change from those who 
     know the gossip.  The purpose of gossip is to excite and 
     titillate, as well as to establish a seat of power.  It 
     usually produces paralysis, because sources cannot be 
     revealed, and real information is always obfuscated.  Gossip 
     helps to avoid real, direct, and effective communication.  
     It relieves tension while providing a feeling of intimacy.  
     In the end it is ephemeral.

     SECRETS operate in much the same way as gossip, except that 
     secrets usually come from reliable sources.  There are many 
     secrets in addictive organizations.  Secrets are usually 
     "for their own good."  Decisions about money, salary, and 
     personnel are often secret.  Secrets are information being 
     managed that is not open to all. Our friend from the utility 
     company was frequently let in on company secrets.  She 
     always felt privileged to receive the secrets; it engendered 
     a sense of power in her.  She believe that "knowledge was 
     power," even though she could do nothing with or about the 
     information she received.  There is a saying in Al-Anon that 
     families are only as sick as the secrets they keep -- so too 
     in organizations.  Secrets are divisive and powerful.  
     Keeping them is difficult, fosters dishonesty, endangers 
     trust, and creates "in" groups and tension.  Organizations 
     moving toward health try to keep fewer secrets and ideally 
     work toward none at all.

     Another form of communication in addictive organizations is 
     what Chris Argyris calls "SKILLED INCOMPETENCE."  This 
     refers to the phenomenon of executives [and managers] who 
     are skilled communicators, highly committed and respected by 
     each other, using communication skills (much like 
     disinformation ?) to cover up real problems.

     These executives [and managers] meet repeatedly to 
     brainstorm and develop strategy [but not the masses doing 
     the work].  Yet when they meet, they always seem to go in 
     circles.  They make endless lists of agenda items on flip 
     charts and put check marks next to the important items, and 
     in the end, everyone leaves feeling exhausted having 
     accomplished little.  Argyris says that these executives 
     were skilled, but their skills were being used to avoid 
     upset and conflict in meetings; consequently, they did not 
     say what they mean, nor were they open to test the 
     assumptions about the group's ability to deal with or 
     utilize conflict.  Their very communications skills 
     inhibited a resolution of the important issues in the 
     meeting.

     The avoidance of conflict and of difficult issues can be 
     institutionalized and lead to a corporate environment that 
     cannot tolerate "straight talk," honesty, or directness.  In 
     the addictive organization, there is little or no straight 
     talk.  The culture of the addictive organization is one of 
     confusion and chaos.  The first step is to design an 
     obviously ambiguous statement that the receiver recognizes 
     as ambiguous but does NOT question.  The second step is to 
     ignore any inconsistencies in the message.  Next is to make 
     the ambiguity and inconsistencies undiscussable and, 
     finally, to make the undiscussability, UNDISCUSSABLE.

     Argyris believes that such chaos is part of a defensive 
     route that has become systemic.  As routines become norms, 
     more and more people in the organization begin operating out 
     of them.  In this setup, people can leave the organization 
     and new ones arrive, but the routines remain intact.

     We agree with Argyris that the culture of chaos remains 
     intact in organizations and becomes systemic.  We think, 
     however, that he misses the root cause of its stability.  We 
     believe it is because the organization has become an 
     addictive system and has that disease process underlying THE 
     DEFENSIVE ROUTINE.  When one works with addicts, it is easy 
     to see that this behavior is clearly characteristic of 
     addiction.

     Thus far we have been discussing the process of 
     communication in addictive organizations.  We now want to 
     say something about the CONTENT of communication.  Addictive 
     organizations are skilled at eliminating significant 
     communication.  Significant communication is any information 
     that could make employees more effective, decisions more 
     strategic, and change more likely in the organization.  The 
     processes we have been describing serve to cloud significant 
     information and make it more difficult to get access to what 
     is REALLY going on.  Consequently, mundane announcements may 
     be given more time at meetings than important decision 
     making.  Significant content simple does NOT get through in 
     an addictive organization.  We are not saying that this is 
     malicious or deliberate.  What we are saying is that this 
     blocking of significant information is observably present in 
     addictive organizations.

     THE EXPRESSION OF FEELINGS is also noticeably absent in 
     addictive organizations.  Frozen feelings are 
     institutionalized.  First of all, feelings are just not 
     discussed in these companies.  If there is a display of 
     feelings, it is seen as inappropriate.  A common statement 
     is, "Get control of yourself."  There is a general belief 
     that if feelings are expressed, one will be seen as 
     unstable, and this could jeopardize one's security on the 
     job.

     In the addictive organization, people are either OUT OF 
     TOUCH with what they feel, or they PUT DOWN any feelings or 
     awareness of what they need, because to have feelings or to 
     need something would be seen as being out of control.  We 
     often encounter executives who are not aware when they need 
     to take time off.  In these organizations it is seen as 
     inappropriate for other executives to observe that a 
     coworker seems to need a vacation [always important to look 
     good].  This is a good example of the lack of intimacy in 
     the addictive organization and the unwillingness to honor 
     feelings [or even human dignity].

     By intimacy we are not referring to sexual intimacy or even 
     what might be seen as emotional intimacy.  What we mean by 
     intimacy is the willingness to know oneself and to let 
     oneself be known by others.  William Ouchi describes 
     intimacy as a common thread binding people together in 
     caring closeness and support in social relations [do you see 
     a lot of this in Digital by employees to one another?].  He 
     observes that intimacy is very rare in American life and 
     that we resist the notion that closeness can be achieved in 
     the workplace.  We have segmented our lives in such a way 
     that personal feelings have no place at work.  
     Interestingly, the inability to form and maintain intimacy 
     is a prime characteristic of an addict.  We do not feel that 
     it is by accident that our corporations have been structured 
     to reflect this lack of intimacy.

     In the addictive organization, the prohibition against being 
     who you are makes intimacy almost impossible.  The addictive 
     organization then tries to counteract this reality by 
     setting up planned encounters [team building woods meetings] 
     and workshops in which individuals tell one another what 
     they like and dislike about the other and practice 
     "communication skills."  Regardless of how many 
     communication workshops the organization sponsors, intimacy 
     is not possible, because the person and the system are part 
     of the same disease.  We know that maintaining this disease 
     is dependent upon keeping out of touch personally and 
     institutionally [as in managers NOT "walking the floor" 
     knowing both THEIR employees, and customers, for that 
     matter], and a quick "communications fix" may bring 
     temporary relief, but it does not address THE PROBLEM.

     The addictive organization has a narrow view of the type of 
     content that is acceptable inside the organization.  Most of 
     the content communicated must be LOGICAL AND RATIONAL 
     [proven beyond a shadow of a doubt in practice with a 
     preponderance of evidence!].

     We are reminded of this problem when hearing testimony of 
     the scientists and engineers who worked with the ill-fated 
     spaceship CHALLENGER.  Apparently, some of those closest to 
     the project had enough information to be sincerely worried 
     about the worthiness of the spacecraft.  Others just "felt" 
     it shouldn't be sent up.  However, in the NASA community 
     hunches and intuitions were NOT considered reliable content 
     for a decision to curtail the flight.  Feelings, intuition, 
     and imagination are considered ILLEGITIMATE and not 
     CONTROLLABLE.  Consequently, feelings and intimacy are just 
     not acceptable.  The information that gets through has to 
     come through the indirect, triangulated, and defensive 
     communication forms.  Ironically, there is a belief that 
     feelings and intimacy are counterproductive to the 
     accomplishment of the task.  We have known for some time 
     in organizational circles that attending the process usually 
     facilitates production.  We have seen that the really 
     addictive organizations are noticeably depressed and 
     entropic and have difficulty in attending to tasks except at 
     crisis times.
    
1208.22LESLIE::LESLIEOpen the QAR database please, HALSat Oct 13 1990 18:111
    Are these materials not copyright?
1208.23Probably, butCARTUN::MISTOVICHSun Oct 14 1990 03:563
    I could be mistaken, but I think excerpts are not considered copyright
    violation, although it may depend on the amount of material that is
    copied.
1208.24LESLIE::LESLIEOpen the QAR database please, HALSun Oct 14 1990 08:108
    "Fair use" is for review and examplative purposes. Extensive quotes
    such as are being entered here may well be getting near the borderline,
    in this non-lawyers opinion.
    
    
    
    
    /andy/
1208.25dysfunctional thinking processesSAHQ::CARNELLDDTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALFSun Oct 14 1990 14:35201
    Another "fair use for discussion purposes" excerpt from THE ADDICTIVE
    ORGANIZATION by Anne Wilson  Schaef and Diane Fassel.

     THINKING PROCESSES

     LOSS OF CORPORATE MEMORY, or FORGETFULNESS, is an 
     outstanding characteristic of the addictive organization.  
     People have said of addicts that they cannot learn from 
     their past behavior, because they have no memory.  This is 
     one of the aspects of the disease.  Addictive organizations 
     have the same problem.

     Forgetfulness among employees is certainly related to the 
     sheer amount of work and the confusing way communication 
     occurs.  Sometimes memory is very selective.  A man who 
     worked for a heavy equipment manufacturer told us he was 
     part of an executive team that had responsibility for 
     marketing strategies.  They met routinely in a team of 
     seven.  Over time they discovered they did well 
     acknowledging small tasks and completely forgot large, 
     important projects.  This even happened when tasks had 
     definite deadlines.  "I know it is hard to believe," he 
     said.  "But we just spaced it."

     This is not unusual in the addictive organization.  Small 
     tasks suddenly become more attractive.  They appear 
     manageable with the depleted human and organizational 
     resources available, whereas big tasks are overwhelming and 
     are just ignored or forgotten.

     This type of forgetfulness may be related to the penchant of 
     addicts, co-dependents, and the addictive institutions to 
     take on what they cannot do but believe they should accept.  
     In the case of the executive just mentioned, his team was 
     overloaded with work because a co-dependent team leader took 
     on more work that he could possibly do.  Instead of dealing 
     with the conflict among themselves about work loads, they 
     conveniently avoided the task by forgetting it.

     Another aspect of forgetfulness we see related to 
     organizations is not learning from past mistakes and past 
     experience.  Occasionally, in our role as consultants we 
     will remind people they are proposing an organizational 
     design or project they used in the past with dubious 
     results.  No one remembers.  Sometimes groups get into the 
     middle of a project, and someone has the feeling that "we 
     have been through this before."  Not until they are too 
     deeply committed to back out do they see that they are 
     replicating old patterns and old solutions.

     Addictive organizations get into their most serious trouble 
     when they forget to keep the primacy of their mission before 
     them [read: fundamental business of the company].  They then 
     lose contact with the reason for their existence, the 
     contribution they expect to make to the society or what they 
     want to do.  Although it seems incomprehensible that 
     organizations could be so out of touch, the confusion in the 
     addictive organization often results in the company's 
     pursuing a product line or strategy that LOOKS GOOD in the 
     abstract at the moment without asking how it relates to the 
     missing, consumer [customer] needs [and wants], or 
     readiness.  They then end up having to develop a market.  
     Addictive organizations are always on the lookout for the 
     "QUICK FIX," and anything that may provide temporary relief 
     or solutions is leaped upon gladly, even if it is not 
     congruent with their mission.

     In TIME magazine we read of "Crime in the Suites" describing 
     large corporations being convicted of "obstructing justice" 
     (LTV chairman), "illegal billing" (General Electric), mail 
     and wire fraud (E.F. Hutton), fraud (E.S.M.), missing bank 
     funds (Jake Butcher, Tennessee banker), and failing to 
     report large cash transfers (Bank of Boston Corporation).  
     We hear of struggles with workers' rights being described as 
     not "union busting 101... This is ADVANCED union-busting."  
     These are examples of loss of contact with the morality and 
     mission of the organization.

     Organizations can keep their mission in focus if they can 
     remember their history and can tell it.  Such a process 
     keeps alive the mission in the culture of the group.  
     However, when both people and organization are out of touch 
     with their own thoughts and feelings, they become 
     progressively numb.  As a result, they are less able to 
     focus on anything outside themselves, even if that is the 
     very purpose of the organization.

     The next process we will discuss is perhaps best described 
     as DISTORTED THINKING PROCESS.  This kind of thinking 
     process relies heavily on EXTERNALIZATION, the process 
     whereby an organization assumes it is normal for people in 
     the organization to work out their personal issues on others 
     in the organization.  This behavior is accepted in the 
     addictive organization; however, it wreaks havoc and 
     contributes to confusion.

     We encounter this phenomenon in organizations with key 
     persons who are addicts.  They are not dealing with their 
     addictive diseases in treatment or in AA groups, so they 
     externalize them in the workplace.

