When attending a conference, a good time to take a break is
just as the introductory remarks begin.
Nothing of any value is going to be said for some time. Yesterday I took a ten-minute walk and after
returning, decided that a 25-minute walk would have been better.
Coming late overall has its weaknesses, as you might not get
a good seat or a clear idea where lunch and restrooms are. But I think my new plan will be to arrive at
the very beginning of registration, grab coffee and scout the territory, load
my stuff onto a seat I like, perhaps even with my name, then go take a nap in
the car for 45 minutes to an hour.
During the introductory remarks, the people running the
joint like to say thank you to all the people who did the work and deliver
their little in-jokes and graceful self-deprecations about how long they have
been in the field and known each other.
It’s tribal stuff, so a surprising percentage of the audience will laugh
at jokes that are not really all that funny (“I was going to refer to the
73-year-old woman in the story as elderly but Ken threatened to…”). I conclude that they are reassured rather
than entertained by these rituals: this is a nice club to be part of and a
safe place.
Also of interest are that percentage of people you see every
day at work but are excited to see you at the conference and wave to you. They
are almost always women. I believe something similar is happening. Reassurance is being enacted. They are comforted by the presence of people
they know in a strange place, and also signal to a crowd of strangers I know others, I do belong here, I am not
an intruder or imposter. Rather like
bees, perhaps. I think I have made them
sound weak or insecure, but it may be the opposite. The three yesterday are all among the most
universally-liked, competent people in the building.
They may have natural abilities to put others at ease. Or something.
I always knew you were a King Bee. Bzzzzzz.
ReplyDeleteMost of the big meetings I've been at lately are experiment group meetings. The dynamics are rather different. Since nobody can keep track of all the details and all the rumors, the plenary session introduction is interesting.
ReplyDeleteThe speaker is relentlessly upbeat, but we rescale his enthusiasm by how bad _we_ know particular problems to be. After his speech, the laptops open and wireless bandwidth goes into the toilet.
"They are comforted by the presence of people they know in a strange place, and also signal to a crowd of strangers I know others, I do belong here, I am not an intruder or imposter."
ReplyDeleteOr it may be a signal to others, "I have friends and protectors in this crowd."