The Context of Holistic Branding,
Experience Design and the Person
Earlier, in NYC, I was talking to an Aikido master about sensation — and the sphere of awareness. It might be suggested that Aikido — a “way of ki,” is more about finding the divinity of an opponent, and perhaps in that journey,
finding the true nature and spirit of Oneself.
Without a presumptive dissertation on the path of Osensei Morihei Ueshiba, above, the founder of the Aikido movement, my conversations with a NYC aikido training master were about degrees of awareness and sensation. In the samurai tradition, the notation of a “controlled place or ring about the swordsman” implies a meditated consciousness about proximity, a defined and precisely controlled focus on the ring, the sphere around a combatant’s protective zone, this sense about psychic and physical being. To aikido principles, the idea of breathing in your reality and knowing your place and the energy that is whirling around you is part of that positioning – to Ueshiba-sensei’s notation, energy works in a spiral, like the whirring of a yin and yang cycling of harmonious opposites energy spins and whorls — and as that force comes “to you” — in the aikido manner — that is a casting-through, or by, that incursion.
The flow goes by.
I was talking to a master squash player and he was telling me about watching through the ball, the idea of a rippling, almost vibrational showing of the small squash ball, as it hurtles through time and place to create a sense of how you perceive the ball in time as it travels towards you, your racquet, in resounding the return. For the work on brand in place, I contemplate people — guests, community members, an audience, clients, event participants — moving in a spherical containment through space and time. The sphere is the person’s degree of their perception — and the grasp of the quale.
We’ve talked about qualia as a response or non-response to stimulus — but key to experience design is an acknowledgement of the layering of sensations — how:
• they are designed,
• what they are for and
• what their impact might be in
• the holism of the spherical [holistic] impressions of the experiencer.
When I draw and paint that sensation of energy and perception of experience, I think about it in these holistic energy field terms — the touching, the scenting, the tasting, the hearing, the seeing, and the balance of them — as well as the intuition that either drives their relevance in context or the fact they there are ignored and not paid attention to.
While the notion of samurai-ringed martial strategy in fight-ready awareness, or the principled ki | ch’i knowledge of going into the flow of an assailant and letting them “pass by” might seem a far-fetched leap of imagining how this might relate to brand and holistic experience design, I’ll leave it to you to contemplate and consider what potential resonance there might be to how you think about designing experience.
What I do know, as a person that queries
in this line of space/place design thinking,
that prompted this investigation to study and examine “brand spheres,”
people pay attention to far more than one might consider.
That tiny scrap of paper, the dust on the table,
the stain on the curtain, the smallest arrangement of flowers,
a patterning in the restroom, the chef’s drawings on a chalkboard, a small print in a hallway,
the notes of a fragrance in a breezeway, the sound of music in a vestibule,
the shaft of light on a painting, the glint of a letter in a signing treatment, a subtle touch of floorboards underfoot.
They add up,
integers to
the whole equation.
They
are
noticed.
It will depend on the consciousness of the experiencer to
comprehend the depth
of that re-collection.
And in our work, memory is everything.
Design to keep.
TIM | NYCGIRVIN
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