     Externalizing issues can be seen at many levels, from the 
     executive having trouble with his wife and taking out his 
     feelings on his secretary to the organization itself fixing 
     the blame on other organizations for behavior that causes a 
     slump in productivity [like in: Japan and Germany "do 
     things" which has caused the slump in U.S. companies].  The 
     purpose of externalization is to place the issues 
     inappropriately on someone or something else, so that you, 
     as the source, will not have to deal with it.  In 
     organizations where addictiveness is high externalizing 
     takes place because the group is always symbolically 
     protecting its secret and/or its "supply."  These people 
     cannot afford to see what they are doing.  Unfortunately, it 
     is so common that it is often accepted as standard operating 
     procedure.  Many employees say, "Well, that is just the way 
     it goes," and resign themselves to being DUMPED ON by others 
     [an increasing trend that began years ago in DEC as stated 
     by a former head of Digital personnel].  Both the person who 
     does the dumping and the one who receives it collude in 
     keeping the SYSTEM going; both must distort their feelings 
     and the object of their feelings for externalization to 
     work.

     Another distorted thinking process (defense mechanism) that 
     we see in addictive organizations is PROJECTION.  Basically, 
     projection is taking something that is going on inside, 
     placing it outside, and reacting to it as if it indeed were 
     coming from another person or organization.  We see this 
     kind of thinking in the alcoholic and in the paranoid.

     When an organization is involved in projection, it is 
     institutionalizing NOT TAKING RESPONSIBILITY.  An 
     organization that operates out of a distorted thinking 
     process using projection takes all its own problems and woes 
     and blames them on the market, the economy, and other 
     corporations [or "the workers" or "management" -- when the 
     issue in fact should be addressing the SYSTEM, the rules, 
     official and unofficial, that determine the organizational 
     culture that drives how the organization works].  This kind 
     of corporation is willing to face anything but itself.  
     Responsibility is always linked with blame, and the 
     organization simply will not look AT ITSELF.  Hence, all its 
     problems come from outside.  The byword of the addictive 
     organization is "if only."

     The last of the distorted thinking processes of the 
     addictive system in organizations we want to discuss is 
     DUALISM.  We have said a lot about dualism at other places 
     in this book.  We will focus briefly on some of the 
     organizational aspects of it here.  In planning, dualistic 
     thinking is deadly, because it limits options to TWO or the 
     multiple of two.  These multiples are usually none other 
     than the ORIGINAL POSITIONS IN DISGUISE.  In the addictive 
     organization, dualism in planning is always a FORM OF 
     CONTROL AND COMPETITION.  It prevents people from looking at 
     their choice and the choice of others for creative 
     solutions, which usually CANNOT BE PREDICTED AND CONTROLLED.

     Dualistic thinking sets up sides and establishes enemies.  
     It sees other groups and individuals as the good guys or the 
     bad guys.  This simplifies relationships by removing 
     ambiguity and subtlety.  Organizations that do not think 
     dualistically let themselves see that a competitor may have 
     something they can learn from and in fact, they may work 
     cooperatively in some areas.  Dualistic thinking obviates 
     this kind of knowing.  It is ARROGANT knowing that comes out 
     of the pressure to know everything [sound familiar?  Don't 
     talk to ME about a problem or idea or a change unless you 
     have ALL the answers, supported by a preponderance of PROOF 
     first!].

     We were working with a European company that had only one 
     competitor.  Our client company was sorely in need of a new 
     organizational design.  We suggested that they consider 
     their competitor's design because it worked well.  They 
     dismissed our suggestion without a moment's hesitation 
     because it was tantamount to admitting the other company was 
     better.  In fact, in this one area the other company could 
     be emulated, because they did having something that worked.

     Our company's dualistic thinking was a box that prevented 
     them from using what was good because they felt they would 
     lose all identity if they borrowed an organizational design.  
     As it happened they devised a very complicated design that 
     plagues them to this day.

     This example suggests the other result of dualism.  It 
     allows one to stay stuck.  By staying in the we-they 
     mentality, our company could never take the focus off a 
     two-sided mentality and ask, instead, What do we as an 
     organization need to be EFFECTIVE IN this product area? [or 
     service area, or fundamental business].  They needed to look 
     inside and begin by making themselves open to all options.

     The question they needed to ask is based on humility and 
     truth and is one that addictive organizations rarely ask 
     themselves.  If they did, the answer would take them away 
     from the illusion of simplicity and plunge them into a world 
     of complexity and ambiguity.
    
1208.26KEYS::MOELLERBorn To Be RiledMon Oct 15 1990 16:2212
    Another aspect of codependency is the assumption of one's own power..
    "if I do THIS, then they'll do THAT".  Of course this can be manifested
    by not feeling one's own feelings, twisting oneself around to influence
    the person with "the problem".
    
    I am reminded of Sales within Digital.  I work in Volume/Channels, out
    in the field, and am continually amused and amazed by the assumption
    that we can positively influence the buying patterns of end-user
    customers, and budget and plan and plot and scheme to make the numbers
    from our resellers.
    
    karl
1208.27management & personnel processes - long noteSAHQ::CARNELLDDTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALFSat Oct 20 1990 12:49216
    More "fair use for discussion purposes" excerpts from THE 
    ADDICTIVE ORGANIZATION by Anne Wilson Schaef & Diane Fassel.

    MANAGEMENT AND PERSONNEL PROCESSES

    DENIAL AND DISHONESTY

    Denial is not allowing oneself to see or know what is REALLY going 
    on.  It is a type of dishonesty.  Dishonesty is related to lying 
    to or misleading the self and others.

    Organizationally, a company is in denial when it routinely refuses 
    to see or ACKNOWLEDGE what is happening internally and/or in its 
    markets.  Companies that persist in producing and marketing 
    products that are harmful to the environment are in denial about 
    their effect on consumers, and they are often dishonest in 
    reporting to regulatory agencies.

    Before the popularity of such concepts as MBWA (management by 
    walking around), executives were often removed from the "common 
    people."  Why?  They were not responsible for what they did not 
    see.  We have found that it is not possible to be into "a 
    selective denial" as an organization.  Denial is a phenomenon that 
    progressively pervades the processes of a company.

    Dishonesty arises from within the organization alongside denial, 
    and it takes other forms as well.  In organizations in which 
    dishonesty is the norm [read surveys], there is a belief that if 
    you are honest, the organization cannot possibly survive.  In such 
    cases, dishonesty is functionally related to the resistance to 
    change at every level of the organization [re-read that again].

    Perfection is also related to dishonesty, as it is not possible to 
    maintain an ILLUSION of perfectionism without keeping information 
    from others.  Perfectionism requires institutionalized secrets and 
    dishonesty.

    The systematic nature of dishonesty is that once dishonest 
    communication and practices become established in an organization, 
    they are assumed to be normal.  Consequently, the only way to 
    survive and progress in such a system is to enter into the 
    process.

    ISOLATION

    Addictive organizations become more isolated the more they sink 
    into their disease.  For one thing, isolation keeps other people 
    from seeing what is happening.  [How many hundreds (?) have times 
    have you heard "Well, Ken or Jack WOULD do something, but "they" 
    keep them isolated and nothing gets through."]

    Organizations practice isolation when they stay out of touch with 
    the consumer [customer], those they serve, and with society at 
    large.

    Often decision makers in SERVICE organizations rarely have any 
    contact with the clients they serve.

    Isolation means remaining in your own reality without concern for 
    employees or the community in which the company exists.

    SELF-CENTEREDNESS

    Self-centeredness is related to isolationism in organizations; 
    when an organization feels it is the center of the universe, it 
    sees no need to include any other information in, for example, its 
    planning.

    JUDGMENTALISM

    Judgmentalism is a characteristic of the addict.  It is very 
    different from making choices or deciding on a course of action.  
    Judgmentalism is adding the element of "BAD" to an observation or 
    choice.  There is a great deal of difference between saying, "I 
    don't like that," or "I will not be involved in that," and saying, 
    "You are bad," or "That is bad." Judgmentalism requires separating 
    from and judging the other, and is nonparticipatory.  In the AA 
    program, there is a saying, "You have a disease; you are not your 
    disease."  It means you are a good person, and your disease is not 
    you.  It is separate and is something that is overcoming you.

    Addictive organizations do NOT make this distinction.  You are 
    your actions, and you are your disease.  This is the essence of 
    judgmentalism with people and with organizations.  Look at how 
    confining judgmentalism is when applied to personnel practices.  
    It automatically means that many standards are established for 
    behavior and used to measure the worth of a person [we MUST 
    measure YOU and grade you A,B,C,D,F or 5 to 1 or whatever, 
    COMPARING you to your peers, FORCING RANKING and thus NURTURING 
    INTERNAL COMPETITION "RATHER" THAN COOPERATION -- ranking is 
    cursed as a MAJOR detriment to companies by Dr. Deming].  
    Judgmentalism in corporations means that employee evaluations are 
    dreaded because employees come out deflated or exalted, depending 
    upon the judgment.  TRUTH is frequently LOST in judgmental 
    corporations.  When companies can separate a person's worth from 
    his or her behavior, then information input can be utilized for 
    growth and change.  Judgmentalism in organizations actually 
    prevents growth.  It stunts growth, promotes stasis [what do you 
    mean change, this customer gives us a 9.6 rating! We don't need to 
    change NUTTIN'!], and puts people on constant alert, lest they be 
    judged.

    Judgmentalism is EXTREMELY limiting to creativity in organizations 
    because creativity cannot be "controlled."  Creativity depends on 
    both success AND failure.  Employees who feel judged take few 
    risks and limit their creativity [know anyone like this?].

    PERFECTIONISM

    In order to perpetuate the illusion of perfection, one must live 
    with constant denial, avoiding the OBVIOUS.

    Organizations institutionalize perfectionisms in job descriptions 
    for example.

    We have found that most job descriptions describe jobs that simple 
    could not be accomplished by human beings.  There are frequently 
    far more objectives in them than any five people could accomplish, 
    but they are given to employees as if they are real.

    CONFUSION AND CRISIS ORIENTATION

    All addictive organizations are marked by confusion.  The 
    confusion is punctuated periodically by a crisis, which serves to 
    take the attention temporarily away from the constancy of 
    confusion.  Executives and planners make the assumption that 
    crisis can be reduced if confusion is reduced.  Unfortunately, 
    they see the two as separate.

    In the addictive organization, everyone is trying to find out what 
    is really going on with the firm and believes that it is possible 
    to get such information.  Of course, these efforts are futile, 
    because it is frequently an illusion that anything is really going 
    on in the first place.  There is very little real productive 
    activity in the addictive organization, or if it takes place, it 
    is taking an inordinate amount of effort; that is what the 
    confusion or the crisis orientation is hiding.

    Confusion keep us in the past.  We are constantly going back to 
    understand how we got to such a mixed-up place.

    The confusion keeps people figuring out the past and too busy in 
    the present trying to see what is truly going on to know about the 
    current situation.

    Crisis has a slightly different function in the addictive 
    organization.  Like confusion, crisis keeps us from being 
    effective in our work because we leave the routine to handle the 
    crisis, but the other function of crisis is that it is a 
    substitute for other feelings.  In the addictive organization, 
    feelings are not permissible, and people are generally dead to 
    what is going on inside them.  A crisis creates a great upheaval 
    and intense feelings.  One of the reasons organizations create 
    crisis is to feel.  Another outcome of crisis is that it brings 
    people together who feel alienated from each other in the 
    day-to-day work.  Crisis lets people lay aside their animosities 
    to cooperate for the greater good.  In these two ways, crisis 
    creates a false sense of camaraderie.  It is a fake, it is 
    temporary, and it is a substitute for real life and a healthy 
    organization.  It leaves people with the illusion that if they can 
    pull together through this crisis, they are really a GROUP.  The 
    organization absorbs this illusion and uses it to maintain itself.

    The other way crisis orientation keeps the addictive system intact 
    is through the power it gives various CONTROL mechanisms.  In 
    crisis we allow people to take over and enact unusual procedures.  
    Crisis feeds on the illusion that control can bring the situation 
    under control.  Crises are used to excuse drastic and erratic 
    actions on the part of managers, and they heighten the 
    organization's tolerance for addictive behavior.  Ultimately, 
    crisis reduces an organization's ability to plan or to take 
    responsibility.

    SEDUCTION

    In the addictive organization, people often find themselves 
    getting on bandwagons or being pulled into activities that do not 
    feel right to them.  We have worked with people in a large 
    cosmetics firm who attend meetings that are run like pep rallies 
    to get salespeople fired up.  Our client BELIEVES IN THE PRODUCT 
    she represents; nevertheless, she is somewhat uneasy with the 
    backslapping, hugging and kissing, hooting and hollering of sales 
    rallies.  She feels seduced and that her INTELLIGENCE, and ever 
    her personhood, are being IGNORED OR NOT RESPECTED.

    SETTING UP SIDES

    One organizational process of the addictive organization is 
    setting up sides.  In this process, people think they are expected 
    to take sides around issues.  They HAVE to be for one or the other 
    person, idea, or product -- or for the other.

    It is not recognized that OPTIONS do exist.

    MANIPULATING CONSUMERS [CUSTOMERS]

    Organizations ask employees routinely to cover up faulty products 
    or faulty functioning (keep secrets).  The organization 
    participates at two levels of dishonesty here.  It knowingly makes 
    a defective product [and ships it]; then it markets it, asking 
    employees to continue the lie.

    ALL THE ABOVE processes are organizational dimensions of an 
    addictive system.  Individual addicts and co-dependents operate 
    with these characteristics in their personal and professional 
    lives all the time.  The organization itself takes on a "persona" 
    that is the composite of the individuals, and it is also more than 
    just the sum of the individual parts.  Many of the characteristics 
    we describe have existed in companies for years.  They are bigger 
    than the individual personnel and more far-reaching.  Many have 
    also been considered normal operating procedure.  This is one 
    reason they are so INSIDIOUS and DIFFICULT to detect and change.  
    We want to emphasize here that these procedures are not normal.  
    They are normal for an organization that has become an addict, and 
    there are alternatives.
    
1208.28structual components, fixes, and the real issuesSAHQ::CARNELLDDTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALFSat Oct 20 1990 14:13174
    More "fair use for discussion purposes" excerpts from THE 
    ADDICTIVE ORGANIZATION by Anne Wilson Schaef & Diane Fassel.

    STRUCTURAL COMPONENTS

    What do we know about organizational structures that is like the 
    addict.  We know that many structures are set up to engender 
    [internal] competition, heighten control, apply punishment, 
    guarantee predictability, and make accomplishment of the mission 
    of the group extremely difficult.

    We know from observing organizations that as the system gets 
    sicker there is a proliferation of structures and rules. As 
    individuals inside the addictive system become sicker, they cannot 
    be trusted to use good judgment.  In an attempt to control this, 
    an abundance [of] rules and procedures are set up.

    The most glaring system problem we find in the addictive 
    organization is that the structure of the organization is not 
    established to be congruent with the mission of the organization.

    External referencing is a process of the addictive organization.

    A group is referencing externally when the only real source of 
    validation is outside itself.  It looks externally to get clues on 
    how to behave without balancing this information with information 
    from inside to see what is right.  Co-dependents and ACOAs [adult 
    children of alcoholics] spend their lives outside themselves for 
    direction about how to act and react [like looking to "managers" 
    as authority figures rather than knowing intuitively within 
    yourself what "do what is right ETHICALLY" really means].

    Dishonesty and denial may be the clearest characteristics of the 
    individual addict, but CONTROL is the prime characteristics of the 
    addictive organization.  Perhaps because organizations are so 
    complex, they look to control as a method of reducing chaos {see 
    also THRIVING ON CHAOS by Tom Peters].

    Structurally, control is built into every level of the addictive 
    organization.  In an addictive organization, personnel practices 
    are built on concepts of punishment.  In this type of system, 
    there is a belief that behavior reflects a person's goodness or 
    badness.  It is not a system in which logical, clear consequences 
    one's behavior are built in as a result of choices made.

    The addictive organization wants to control how it is seen by 
    others -- and it believes it can.  This image (actually an attempt 
    at IMPRESSION MANAGEMENT) supposedly is created by dress codes, 
    appearance at certain functions, the discussion of some topics and 
    NOT others, and a host of other actions all developed to give the 
    RIGHT IMPRESSION.

    The right impression is part of the desire to appear ALL RIGHT to 
    other organizations [and internal groups, higher-ups], clients and 
    the public.

    Planning can be a form of control in the addictive organization.  
    Healthy organizations do plan, but the difference is that their 
    planning is a process, assumes flexibility, and is not used to fix 
    unaddressed ills.  Planning in a healthy organization is not an 
    outcome.  It is a description; it is NOT a prediction or a 
    prescription.

    Addictive organizations do NOT sample widely from inside and 
    outside the organization.  They are very careful about WHO they 
    listen to and where they go for information.  As a consequence, 
    future plans at some level perpetuate the present system, thus 
    giving the impression that change is happening.  To enhance this 
    impression, they may perhaps make a FEW inconsequential cosmetic 
    alterations.

    Though planning is illusionary in an addictive organization 
    because sufficient informations is NOT solicited, POWER, on the 
    other hand, is controlled by giving only PARTIAL information 
    [which would become increasing hard to do when an entire 
    organization has the minds of all its members linked via the power 
    of distributed computer networking].  When only partial 
    information is given, people always feel a sense of uncertainty 
    and dependence on others; they never have all the information they 
    need to make informed decisions.  Such lack of information leads 
    to hypersensitivity among individuals and INFIGHTING among groups 
    [anyone see this anywhere?]  We rarely see cooperative problem 
    solving in an addictive organization.  The form of control we see 
    in addictive organizations puts the power into the hands of a few 
    manipulators, and coping with it wastes energy that could 
    otherwise be spent making the organization more effective [THIS is 
    a BIG reason why Kodak's decentralization of power is producing 
    such SIGNIFICANT INCREASES in efficiency and effectiveness, in 
    waste and cost reduction, and in quality in products and actions].

    In addictive organizations, power and control are also exerted 
    through structures that replicate our present political process.  
    Power in these systems is the ability to get SOMEONE ELSE to do 
    what YOU want THEM to DO [even though all the authority is held by 
    those holding all the power - catch 22].  Inside organizations, 
    coalitions and power groups are formed that use the political 
    process, hence promises are often made and rarely KEPT [no ethics, 
    no doing what's right].  People are approached as OBJECTS and a 
    MEANS to an end, although superficially they are treated with the 
    utmost respect and friendliness [and in "some" cases, not even 
    this tokenism].

    The political process is, in fact, a model for organizational 
    functioning in many groups.  Consequently, concepts of pluralism 
    and democracy exist and are verbalized, but the REALITY is one of 
    dishonesty, control and co-dependence.  As organizations get 
    sicker, the addictive processes increase, and individuals and 
    groups will go to extreme lengths to get their way [firing people 
    or threatening to do so right to the wire, all without 
    justification and due process, as an example].

    In an open system, people say what they want and need, hear 
    others' needs, and then negotiate solutions acceptable to all 
    [like in everyone being a Digital PARTNER, owning rights and 
    responsibilities to build a better and more successful Digital 
    with authority decentralized to groups as groups, working as 
    self-managed virtual TEAMS with leaders of the group's choice].

    However, addictive systems revert to power plays, collusion, 
    lobbying, and manipulation as forms of control.

    Competition is integrated into the addictive organization.  When 
    the organization chooses to SET employees AGAINST each other for a 
    reward, it is promoting a process by which people receive the 
    validation from outside themselves.  It is setting up the other as 
    an object, and rewards come from beating out [and typically also 
    BEATING UP] other persons or groups.

    Competition is intrinsic to an addictive organization, both 
    internally and externally.  Some people have stated that 
    external competition is necessary, claiming that they have no way 
    of avoiding competitive relationships with other manufacturers 
    making the same product.  Our response is that there is a 
    QUALITATIVE DIFFERENCE between being in business to beat out a 
    competitor and being in business to make a product or render a 
    service that is the best one can do [Digital espouse this 
    philosophy but does it practice within the hallways in how 
    employees compete up the ladder for power, money, control and 
    other perceived desires.  Do most compete by being THE BEST in 
    knowledge, intuition, wisdom, leadership, ethics, all reflected in 
    the QUALITY of their individual WORK and practices?  Or by 
    ruthless manipulation, politicking, always "looking good" and 
    BEATING other employees using whatever methods and means get the 
    desired end desired to fulfill personal ambition].

    Addictive organizations believe if they can get the form [the 
    "fix"] right, they do not have to deal with the underlying disease 
    process.  There is a firm conviction that when STRUCTURES [lots of 
    rules and red tape] can be PERFECTED, the people inside them are 
    then adequately CONTROLLED [would employees conducting themselves 
    as REAL partners "need" to be controlled?].

    Form as a fix is a constant pursuit of something that will take 
    the complexity out of the organization and make it perfectly 
    predictable [an impossibility, especially these days with 
    technology AND the exchange of information going at breakneck 
    speed].

    All of these structural components result in ethical 
    deterioration, the ultimate breakdown of the addictive 
    organization.  When organizations have lost touch with their 
    essential purpose, their consumers, and their own employees 
    because they are into the processes and structures we have 
    described here, they are by definition, morally bankrupt.  They 
    are no longer able to honor the contract they have made with 
    society, with their workers, and with themselves.

    Through it all, we should remember that they are NOT bad 
    organizations getting GOOD, they are sick trying to get well.  
    They are hurting at many levels and are in need of recovery.  We 
    must also recognize that PARTIAL recoveries or "FIXES" are NOT 
    adequate.  They may bring temporary relief, and they do NOT 
    address the REAL ISSUES.
    
1208.29controllling and "self-elected" censorsSAHQ::CARNELLDDTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALFMon Oct 22 1990 13:2275
    
    An employee has sent me a memo "requesting" that I remove my excerpts
    and not post any without my having "official" permission.  Here is my
    reply, copied to corporate personnel:
    

                  I N T E R O F F I C E   M E M O R A N D U M

                                        Date:     22-Oct-1990 09:51am EDT
                                        From:     David Carnell @ALF
                                                  CARNELL.DAVID
                                        Dept:     PROPOSAL DESIGN RESOURCE CENTER
                                        Tel No:   DTN 385-2901

TO: {removed}

CC:  Remote Addressee                     ( JIM PITTS @MLO )
CC:  Remote Addressee                     ( JOHN SIMS @CORE )
CC:  Remote Addressee                     ( ALAN ZIMMERLE @CFO )

Subject: RE: DIGITAL #1208 - VAXnotes Conference Topic

Thank you for your attached memo of protest.

In my opinion, by way of your memo, you are inappropriately 
attempting to censure and intimidate me into silence and to keep 
co-workers ignorant and unaware of deep underlying problems 
within Digital by restricting the free flow of information within 
this company.

Since there must be about 200 books on this subject, if I wish to 
pull excerpts from any or all these books "for fair use for 
discussion purposes" to enlighten employees within a proper forum 
for discussion of the merits of my arguments around co-dependency 
within Digital within this topic in the DIGITAL VAXnotes 
conference, or in the hallway for that matter, then I should be 
entitled to do so without harassment.  The amount of material I 
am excerpting from any given book is minute compared to the 
overall length of the book material within any book I reference.

Please cease and desist from interfering with freedom of 
expression and open sharing of information pertinent to how we 
work in Digital, including the discussion of any problem, as 
defined by any Digital employee and supported as he or she sees 
fit, including the use of excerpts from published materials.

If you have a problem with excerpts being quoted to intelligently 
support open debate, then you SHOULD have sent your memo raising 
the issue to corporate personnel, John Sims.  Not to me.  Your 
sending it, demanding I stop and in fact remove my entries, to me 
smacks of intimidation and self-elected "official" censorship on 
your part.  Digital already has thousands of such "controllers" 
of information and we need less of this, not more.  I will not 
comply with your demands.

Since I have already extracted my entries and have forwarded them 
to Jim Pitts and John Sims as an aid to understanding deep 
problems within Digital, I shall take the liberty of forwarding 
this memo with yours to them also and if they with corporate 
legal wish to limit excerpts not having "official permission" 
from ANY and ALL published sources, thereby restricting the free 
flow of information, then THEY can make the decision as to what 
articifial number of words will be allowed.

Note, however, that such a decision would also then have to 
impact all innumerable "copies" made of published "articles" on 
Xerox machines which are subsequently distributed by the tens of 
thousands of copies every month within Digital, all done without 
anyone HAVING "official" permission as you would now advocate.

David
    ("incoming" memo to me deleted since I do not have official permission
    from the author to share it publicly.  Perhaps said employee will post
    it here to complete the rathole).
    
1208.30CSSE32::LESLIEAndyMon Oct 22 1990 14:0315
    I requested the removal of copyright materials in mail to you and the
    Moderators of this conference.
    
    Your protest at my "demands" is an emotive reaction and is an
    inappropriate reaction in my opinion.
    
    "I" am not "demanding" anything. As a former DIGITAL moderator and as a
    long-time moderator of many conferences, I expressed an opinion and a
    request. 
    
    Asking your respect for copyright laws isn't censorship.
    
    I leave any decision on this up to the Moderators of this conference.
    
    /andy
1208.31go to a VP everytime you don't think a note is in the companies best interest?CVG::THOMPSONAut vincere aut moriMon Oct 22 1990 14:2612
>If you have a problem with excerpts being quoted to intelligently 
>support open debate, then you SHOULD have sent your memo raising 
>the issue to corporate personnel, John Sims.  Not to me.

	I find I must disagree with these lines. This is Digital were
	one generally tries to solve problems at the lowest level possible.
	With Notes issues the lowest level is with the author of a note
	and one should ALWAYS IMHO start there. The next level is the
	conference moderators. Only if all else fails should "real"
	management get involved.

			Alfred
1208.32what's the REAL issue hereSAHQ::CARNELLDDTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALFMon Oct 22 1990 14:4117
    
    Ref: .31
    
    Sorry, Alfred, but I think there is a need here for Corporate to get
    involved in defining more precisely what is or is NOT allowed in the
    communication of published information within Digital, whether said
    published information is related to information/computer technology or
    to issues relating to "how" we work in Digital, and appropriate
    problems, the latter which are legitimate topics for discussion and
    debate in this conference.  When entire VERY LONG articles are
    reproduced via copiers and distributed in hardcopy throughout Digital,
    all without permission, the argument over excerpts, which are minute
    compared to the entire book becomes less of an issue over what is or is
    not fair use of copyright material.  I submit the "problem" HERE is NOT
    excerpts of copyright material but rather the nature of the content of
    these particular excerpts and THIS particular topic.
    
1208.33my opinion regarding this topic contentSAHQ::CARNELLDDTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALFMon Oct 22 1990 15:0628
    
    It has been brought to my attention that I have failed to post my
    opinion in this topic so far -- I guess I thought it was self-evident.
    
    I believe the model of comparing dysfunctional organizational practices
    to having characteristics comparable to that of an addict and his or
    her family of co-dependents is extremely accurate, closer to what I
    perceive to be a deep underlying problem and truth than any other model
    I've seen postulated by any business guru in the United States.
    
    I believe the excerpts from Co-Dependency and The Addictive
    Organization accurately depict characteristics that are everyday
    "norms" within many "pockets" within Digital.  I believe surface
    solutions will not GUARANTEE Digital's future prosperity, especially
    against IBM and more particularly, Japanese computer/information
    technology competitors, who are increasingly coming to "own" this
    industry, as they have successfully accomplished in several other major
    INDUSTRIES, created and formerly "owned" by American corporations.
    
    I believe the better solution is to finally ferret out the REAL
    underlying problems, understand and acknowledge them, and then address
    them.  I believe the cornerstone of such a solution lies in a major
    paradigm shift within Digital, bottom to top, top to bottom, where
    essentially all employees become TRUE Digital "partners" owning joint
    rights and responsibilities to build a better and more successful
    Digital (see other topic on Paradigm Shift in Digital and host of other
    topics and discussions within the last 300 topics in this conference).
    
1208.34so you are telling people they don't mean what they say they mean?CVG::THOMPSONAut vincere aut moriMon Oct 22 1990 15:218
>  I submit the "problem" HERE is NOT
>    excerpts of copyright material but rather the nature of the content of
>    these particular excerpts and THIS particular topic.

	I submit that the problem *is* the excerpts of copyright material
	and that you have no reason to believe Andy has any other motive.

			Alfred
1208.35Maybe someone should call a lawyerCARTUN::MISTOVICHMon Oct 22 1990 16:102
    I seem to remember that under copyright, most or entire works may not
    be copied, but portions for discussion may be. 
1208.36CSSE32::LESLIEAndyMon Oct 22 1990 16:455
    re: .34
    
    Thank you, Alfred. My motives are as stated.
    
    /andy
1208.37COVERT::COVERTJohn R. CovertMon Oct 22 1990 17:0318
re somebody should call a lawyer.

Lawyers give opinions, but will not normally discuss specific cases.

Somewhere, probably in this conference, maybe in some others; I don't recall
where right now, I posted what our corporate lawyers have officially put into
writing on the topic of fair use.

Fair use is not well-defined.  Posting excerpts moves from fair use to
prohibited use when it is done systematically or in too great a quantity,
and especially where it prevents the copyright holder from gaining profits
from additional sales of the copyrighted material.

Since it's not well-defined, if we ask for a corporate rule, we'll end up
with a "no posting of copyrighted material" rule which will work against
all of us.

/john
1208.38CSSE32::LESLIEAndyMon Oct 22 1990 17:172
    As previously stated, I think that it's the call of the Moderators -
    and I'm willing to abide by their decision, whichever way it goes.
1208.39RICKS::SHERMANECADSR::SHERMAN 225-5487, 223-3326Mon Oct 22 1990 17:2110
    Look, if it's an area of uncertainty and we push the powers that be
    into making a ruling on what can and cannot go into notes, the powers
    that be will make the most conservative decision.  This issue should be
    dropped, IMHO.  There have not been flagrant violations per my
    understanding of "fair use", but if it becomes a big enough issue you
    can count on "persons of responsibility" to take a conservative
    position.
    
    
    Steve
1208.40I detect an inconsistencySMAUG::GARRODAn Englishman's mind works best when it is almost too lateMon Oct 22 1990 19:586
    I find this amusing. Here is Mr Carnell who is always arguing for
    employee empowerment saying that corporate should come down and say
    whether it is OK / not OK for him to post these excerpts. Make up your
    mind, Sir!
    
    Dave
1208.41ESCROW::KILGORE$ EXIT 98378Mon Oct 22 1990 20:015
    
    ...seems like the real problem is a legitimate difference of opinion
    that got moved by .29 into a public forum, for apparently no good
    reason...
    
1208.42VAXnote Wars! An opportunity to grow thru conflictSAHQ::CARNELLDDTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALFMon Oct 22 1990 22:0760
    
    REF: 1208.40 SMAUG::GARROD
    
    >><< I find this amusing. Here is Mr Carnell who is always arguing for
    employee empowerment saying that corporate should come down and say
    whether it is OK / not OK for him to post these excerpts. Make up your
    mind, Sir!>>
    
    I find it amusing that so many can attack everything but never have an
    intelligent discussion and debate related to the content of a topic,
    and what truths might be found that could lead to change, and building
    a better Digital in which to work, and a more successful future
    Digital!
    
    You got it backwards, Sir.  It is Leslie that wishes referenced
    excerpts removed because HE has decided, as self-proclaimed good
    citizen defending the rights of published authors everywhere, that my
    excerpts are too long (gosh, this is getting to be a very old broken
    record, but if you want to keep playing it, that's your pleasure) --
    has Leslie sent Ken Olsen memos warning him of the dangers of thousands
    of Digital personnel making unauthorized copies of 100% of authors'
    works, like in articles, distributed everyday throughout Digital.  My
    excerpts are less than 1% of the authors' works (books) referenced. 
    Fair use, I say.
    
    No, I copied corporate to protest intimidation.  The excerpts ARE okay
    for me to post, did not nor do not require me getting anyone's "okay"
    beforehand to post as fair use, and it is going to take corporate
    involvement to have them yanked -- not Mr. Leslie sending me mail
    saying he doesn't "like" what I'm communicating -- using whatever
    definition of what "like" is as he wishes.
    
    The hypocrisy communicated doesn't sit at my end, Sir.
    
    REF: 1208.41  ESCROW::KILGORE
    
    >><< ...seems like the real problem is a legitimate difference of opinion
    that got moved by .29 into a public forum, for apparently no good
    reason...>>
    
    Ah, but there is a reason for me to move it to a public forum.  I'm
    quite aware of lots of people who have been intimidated into silence by
    such maneuvers and who have failed to either be assertive for their
    rights to express their opinions, to use the open door policy for
    redress, or to file grievances against wrongs that clearly break both
    the expoused rules within Digital as well as its values.  By making
    this issue public, and by demonstrating by action that I am not going
    to be run roughshod by anyone, perhaps all the hundreds, thousands
    even, of others who get these little memos, little phone calls, and
    little remarks, will also stand and put a stake in the ground, saying,
    "I'm doing what's right in my actions.  Let's escalate and let the damn
    light of day see which of us is peddling the bureaucratic bs."
    
    Now, do you suppose all of you could address the contents.  Like
    expressing your opinion that NONE of the characteristics listed in the
    excerpts are found in this company; or all; or which ones and whether
    this model offers any direction that "should" be explored further to
    understand what's bottlenecking real change and real employee
    participation in building this company.

1208.43Ignore the moderators; they have no authority over youSMAUG::GARRODAn Englishman's mind works best when it is almost too lateTue Oct 23 1990 01:2320
    Re .-1
    
    David, it was you who took the bait from Andy Leslie. If you believe it
    is OK to post excerpts (personally it looks OK to me, but that doesn't
    have much to do with it) then post the excerpts and take responsibility
    for them. My approach would be to simply ignore all the high handed
    moderators and self appointed pseudo moderators. If you genuinely
    believe that what you are doing is right and are willing to take
    responsibility for your notes then post them, ignore 'helpful' comments
    from self appointed policemen, repost your notes if they are deleted
    thus forcing the pseudo policemen to escalate the matter themselves.
    Since the assumption is that what you are doing is right you'll have
    nothing to fear if and when someone with 'real' authority over you
    challenges you.
    
    Just one thing though. If you actually expect people to read these
    excerpts I'd humbly suggest that you paraphrase them otherwise people
    will just next unseen past them; that's what I've been doing.
    
    Dave
1208.44ESCROW::KILGORE$ EXIT 98378Tue Oct 23 1990 10:469
    
    re .-2
    
    ...and do stop trying to save the little people. Work on your own
    arguments; they're on quite unstable ground as it is. Keep private
    disagreements where they belong -- private.
    
    
                                                                     
1208.45no, I won't stopSAHQ::CARNELLDDTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALFTue Oct 23 1990 11:1715
    Ref: <<< Note 1208.44 by ESCROW::KILGORE "$ EXIT 98378" >>>

    >><<...and do stop trying to save the little people.>>
    
    Little people?  Where have I heard that before.  Oh yeah.  Didn't hotel
    magnate Leona Helmsley have a opinion regarding employees and worker
    bees in general, the "little" people?  I believe her true feelings came
    out in the quote, "Only the little people pay taxes."
    
    Again, when will you begin discussing the contents of the topic instead
    of diverting attention into ratholes?  One might think the model
    presented by me in this topic (addict/co-dependent dysfunctional
    behaviors) was hitting too close to home to warrant intelligent debate
    and discussion.
    
1208.46CSSE32::LESLIEAndyTue Oct 23 1990 12:1028
    Well, since Mr Carnell seems determined to publicly impune my motives
    and accuse me of intimidation, I see no reason not to reply likewise in
    public.
    
    David,
    	 when I mailed you and the Moderators of DIGITAL, it was as a
    concerned DEC citizen, wanting to ensure that what was going on was
    kosher. I have seen problems regarding copyright materials being posted
    in Notes Conferences before and wished to ensure that all concerned
    knew what they were about. You reaction - to insult and attempt to
    intimidate me by a) taking this discussion public and b) copying your
    reply to amongst others, John Sims, tells its own story. If I was he,
    by the way, I'd be getting might sick of people who don't sort out
    their own problems without jumping to VP level at the slightest
    provocation. Don't you think they have better things to do? Well, let
    me tell you a not-so secret - they do. Sort out your own messes,
    instead of creating more.
    
    	Frankly, I have real work to do - as presumably do you. I intend to
    get on with that instead of particpating in any continuing
    conversations here with someone who has totally lost any respect I
    might have had for them from past discussions.
    
    	In the meantime, will the Moderators please make their decision?
    
    Thanks
    
    Andy
1208.47STAR::ROBERTTue Oct 23 1990 12:4628
re: copyright

I think Andy was totally in order to raise the copyright issue, and
to raise it directly with the author was correct and proper.  The
facts, as they've been given here by both parties, do not suggest
intimidation and I can't see any reason to escalate it to the levels
that it has apparently been taken.

David, I'm sorry you see that as intimidation.  I would have
considered Andy's question to be a legitimate one, REGARDLESS
of whether the postings are legal or not.

We work in a company that is heavily dependent on intellectual
property and we must needs be follow a high standard with regard
to these issues.  We must be scrupulous in the way we observe
copyright, patent, license, trademark, trade-secret, and other
mechanisms if we are to expect our customers to also observe
these business and legal practices.  Declaring questions of
legitmacy to be "intimidation" is itself intimidation;  I would
hate to think that some employee would fail to question such
behavior in the future because they might be reported to a VP.

Let me repeat: even though 1000 lawyers may say that Andy's concern
is misplaced, he IS STILL CORRECT TO RAISE IT.  (Of course, they
may say the opposite ;-).  Andy's behavior is completely consistent
with the empowerment and initive that you seek of all employees.

-  greg
1208.48CSS::DCOXTue Oct 23 1990 12:5121
re><<< Note 1208.43 by SMAUG::GARROD "An Englishman's mind works best when it is almost too late" >>>
>          -< Ignore the moderators; they have no authority over you >-

A voice of reason popped in.

I would offer a slight modification of otherwise sound advice;
    
>    for them. My approach would be to simply ignore all the high handed
>    moderators and self appointed pseudo moderators. If you genuinely
>    believe that what you are doing is right and are willing to take
>    responsibility for your notes then post them, ignore 'helpful' comments

Instead of  "ignore"ing  them,  recognize  that,  for  the  most part, they are
creative, well meaning  individuals  and  THANK  them  for  taking  the time to
contribute to your "good ideas".  Doesn't mean you have to agree with them, nor
does it mean that they  are  right,  just  that you acknowledged that they care
enough to voice an opinion.   

I have yet to find any good reason NOT to be polite.

Dave
1208.49Not relevent, I thinkTLE::MINAR::BISHOPTue Oct 23 1990 14:1324
    Back to the topic:
    
    No, I don't think the concepts of "addictive" or "co-dependent"
    have any meaning in large organizations driven by gain.  Small
    organizations driven by personal affection (e.g. families) is
    where co-dependence happens.
    
    I believe, however, that organizations with unclear lines of
    authority or poor accountability suffer from a problem which 
    cannot be cured without restructuring the organization.  Putting
    "good" managers into a bad structure will only turn those people
    into "bad" managers.  I also believe that organizations within
    which there is a power struggle suffer from a problem which can
    look to an outside observer as though the organization is, as a
    whole, bent on its own destruction.
    
    For the organizational equivalent of family disorders, I think 
    you have to add an element of compulsion, as has existed in 
    totalitarian countries: there everyone must proclaim an ideological
    fervor almost none feel, and must fear accusation of thought crimes
    no one can defend against.  Such a shared lie is close to what
    happens in familes called "co-dependent".
    
    			-John Bishop
1208.50Aren't ratholes fun?DR::BLINNCarpe DiemTue Oct 23 1990 14:2239
        The "official" moderators of this conference have considered the
        issue raised by this topic, and have concluded that we are unable
        to determine a clear dividing line for "Fair Use" of copyrighted
        materials.  We could have a simple, hard-and-fast rule that would
        ban all copyrighted materials, unless explicit permission had been
        obtained from the copyright owner, and the person posting them had
        stated that he or she had obtained permission.  We think that
        would be a waste of everyone's time, and suppress discussion of
        ideas that are worth discussing.  So we don't want to make that a
        rule of this conference.  (Other conference moderators may have
        chosen to make that a rule in the conferences they moderate, and
        if you have problems with that, please take them up either in some
        other topic in this conference, or with the moderators of the
        other conferences.)
        
        It's my *personal opinion* that David Carnell's excerpts comprise
        "fair use" of the materials in question, but I'm not a lawyer and
        I'm not the copyright holder.  I appreciate Andy Leslie's concern
        about the extent of the extracts.  It's clear David was not trying
        to "pirate" the materials, since he clearly attributed them to the
        sources.  That allows anyone who wants more information to obtain
        and read the original, which is appropriate.  I wish David had put
        more of his own comments interspersed with the materials, since it
        would strengthen a claim of "fair use" for purposes of discussion,
        but he did not do so.  And I wish Andy had addressed his concerns
        to David outside this conference, and if he could not get what he
        felt was a satisfactory outcome, he had contacted the moderators
        outside the conference.  But that did not happen, either.
        
        Until and unless we are instructed by "higher authority" that the
        copyrighted materials reproduced here should be removed from this
        conference because, in the opinion of someone qualified to make
        that judgement, they either violate the "fair use" rules or that
        the risk to Digital that they violate the rules is too great, we
        plan to leave the materials here.
        
        Perhaps we can get back to the original topic?
        
        Tom
1208.51COVERT::COVERTJohn R. CovertTue Oct 23 1990 15:1111
re .50

>I wish Andy had addressed his concerns to David outside this conference,

Excuse me, but if you look at .29, you'll see that Andy did just that.

David seems to believe that any time anyone disagrees with him, he's
being "intimidated."  We've run into this with him more than one time
before.  I think he needs to learn the difference between intimidation
and disagreement.  I'm not sure how that's done -- maybe someone should
_really_ intimidate him.  :-)
1208.52CARTUN::MISTOVICHTue Oct 23 1990 16:0222
    re: .51
    
    Andy claims that his memo to David was not an attempt at intimidation; 
    David claims it was.  Unless we see the actual memo, we have no way of 
    gauging the tone or intent.
    
    Back to the original topic:
    
    I can see some similarities in co-dependent relations within families 
    and co-dependencies within an organization.  Since most people learn
    behavior within the context of family relationships, it is not 
    impossible that behavior patterns would carry through to to 
    relationships that exist within other contexts.
    
    Also, I disagree with the noter who stated something about family
    relationships being based on affection, while corporate relationships
    are based on profit.  You, clearly, were never exposed to my family. 
    
    In any event, co-dependency is kind of passe, so I think I'll skip 
    out of this note.  Must say that I enjoyed the rathole immensely!
    
    Mary
1208.53Let's see what John Sims has to saySAHQ::CARNELLDDTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALFTue Oct 23 1990 16:3722
             <<< Note 1208.51 by COVERT::COVERT "John R. Covert" >>>

    >><<David seems to believe that any time anyone disagrees with him,
    he's being "intimidated."  We've run into this with him more than one
    time before.  I think he needs to learn the difference between
    intimidation and disagreement.  I'm not sure how that's done -- maybe
    someone should _really_ intimidate him.  :-) >>
    
    Well, John.  You now seem to be encouraging "someone at large" with
    clout to come get me.  If an employee following your public advice to
    40,000 employees now physically threatens me, am I now free to sue you
    and Digital on the basis of this public written note?
    
    I believe an individual just lost a civil case in Oregon (?) for
    instigating violence -- $12,000,0000, I believe.
    
    Or are you not so subtlely suggesting an official hard put down by an
    executive in Digital?  On what justification will you defend your call
    for someone "to really intimidate me?"
    
    Let's find out.
    
1208.54help for the humour impairedSTAR::HUGHESYou knew the job was dangerous when you took it Fred.Tue Oct 23 1990 16:436
    re .53
    
    Are we to take it that you missed the 'smiley face' at the end of
    John's last sentence?
    
    gary
1208.55humour? reallySAHQ::CARNELLDDTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALFTue Oct 23 1990 16:494
    
    Organized crime hitters smile too in order to get close.  Sorry, but
    smiley faces don't cut it on this.
    
1208.56Calm down, David. You're on a wrong tack.COVERT::COVERTJohn R. CovertTue Oct 23 1990 16:528
I don't know whether he missed the smiley face, but if he forwarded it to
John Sims, I may find out whether John Sims knows what a smiley face is.

BTW, David, that's a good example of the difference between intimidation
and disagreement.  You might disagree with my reply and tell me so; when
you threaten me with John Sims and $12,000,000 lawsuits, that's intimidation.

/john
1208.57One more rathole couldn't hurtASABET::COHENTue Oct 23 1990 17:2520
    
    	For what it's worth, the extended quotation of the material
    	in question is a violation of copyright laws.  (As a rule of
    	thumb, to quote anything over two hundred words you better
    	have a very good reason.)
    	Therefore, David is also correct in noting violation by many
    	other members of this corporation who copy complete chapters
    	of books without permission.  The same goes for magazine and
    	newspaper articles which are reproduced for distribution in
    	the company without express editorial consent.
    	So, what we have are many people breaking the law followed by 
    	a spate of the pot calling the kettle black salvos.  There
    	simply isn't a prison large enough to hold all of Digital's
    	offenders.
    	And a parting comment, as noted before by another, we are a
    	company which claims copyright to a number of products.  To
    	violate the copyright of others is not only in very poor taste,
    	it goes down *very* poorly in a court of law.
    	Do whatever you feel is right.
    	
1208.58COVERT::COVERTJohn R. CovertTue Oct 23 1990 17:296
re .57

Would you please post your qualifications for judging the fine line between
fair use and copyright violations?

Thanks/john
1208.59let's talk about itLEMAN::DAVEEDWhat you get is how you do itTue Oct 23 1990 17:3317
    Could we get on with discussing co-dependency?
    
    Maybe I can distract folks from this digression by opening discussion
    on something that alot of field hands talk about.  Is the relationship
    between SWS and Sales a sick co-dependency?  Frequently SWS people will
    complain about being treated like mushrooms by Sales...at the same time, 
    the same people seem to increase their output the more they're dumped on.
    And many in Sales will treat SWS folks like they had leprosy...then later 
    practically court them in order to get a "fix" (e.g., PID delivered to
    customer, special demo to close a sale, etc).  Sounds similar to an
    individual's substance abuse cycle.  Is this a little example of what
    David was talking about?  Am I describing a common situation or is this
    unusual?  Is this SWS insecurity/looking_for_approval interacting with 
    Sales insecurity/exploitative_control_trip?  Are we ready/willing to 
    discuss this?  Is this provocative enough to get us off ad hominum?
    
    -dinesh. :-) :-)
1208.60RE: .59YUPPIE::COLEA CPU cycle is a terrible thing to wasteTue Oct 23 1990 17:416
	If that is co-dependency, then it's not a new problem by any means!
That's been the Sales/Services relationship norm for the 14+ years I've been
in SWS/EIS.

	And if you think life is tough now for Sales Support, we used to do
that AND product warranty support AND revenue services!
1208.61After a while, any attention or help will doSVBEV::VECRUMBADo the right thing!Tue Oct 23 1990 17:5112
    re .59

    Or is it that we're just pressed so "up against it" that we'll just keep
    working harder and harder to get any show of appreciation and will trade
    any kind of favor to get help for what we need to do or have done?
    
    "Have _you_ sent out a thank you note today to someone who deserves it?"

    And not this let me make you visible to your manager cloying bull***t, just
    a plain thank you, _one-on-one_.

    /Petes
1208.62I'm member kind 1 today. What kind of member are you?TLE::AMARTINAlan H. MartinTue Oct 23 1990 17:5353
			Digital Internal Use Only

From the "1989-1990 Internal Guide to Digital Organizations", EL-ENGRS-OM:

Page 243:

"
				Chapter 24

		LEGAL SERVICES FOR ENGINEERING/MANUFACTURING


The Engineering Law Section of the Digital Law Department fills the roles of
general counsel to the Engineering/Manufacturing organization, and worldwide
intellectual property and product liability expert for the entire corporation.
This section provides basic legal information for Digital employees, explains
how to deal with the most common legal problems, and tells how to contact an
Engineering lawyer if you need more help.
"

Page 263:

"
24.5.4  HOW TO AVOID LEGAL PITCALLS WHEN YOU WRITE

The outcome of lawsuits can be affected by correspondence written years before
by people who never thought about how their words would sounds in court.
Whenever anything is written (either in hardcopy or electronically) - a memo, a
letter, a note - remember that your words might be read some day by an
unfriendly competitor or customer, or by an enthusiastic government prosecutor
who may interpret its language in the most sinister way possible.

For this reason:

*  Don't speculate in writing about the legality or ethics of Digital's
actions.  While you should be concerned if you have any questions about the
legality of any action, the way to handle this situation is to contact the
Law Department, and to find out.  Speculation might be thought (incorrectly) to
be evidence that the company has recognized a law violation, and had tried to
camoflage it in some way.
"

Conclusion: the Law Department insists that there be exactly two kinds of
members of this conference:

1.  Those who have no concerns about the legality of its contents
	-and-
2.  Those who have concerns, but address them by contacting the Law Department
for more help.

A third kind of member: one who speculates in writing about the legality or
ethics of some action, must not appear.
				/AHM
1208.63C'mon, the rathole's been the best part of this note....ESCROW::KILGORE$ EXIT 98378Tue Oct 23 1990 17:5616
    
    Re .59:
    
    Don't try to intimidate me out of my digression!!    :-) :-)
                                                     (smiley faces)
    
    Seriously, perhaps the reason we rat-hole so easily is because it's
    hard to find merit in the co-dependency theory as applied to Digital
    operations.
    
    Re .56:
    
    He also wouldn't know sarcasm (.45) if it bit him on the tush. Is there
    a prescribed sarcastic face? (Not that it would do any good.)   :-)
                                                               (smiley face)
    
1208.64healthy strokes or addicts' "fix" ?LEMAN::DAVEEDWhat you get is how you do itTue Oct 23 1990 18:1217
    re .60
    
    The fact that it's been going on for a long time isn't the issue.
    Is it healthy and wholesome?  If not, what steps can we take towards 
    restoring health?
    
    re .61
    
    My ears are sore from listening to my colleagues complain about this 
    and it seems to be negatively affecting their performance now more than
    before.  Is this just a local issue?  How do I persuade Sales to give
    my colleagues more strokes?  Is this just another quick "fix" ?
    Other suggestions?
    
    Thanks,
    
    -dinesh.
1208.65NOTIME::SACKSGerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085Tue Oct 23 1990 18:302
I vote for making this the official copyright/intimidation note.  The
co-dependency argument is boring.
1208.66ASABET::COHENTue Oct 23 1990 18:4219
    
    	Re: .58
    
    	Can't site legal expertise, but I have been involved with 
    	publications, reproductions, and with broadcasting off and on 
    	(mainly on) for roughly twenty years.  This includes both
    	written and pictorial items.  I've written, edited, created, 
    	placed, and read material in newspapers, magazines, books,
        over the air, and was involved with reproducing original
    	art for commercial applications.
    	I'd require a release to use that much material.  It can be hidden
    	here, but in the real world. . .
    	I just did a voice over for a radio commercial and wanted to use
    	ten seconds of an original track by a local band.  I called.  
    	They were flattered.  But I got them to sign off.  Lawsuits can
    	be so messy.
    	As I said earlier, do what you want.  You probably won't get
    	caught here.  However, to the best of my experience, I wouldn't
    	quote that extensively.   
1208.67We're probably more like news (old, new, and otherwise)SVBEV::VECRUMBADo the right thing!Tue Oct 23 1990 18:5014
    To digress to the "other topic"...

    When the VNS still had letters to the editor, I obtained a study and
    reproduced figures from it -- the institute categorized me as news media
    and released the materials to me.

    So, electronic or paper, what can the "news" quote without violating
    copyright?

    And, for those of you bored by the original and alternate topics, what
    kind of "news" are we (HUMAN::DIGITAL), anyway? :-)

    /Petes
1208.68COVERT::COVERTJohn R. CovertTue Oct 23 1990 19:178
re .66

But the DEC document on fair use (where _did_ I put that) draws a distinction
between the kind of use you are talking about -- use of copyrighted materials
in sales literature or other externally disseminated materials like radio
shows -- and the kind of use we have here -- a completely internal discussion.

/john
1208.69root causes - what is the addictionSAHQ::CARNELLDDTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALFThu Oct 25 1990 11:5861
    
    Someone asked, "Just what is the root cause that causes all the surface
    problems and impediments to real change and real employee participation
    to build a more successful Digital?"
    
    I believe the root cause to be that the wrong people (some, not all)
    are being promoted into manager's jobs, upward into higher manager's
    jobs, and perpetuated in manager's jobs.  They are wrong because they
    have little leadership skills, no inclination to lead others to greater
    success, and are driven by inappropriate motivations that these days
    are detrimental to a corporation, and even to a society.
    
    What are the motivations that have driven such people into management,
    and into clinging to said jobs and empires at all costs?  What is the
    addiction as eluded to in THE ADDICTIVE ORGANIZATION?
    
    A survey that appeared on national television this morning briefly
    noted the definition of business success by 1,000 American executives
    as they defined it.  Overwhelmingly it was defined in one word: RESPECT.
    
    Success to these managers meant "respect" by bosses, peers,
    subordinates, the organization, society.
    
    But which way is respect manifested in reality?  Esteem and honour for
    leading the members of an organization to greater success?  Or respect
    as in deferential treatment?
    
    I believe the latter: deferential regard -- with power, you get control
    with others doing it YOUR way, regardless of what way is pursued, if
    even said "ways" lack competence and common sense and are disasterous
    to the organization.
    
    Respect above all other considerations.  I submit the driving
    motivation is really power, control and deferential regard by all
    people within the sphere of a person driven to "get respect."
    
    The motivation to be a manager by many simply is NOT to lead the
    members of an organization to higher levels of success, to grow a
    greater enterprise, where all members benefit from said leadership and
    attained results, with then said "respect" being solely from a
    reflection from accomplishing this.
    
    But how can you change "the system" that puts many who are wrong into
    manager's jobs when "the system" cannot be changed because it is
    controlled by those who would perpetuate promoting wrong people rather
    than ONLY people devoted and driven to lead OTHERS to success without
    thought to attaining and retaining personal reward, glory, power and
    control?  Thus, to make an addiction organization better requires
    awareness and understanding of the root causes and effects, and then
    within heightened enlightenment, a major paradigm shift has a chance of
    happening.
    
    If Digital is to attain and retain GREATER success in the year 2000+ I
    believe it will necessitate all employees being regarded as TRUE
    Digital partners owning joint rights and responsibilities to build a
    better and more successful Digital, accepted by all employees, with all
    continuously effecting millions of "improving" changes in all
    processes, lead by real leaders who driven and motivated by real ethics
    and altruistic values to the total organization, and not driven by
    quests for personal glory, power, control and deferential treatment.
    
1208.70ownership in affecting decisions and changeSAHQ::CARNELLDDTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALFFri Oct 26 1990 00:3092
    
      An example of a "new paradigm" within GM at Saturn -- see below
    memo just sent to Ken Olsen/Jack Smith/John Sims/Win Hindle/Jim Pitts

  Subject: The Right Stuff -- new ideas at GM's Saturn facility

     As you weight the merits of all the ideas for change being 
     submitted to you by a wide variety of employees, particularly 
     those addressing the Digital "system", which drives the behaviors 
     of all employees, advocating greater employee involvement, I 
     would like to submit for your consideration a couple short 
     excerpts from the article THE RIGHT STUFF by S.C. Gwynne, 
     Detroit, that has appeared in the October 29, 1990 issue TIME 
     magazine regarding GM's new Saturn facility:

     "Why is Saturn so revolutionary for American industry?  Primarily 
     because this attempt to reverse GM's industrial decline 
     acknowledges for the first time on a large scale the real reason 
     for Japan's manufacturing superiority over the last two decades.  
     The secret is not advanced technology or low wages or some 
     mystical Asian work ethic.  Japan's most important advantage is 
     its management system: the way it deals with employees, 
     suppliers, dealers and customers.  This month a historic, 
     $5 million M.I.T. study of the world's auto companies concluded 
     that Japan's advantages boil down to a few elements, including 
     teamwork, efficient use of resources and a tireless commitment to 
     improving quality."

     "Saturn's best hope is that it represents a profound change in 
     the way GM manages its people.  But the difference is not 
     technological.  Saturn's cavernous, mile-long Tennessee factory 
     is a medium-tech plant, as are many of the most efficient 
     facilities in Japan.  The core of Saturn's system is one of the 
     most radical labor-management agreements developed in this 
     country, one that involves the United Auto Workers in every 
     aspect of the business.  The executive suite in Spring Hill is 
     shared by president LeFauve and U.A.W. coordinator Richard 
     Hoalcraft, who often travel together and conduct much of the 
     company's business in each other's presence.

     "Beyond sharing power at the top levels, the labor agreement 
     established some 165 teams, which have been given more power than 
     assembly-line workers anywhere else in GM or at any Japanese 
     plant.  They are allowed to interview and approve new hires for 
     their teams (average size: 10 workers).  They are given wide 
     responsibility to decide how to run their own areas; when workers 
     see a problem, they can pull on a blue handle and shut down the 
     entire line.  They are even given budget responsibility."

     "Not all of Saturn's progressive ideas sprang up in Tennessee.  
     Many were borrowed from around the world by the Group of 99, a 
     team of Saturn workers who traveled 2 million miles in 1984 and 
     looked into some 160 pioneering enterprises, including 
     Hewlett-Packard, McDonald's, Volvo, Kawasaki and Nissan.  Their 
     main conclusions: that most successful companies provide 
     employees with a sense of ownership, have few and flexible 
     guidelines and impose virtually no job-defining shop rules.

     "From that blueprint grew the most radical twist in Saturn's 
     labor agreement, one that is even more democratic than the 
     Japanese model: provision for consensus decision making.  The 
     Saturn philosophy is that all teams must be committed to 
     decisions affecting them before those changes are put into place, 
     from choosing an ad agency to selecting an outside supplier.  
     'That means a lot of yelling sometimes, and everything takes a 
     lot longer,' says Jack O'Toole, who oversees Spring Hill 
     personnel, 'but once they come out of that meeting room, they're 
     100% committed.'

     As you can see from the excerpts, it appears that at Saturn, 
     all employees are in teams that are self-managed and 
     self-motivated, all interlinked by the way with connected bonus 
     sharing as mentioned elsewhere in the article, with groups making 
     nearly all decisions as groups.  One might surmise that the 
     employees there do regard themselves as Saturn partners owning 
     joint rights and responsibilities to build continuously and 
     excitedly a successful Saturn organization and enterprise.

     Similarly, as a change in the Digital system, what would happen 
     if all 125,000 Digital employees in 10,000 groups/teams became 
     self-managed and self-motivated, linked with interdependent bonus 
     or profit sharing if high profit goals were obtain, with groups 
     making nearly all decisions as groups, each considered by you and 
     by each from within to truly be a Digital "partner" owning joint 
     rights and responsibilities to build a better and more successful 
     Digital, greater than what is, relentlessly driving change to 
     improve all processes to increase quality in all products, 
     services and indeed in virtually all Digital actions, thereby 
     increasing our effectiveness to win "preference" in the minds of 
     our customers, resulting in happy customers and greater levels of 
     loyalty, revenue, margin and profit?
    
1208.71Are all these memos helping?SMAUG::GARRODAn Englishman's mind works best when it is almost too lateFri Oct 26 1990 00:358
    Re .-1
    
    I wonder if JS and KO are running out of disk space yet.
    I'm getting a little confused with this 'employee empowerment' thing.
    Is the reason that you're sending all these book excerpts to the Execs
    to encourage them to enforce employee empowerment? There's an oxymoron.
    
    Dave
1208.72I send letters, lots of letters...SAHQ::CARNELLDDTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALFFri Oct 26 1990 01:0636
     Ref: <<< Note 1208.71 by SMAUG::GARROD >>>
    
    >><< Is the reason that you're sending all these book excerpts to the
    Execs to encourage them to enforce employee empowerment? There's an
    oxymoron.>>
    
    The "system" does not have sufficient checks and balances to guarantee
    that the values, ethics and desires (like increased employee
    involvement as was specifically expressed), of Ken Olsen and his
    executive committee, the REAL culture of Digital in effect, get
    translated into action within all groups in Digital.  In many pockets,
    maybe not yours, but others, including mine, many employees do not see
    the ethics, values and desires of the executives of this company.  Some
    of us believe their absence is detrimental to Digital's success.  Yes,
    my opinions in memo form are to influence and affect changes, namely
    getting compliance from "some" managers who do not share the values,
    ethics and direction of Ken Olsen and his executives, and in getting
    real leadership that puts employees first as partners rather than
    self-serving ambition for power and control, even if at the expense of
    employees and the corporation.  The better solution is to make pivotal
    changes in how the system works, which drives all behaviors of all
    employees; simply changing faces is no longer the most effective route
    to ensuring greater success for the corporation.
    
    Doing what's right ethically means to me expressing my opinions and
    beliefs to those who have the authority to implement such changes; and
    this I do, regardless of the system's trial by fire of any new ideas
    submitted.  Ken and Jack have explicitly invited direct communications,
    without pre-judgment of content or quantity or length.  I am simply
    taking them up on their offer and according to the stated ethics and
    values of this company.  I consider myself a Digital partner in
    affecting change to build this enterprise and I act accordingly.
    
    Have you sent a memo to Ken and Jack yet?  I know you have a lot to
    say.  Send it.
       
1208.73The Emperor's NewspeakGLDOA::REITERFri Oct 26 1990 16:2118
There is no such thing as co-dependency.  It is not even a theory.  There were
never any so-called interdependent societies that vanished without a trace. 

This whole business about co-dependency exists only for those who choose to
believe in it, who need to believe in it, or whose livelihoods depend upon 
others believing in it.

By itself it explains nothing, and all of its Sunday-supplement-psychology 
mumbo-jumbo about "feminine" and "masculine" traits is nothing but a swipe 
at neo-urban political correctness, clad in late-20th Century shaman's garb. 
It's pure Mad Ave; it sells.  This tripe is shoveled down the throats of
everyone from public school children and recovering drug addicts to talk-show
audiences and business executives.  And by invoking the tired old "woman good
- man bad" paradigm, the co-dependency Mafia plays the same polarization and
alienation games that they claim to be so far above. 

Get real.  
\Gary
1208.74KEYS::MOELLERSilopsism's not for everyoneFri Oct 26 1990 17:0036
>                      <<< Note 1208.73 by GLDOA::REITER >>>
>There is no such thing as co-dependency.  It is not even a theory.  
    
    You have a lot to learn.  There are tens of thousands of people
    regularly attending CODA and ACOA meetings every night of the week.
    - and getting invaluable information on the underlying causes of
    disfunctional behavior, as well as tools and support for their own
    change process.  There are thousands of counseling professionals that 
    actively use this 'nonexistent theory' with their clients.  With
    results.
    
    I am not certain that corporate disfunction patterns are fixable the
    same way family disfunctions are, but to say that codependence doesn't
    exist only shows your own ignorance.
    
>This whole business about co-dependency exists only for those who choose to
>believe in it, who need to believe in it, or whose livelihoods depend upon 
>others believing in it.
    
    The same thing could be said for any religion, or our own monetary
    system.  How about viewer sports ?  Or politics ?

>By itself it explains nothing, and all of its Sunday-supplement-psychology 
>mumbo-jumbo about "feminine" and "masculine" traits is nothing but a swipe 
>at neo-urban political correctness, clad in late-20th Century shaman's garb. 
    
    Gee, I don't remember anything about masculine or feminine traits and
    codependence - could it be you're reaching a bit and dragging out
    another pet peeve ?
    
>Get real.   \Gary
    
    GET EDUCATED. 
    
    karl
    
1208.75Huh?CARTUN::MISTOVICHFri Oct 26 1990 17:514
    Masculine traits vs feminine traits?  What does that have to do with
    co-dependency?  
    
    
1208.76NOTIME::SACKSGerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085Fri Oct 26 1990 18:141
SOMEBODY got up on the wrong side of bed this morning.
1208.77Selective memory, naked aggression. Tsk.GLDOA::REITERFri Oct 26 1990 19:59119
Re: 1208.74    KEYS::MOELLER 

Hey, Karl,
    
>    You have a lot to learn.  There are tens of thousands of people
>    regularly attending CODA and ACOA meetings every night of the week.
>    - and getting invaluable information on the underlying causes of
>    disfunctional behavior, as well as tools and support for their own
>    change process.  There are thousands of counseling professionals that 
>    actively use this 'nonexistent theory' with their clients.  With
>    results.

Words cannot express how happy I am for these people.  What does this have to 
do with Digital, or as you say...
    
>    I am not certain that corporate disfunction patterns are fixable the
>    same way family disfunctions are, but to say that codependence doesn't
>    exist only shows your own ignorance.

If you are one of these true believers, you've got an awful lot of untreated 
hostility towards people you've never met.  Maybe you need more sessions so
you can stop calling people who don't agree with you "ignorant". 

>    Gee, I don't remember anything about masculine or feminine traits and
>    codependence - could it be you're reaching a bit and dragging out
>    another pet peeve ?

Could it be that you are "projecting"?  Could the Weinholds be misinformed, or
maybe your memory is faulty, or maybe the in crowd forgot the early stages of
its brainwashing.  (Hint: my first exposure to this codependency garbage was
_not_ in Notes.)  Be careful when you call someone ignorant, it's comes across
as aggression. 

But, to assist you in the process, I have excerpted a few paragraphs from Mr.
Carnell's 135-line note 1208.1.  I have appended it below.  Read it.  
No need to apologize, Karl. 

Re: 1208.75     CARTUN::MISTOVICH                                     
>                                   -< Huh? >-
>    Masculine traits vs feminine traits?  What does that have to do with
>    co-dependency?  

Suppose you tell me.  Read the excerpt from 1208.1 or entire note.  If you
still don't follow what I am saying, you get your money back.  OK? 
(PS- Thank you for not calling me ignorant.)

Re: 1208.76       NOTIME::SACKS 
> SOMEBODY got up on the wrong side of bed this morning.

No, Gerald, I'm just a read-only noter who's had enough of the whiners in 1128 
and the New Wave gurus in 1208.  Your 1208.76 is basically an ad hominem attack.
Not nice at all.

Look, your expert opinion is all over this file.  I enter my first two notes
in months and all of a sudden it's a problem for you.  No, not the wrong side
of the bed, I just don't happen to share your opinions.  OK? 

\Gary

******************** BEGIN EXCERPT FROM 1208.1   ODIXIE::CARNELL **********

    Co-dependency in society: history and characteristics

    Quotes from BREAKING FREE OF THE CO-DEPENDENCY TRAP by Barry 
    and Janae Weinhold.

    The Co-Dependent Culture
    Dominator vs. Partnership Models

    Most people in the addictions field are looking at 
    co-dependency as an individual problem or family problem.  
    Some are beginning to examine it as a "systems" problem.  A 
    few are beginning to look at it as a problem of our whole 
    society.

    The Partnership Society

    When Eisler delved into prehistory, she found numerous 
    legends and archeological records that described an earlier 
    form of civilization in which the culture was organized quite 
    differently from what we know today.  According to these 
    records, there were large areas in Europe and the near East 
    which enjoyed a long period of peace and prosperity.  The 
    social, technological and cultural development of the 
    existent society followed a steady move upward.  This 
    civilization, which she identifies as a PARTNERSHIP society, 
    was based on unity, cooperation and mutual need.  The society 
*    valued the life-giving and nurturing qualities that we might 
*    consider to be "feminine."

    The archeological evidence also reveals that this early 
    social structure was based on equality.  Power, risk-taking 
*    and rewards were shared without regard to gender.  This 
    cooperative approach helped create unity and harmonious 
    relationships among people and between people and the planet.  
    Eisler contends that at a point in prehistory, perhaps around 
    3500 B.C., this 30-40,000 year era began to wane and the 
*    qualities of the feminine were gradually replaced with more 
*    masculine values that structured a completely different kind 
    of civilization that she identifies as a dominator society.

    The Dominator Society

    Dominator societies, according to Eisler, exalt the qualities 
*    that we stereotypically associate with masculinity and value 
    life-TAKING and destructive activities, such as conquest and 
    warfare.  This social structure, which is based on 
    inequality, generally ranks one part of society over the 
    other.  Even though the cultural values are what we today 
*    think of as 'hard' or more 'masculine,' dominator societies 
    can be either matriarchal or patriarchal.  The higher ranked 
    group holds the power, takes the risks and reaps the rewards, 
    leaving the lower ranked group to powerlessness and, often, 
    poverty.  Rather than linking people cooperatively, they rank 
    people competitively, creating a hierarchy that is ultimately 
    supported by force or the threat of force.  This creates an 
    atmosphere of distrust and separation.

****************** END QUOTE ************************************************
1208.78MU::PORTERSmall Change got rained onFri Oct 26 1990 20:0620
Can I join this rathole?

Co-dependency may or may not exist.  I expect that it does.  It's
probably a valuable model for describing something like the 'enabling'
behaviour of some (not all) spouses of addicts, and similar cases.

However, this doesn't mean the term is suitable for blanket
application.  From my non-expert, decidely jaundiced viewpoint,
there's plenty of opportunity for a charlatan to make a buck
in the self-help-book field.

I think that the author of .73 speaks correctly for many cases
when he labels it as "newspeak".   In particular, the usage
in this note is somewhat suspect.  It smacks of picking
up the latest trendy terminology (see also "paradigm shift")
and throwing it around with abandon.

I do think DEC has organizational problems, but I don't believe
all this co-dependency claptrap will help matters one iota.

1208.79of people and frogsLEMAN::DAVEEDWhat you get is how you do itSat Oct 27 1990 01:1134
    Most people who have worked with individuals and small groups
    undergoing change _including_addicts_ have observed a sequence 
    that nearly all go through.  The sequence is approximately as follows.
    Note that at any point, people may regress to an earlier point.
    
    Ignorance		unaware of issue or issue doesn't exist yet
    Avoidance		failure to acknowledge issue (subconscious)
    Denial		conscious avoidance, e.g. addicts lie to cover up
    Confrontation	internal &/or group conflict
    Depression		least understood phase...frequently leads to regression
    Acceptance		key to change...allows reintegration
    Harmony/Community	restored balance...change defined, implemented, etc.
    
    Some people treat avoidance/denial and depression/acceptance as the same 
    phases.  Others call them by different names.
    
    In a large group, e.g., Digital employees, there will be a larger
    variation between the phases people are in.  The replies to this 
    note have a wierd resemblance to some of the discussions among groups
    of addicts and their families ("me? no I'm not addicted."  "why do you
    want to talk about it?  let's talk about football." etc. etc. etc.)
    
    Sure.  We're all happy campers.  Let's just keep telling ourselves that.
    
    Please _do_not_ actually do the following experiment.
    
    If you put a frog in a pan of cold water and turn on the heat s/he will
    remain in the pan until the water boils and the frog dies.  If there is
    some "sudden" event the frog will jump out of the pan.  But the frog
    doesn't react to the gradually more hostile environment.
    
    Sometimes people are like frogs.
    
    -dinesh.
1208.80NOTIME::SACKSGerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085Mon Oct 29 1990 13:267
Gary --

I replied to your note here after reading your note regarding health insurance.
Your note here is reasonable.  Your health insurance note reminds me of
Ed Anger's column in the Weekly World News.  At first I thought it was a
put-on.  I apologize for my reply here.  Please consider it as if it were
in the health insurance note.
1208.81TOPDOC::AHERNDennis the MenaceTue Oct 30 1990 12:564
    RE: .78  "trendy terminology"
    
    How much are a paradigms?  Can I buy just one?
    
1208.82People cannot free themselvesCOUNT0::WELSHTom Welsh (UK CASE Marketing) 768-5225Tue Oct 30 1990 14:3244
	re .18:

>>>    I'm getting a little confused with this 'employee empowerment' thing.
>>>    Is the reason that you're sending all these book excerpts to the Execs
>>>    to encourage them to enforce employee empowerment? There's an oxymoron.

	Superficially it looks like an oxymoron, Dave, but I think
	this impression will only stick if you are fundamentally
	opposed to the ideas. (In which case it is a convenient
	pretext for turning your back on them).

	Empowerment means that employees have the freedom to take
	actions which they believe are good for the business. This
	is the opposite to employees doing what they are told, and
	nothing else. Obviously these are extremes.

	It seems to me that empowerment is better for Digital's
	business than unthinking obedience - and what is more,
	this balance is tilting further and further. We can less
	and less afford to have bosses laying down the law and
	employees simply doing what they are told.

	Now, there is no way employees can "empower" themselves
	if their immediate bosses don't want them to. That leads
	at best to disfavour and all its consequences, at worst
	to immediate termination. The only way people can be
	empowered is if top management tells middle and junior
	management that the employees will be empowered OR ELSE.

	A historical analogy can be found in Abraham Lincoln's
	Emancipation Proclamation. If Lincoln had simply said
	"it's up to the slaves to start behaving free, and they
	can do that anytime", not much would have been
	accomplished. The federal government had to pass laws
	to make it a criminal offense to own slaves, and then
	there were no more slaves.

	Similarly, we need top management in Digital to commit
	publicly and consistently to employee empowerment, and
	furthermore to act in support of it and to be seen to
	do so. Otherwise it won't happen.

	/Tom

1208.83A two-way streetTROPIC::BELDINPull us together, not apartWed Oct 31 1990 10:1123
    "People cannot free themselves". 
    
    True, but incomplete.
    
    Freedom or "empowerment" is a description of the relationship between a
    person and the society and other persons in that society. 
    
    Such relationships as marriage, partnership, employment are usually
    formed by negotiation but because they rely on mutual consent, can be
    destroyed by either member.
    
    It is true that no person can be empowered without approval from the
    formal power holder.  It is also true that until they accept the
    responsibility to think for themselves instead of waiting for someone
    to give them directions, they will not be empowered.
    
    I believe we have been offered the empowerment by Digital's top
    management.  At this point, the ball is in our court.  WE MUST DECIDE
    TO USE THE FREEDOM WE HAVE BEEN GIVEN.
    
    Regards,
    
    Dick
1208.84CARTUN::MISTOVICHThu Nov 01 1990 18:494
    You're right.  I didn't read that note.  Actually, my knowledge of
    co-dependency comes from Bradshaw and company.  Masculine vs feminine
    roles or traits or whatever are not at the center of co-dependency as I
    recall.  Just addiction and trying to get needs met.
1208.85"Well, Alice. Now what will you do," says the catSAHQ::CARNELLDDTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALFFri Nov 02 1990 14:5028
    REF: <<< Note 1208.51 by COVERT::COVERT "John R. Covert" >>>

    >><<David seems to believe that any time anyone disagrees with him,
    he's being "intimidated."  We've run into this with him more than one
    time before.  I think he needs to learn the difference between
    intimidation and disagreement.  I'm not sure how that's done -- maybe
    someone should _really_ intimidate him.  :-)>>
    
    Congratulations.
    
    Following memo just sent to Ross Brown, U.S. Personnel Mgr, and CC, et al.
    
    Subject: Grievance outstanding (see attached memo previously sent)

    I was informed a few minutes ago that my tiny cost center, and 
    therefore my job in proposals, is eliminated.  If I fail to take  the
    buyout offer, I will be put in a resource pool and put on  temporary
    assignments.  Could this be classified as a fulfillment  of "real"
    intimidation advocated in writing by John Covert to  thousands of
    Digital employees?  It was suggested by the cost  center manager that I
    start looking at VTX for another job?   Anyone looking for an activist
    for change who would work out of  ALF?  Having advocated so much
    change, is it likely I would ever  find another job?  Ethically
    speaking, what do you see as the  next sequence of events?

    David

    {grievance memo referenced removed along with distribution}
1208.86Good luckSMAUG::GARRODAn Englishman's mind works best when it is almost too lateFri Nov 02 1990 19:2311
    Re .-1
    
    No, it sounds to me like the company has decided that the function you
    are/were working for is no longer needed for the ongoing health of
    the company. Maybe that explains why you have obviously had so much
    spare time over the last few months to compose so many memos.
    
    Good luck, I hope you find a position where your obvious energy can be
    channelled in a productive direction.
    
    Dave
1208.87"Apply for a new job! I will, I will," says Alice.SAHQ::CARNELLDDTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALFFri Nov 02 1990 19:3944
    REF: <<< Note 1208.86 by SMAUG::GARROD "An Englishman's mind works best when it is almost too late" >>>
                                 -< Good luck >-

    >><<Re .-1
    
    >><<No, it sounds to me like the company has decided that the function you
    are/were working for is no longer needed for the ongoing health of
    the company. Maybe that explains why you have obviously had so much
    spare time over the last few months to compose so many memos.
    
    >><<Good luck, I hope you find a position where your obvious energy can be
    channelled in a productive direction.
    
    >><<Dave>>
    
    Please spare me your sanctomonious insincerity.  My productivity was
    never affected by being in Notes anymore than yours was -- your
    piousness that YOU are productive but I was not is hypocrisy.  Save the
    bs for someone else.
    
    Insofar as the specific job I was doing, namely creating the written
    sales presentations that I personally did that impacted potentially
    well over $120,000,000, it seems strange to me that such a function, in
    these dire times where we need values-benefits effectively communicated
    to customers, that there is suddenly no longer any need for
    professionally prepared selling proposals.  Retaliation here?  Nah,
    couldn't possibly be.  Could it?
    
    Regarding your good luck cheerio, don't let the door hit me, unless
    Digital is going to flat out fire me, I have no intention of
    volunteering to leave, and I sure as hell am not going to be
    intimidated into silence by you or anyone else at this point.  In for a
    dollar, in for a nickel more -- you'll be pleased to know that Alice in
    response to the cat just mailed his resume to Ken Olsen applying for a
    direct reporting position.  Refer to earlier topic on creating your own
    job.  Not likely, but who knows.  Nothing ventured, nothing gained.
    
    In the meantime, I guess y'all can find me either in the typing pool or
    outside trimming the bushes around the ALF facility.  After all, why do
    we have 10,000 contractors with so many needing positions; I can pick
    weeds and throw fertilizer around as good as anyone, even you, Dave.
    
    Ta ta.
    
1208.88PSW::WINALSKICareful with that VAX, EugeneFri Nov 02 1990 21:3117
RE: .85

>    I was informed a few minutes ago that my tiny cost center, and 
						   ^^^^^^^^^^^
>    therefore my job in proposals, is eliminated.  


.87:

>    Retaliation here?  Nah,
>    couldn't possibly be.  Could it?

Dave, if you honestly believe that the company is canning an entire cost center
merely to get back at you, then you are being either egotistical or paranoid or
both.

--PSW
1208.89Frontline this week was pretty interestingSTAR::BECKPaul BeckFri Nov 02 1990 23:364
    Further, if you believe that the company is nuking your cost
    center due to a tongue-in-cheek comment by a software engineer,
    then your compaign for the rank-and-file contributors to have more
    influence in the policies of the company must be a great success...
1208.90"arrows" for sale or rent, bows to rent, 15 centSAHQ::CARNELLDDTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALFSat Nov 03 1990 13:3655
    REF: <<< Note 1208.89 by STAR::BECK "Paul Beck" >>>
        
    >><< Further, if you believe that the company is nuking your cost
    center due to a tongue-in-cheek comment by a software engineer,
    then your compaign for the rank-and-file contributors to have more
    influence in the policies of the company must be a great success...>>
    
    Paul:
    
    Or must be a great threat to some.  Some employees being "selected" for
    buyout may indeed be selected on the basis of "like" and "being a
    member of the club" rather than skills and capabilities to contribute
    to a more successful Digital.  To believe otherwise is naive.
    
     Speaking of getting intimidated and dinged for creating ideas, in a 
     previous life at DEC, where I worked here as an American Indian brave 
     named Falling Rocks, I was dinged then too for submitting ideas for 
     change, wanting to truly empower all employees into really being 
     Digital partners, driving change together in harmony, which I believed 
     would lead to building a better and more successful Digital.

     My manager at that time, being a cautious and controlling bureaucrat, 
     and not wanting anyone creating ideas, making waves, incurring risk, 
     and challenging the status quo and "the system", and hating with a 
     passion anyone who expressed their ideas in long memos supported by 
     excerpts, decided to really silence me and to punish me for my 
     transgression.  He banished me to THE most remote office in Digital.

     This Digital office was so remote -- how remote? you ask -- that 
     within months of my being located there, the office became "lost" -- 
     totally forgotten about by the entire company!

     Years passed.  Then one day personnel saw that I, as the employee, the 
     American Indian brave, Falling Rocks, had accumulated 5,763 hours of 
     vacation time.  Sensing if any employee suddenly took this amount of 
     vacation at one time that Wall Street would panic and the stock would 
     drop disastrously to 4 dollars, personnel decided to IMMEDIATELY pass 
     the new policy that restricted the amount of vacation time any 
     employee could accrue (any going over the limit now being vaporized).

     Wanting to ENSURE that I did not take my 5,763 hours of vacation at 
     once, personnel then began a massive search for me and the lost DEC 
     colony, uh, office.

     The search covered the globe.

     Find the lost DEC office, and employee, Falling Rocks!  At once!

     Alas, to no avail.  To this day, you can still see worldwide the 
     remnants of this massive Digital personnel search by the signs that 
     are still visible in nearly every country:

                          WATCH FOR FALLING ROCKS

                                    ;-]
1208.91Try Listening, Dave... We want your success!DNEAST::GREVE_STEVEGreee Veee KingThu Nov 15 1990 23:0253
    
    
	Dave, as a fellow employee, as a fellow "used to be redundant, but
    smartened up and got busy" employee I want to encourage you in the most
    positive and friendly way to stop and take a minute to listen to the
    feedback these folks are trying to give you.
    
    	When folks (folks who cared) tried to tell me to get off my butt,
    and get busy, I reacted with anger and self righteousness
    (pompousness?) most times, until it was too late, and I was made
    redundant.
    
    	Now I've got a real job, and I have to work hard each day.  I'm
    feeling great about myself, and my performance is improving.  My
    personal advice (and I'm not trying to give you shit or intimidate you)
    is to get off the pot, pal, and get busy!  Maybe this listing showing
    you making almost 25% of the replies to your own base note will be
    helpful.  Good luck, if you want to talk, give me a call.
    
    
    Steve
    
    
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                             The DEC way of working
Created: 14-FEB-1986 20:02         1273 topics        Updated: 15-NOV-1990 19:37
             -< DIGITAL INTERNAL USE ONLY - Policy #1, Dir #1042 >-
 Topic  Author               Date         Repl  Title
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  1208    ODIXIE::CARNELL       1-OCT-1990    90  Co-dependency within Digital
          ODIXIE::CARNELL       1-OCT-1990  1208.1  a little history
          ODIXIE::CARNELL       1-OCT-1990  1208.2  some characteristics
          SAHQ::CARNELLD        12-OCT-1990  1208.19  dysfunctional addictive/co-dependency behaviors
          SAHQ::CARNELLD        13-OCT-1990  1208.20  rules in an "addictive system"
          SAHQ::CARNELLD        13-OCT-1990  1208.21  long note but worth reading for understanding
          SAHQ::CARNELLD        14-OCT-1990  1208.25  dysfunctional thinking processes
          SAHQ::CARNELLD        20-OCT-1990  1208.27  management & personnel processes - long note
          SAHQ::CARNELLD        20-OCT-1990  1208.28  structual components, fixes, and the real issues
          SAHQ::CARNELLD        22-OCT-1990  1208.29  controllling and "self-elected" censors
          SAHQ::CARNELLD        22-OCT-1990  1208.32  what's the REAL issue here
          SAHQ::CARNELLD        22-OCT-1990  1208.33  my opinion regarding this topic content
          SAHQ::CARNELLD        22-OCT-1990  1208.42  VAXnote Wars!  An opportunity to grow thru conflict
          SAHQ::CARNELLD        23-OCT-1990  1208.45  no, I won't stop
          SAHQ::CARNELLD        23-OCT-1990  1208.53  Let's see what John Sims has to say
          SAHQ::CARNELLD        23-OCT-1990  1208.55  humour?  really
          SAHQ::CARNELLD        25-OCT-1990  1208.69  root causes - what is the addiction
          SAHQ::CARNELLD        25-OCT-1990  1208.70  ownership in affecting decisions and change
          SAHQ::CARNELLD        25-OCT-1990  1208.72  I send letters, lots of letters...
          SAHQ::CARNELLD        2-NOV-1990  1208.85  "Well, Alice.  Now what will you do," says the cat
          SAHQ::CARNELLD        2-NOV-1990  1208.87  "Apply for a new job! I will, I will," says Alice.
          SAHQ::CARNELLD        3-NOV-1990  1208.90  "arrows" for sale or rent, bows to rent, 15 cent
    
                                       
1208.92The earthquake is ahead of schedule...BIGJOE::DMCLUREDigital charity workerFri Nov 16 1990 16:2050
re: the practice in general of equating the sharing of ideas to loafing off,

    	Anyone who has ever been to a brain-storming session knows that
    the quickest way to kill a discussion is to react negatively to an
    idea.  Beyond that, it is even *more* destructive to react negatively
    to the very process of idea generation in the first place!  Likewise,
    the quickest way to kill the sort of collective brain-storming that
    might otherwise take place in a notesfile such as this (as well as
    *the entire Delta program itself*) is to start measuring [the lack of]
    a given employee's productivity based on the amount of notes one writes
    or ideas one submits.

SET FLAME ON HIGH!~~~

    	There is a BIG difference (in my book anyway) between an employee
    [with a potentially redundant job] who does little to help the company
    and an employee [with a potentially redundant job] who shares every
    idea they can think of in hopes of helping the company!  Believe me,
    there are sadly far more who are guilty of the former, than there are
    of the latter.  One reason could be precisely because of some of the
    pig-headed attitudes expressed in this and other notes towards the
    sharing of ideas.

    	There are too few people who care enough about Digital to want to
    devote any spare momment they might have towards isolating and fixing
    the various problems which exist in this corporation.  This means that
    instead of enjoying a leisurely lunch with friends, jogging, or at
    aerobics class, an employee might instead return to their desk with
    their lunch (such as I typically do) to take a momment to address
    some of these problems - ACTIONS WHICH DO NOT TYPICALLY EVEN BENEFIT
    SAID EMPLOYEE DIRECTLY IN TERMS OF THEIR REVIEW.  In my mind, such an
    employee should *at least* be granted a minimum of respect by their
    peers as having given it their best shot.

    	By ignoring (or worse yet ignobling) such efforts, you only
    encourage sheepishness and subservient behavior in the employee
    population.  If you would rather our company was staffed by a bunch
    of brain-dead, seen-but-not-heard employees who couldn't concieve of
    an idea if their lives depended upon it, then I suggest you continue
    to intimidate people for devoting their spare time towards writing
    notes and sharing their ideas in a forum such as this!

SET FLAME OFF

    	Now that I've got that off my chest, I suggest that everyone
    should please resume the brain-storming session (hopefully it isn't
    too late).

    				   -davo

1208.93Softly as I leave youVINO::FLEMMINGNo eraser? Its not fault tolerantSat Nov 17 1990 18:4918
    Like everyone in Digital (hopefully), I'm busy. I enjoy reading notes
    but I honestly don't have the time or inclination to read vast entries
    or replies. On the otherhand, its often difficult to follow the tread
    of an idea if one doesn't at least scan all of the replies in a topic.
    In fact, in a couple of cases I missed one note and discovered that it
    really turned out to be what was being discussed in all of the
    subsequent replies. That's why I get annoyed when I encounter the 69th
    reply to a note written by the same person and its 200 lines long. Even
    though I may be very intersested in whatever is being discussed, I
    simply can't afford to take the time to try to follow it. That's why
    I appreciate brief replies and that's why I tend to type next unseen
    (even though I may be missing something of value) in notes where most
    entries are made by only a few people (who often seem paranoic) whose
    replies read like the great American expense report.
    
    Softly, briefly, and thoughtfully, please.
    
     
1208.94Common Sense.AYOV10::DHUNTERMon Nov 19 1990 10:407
    RE: .93
    
    Congratulations an well done. One of the best notes I've ever read!
    I hope it's acted upon.
    
    Don H.