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Principles Translation — Participation

Session: 2 Priority: Medium-high — most relevant to psychological prep; key to enjoying the event vs. feeling like an observer


Principle

Participation: The event exists because of the people in it. There are no spectators. Everyone is a performer, a creator, a contributor. Watching from the outside is a choice — but the event is designed so that participating makes it real for you and for everyone else.


Regular camping version

Camping is generally participatory by necessity — you set up your tent, cook your food, do your activities. But participation has a low ceiling. There's nothing to contribute to beyond your group. The world doesn't respond to your presence.


Music festival version

Music festivals are explicitly spectator experiences. There's a stage, there are performers, there is a crowd. The correct role is to watch and appreciate. Audience participation exists (sing along, clap, crowd surf) but the fundamental relationship is performer-to-audience. Even "experiential" festival areas are consumption-framed — you enter an installation, you receive an experience, you leave.

Both Amber's and Matt's festival experience is consumption-structured. This is a deep mental model to shift.


Lakes of Fire version

The event has no stages in the music-festival sense. There is no audience. What exists instead:

  • Art installations — made by participants, for participants. The art is your interaction with it.
  • Sound camps — DJs and musicians from the community, playing for anyone who shows up
  • Fire shows and performance — participant-created, not professional touring acts
  • Camps offering experiences — workshops, classes, food, games, activities — all made by participants
  • The event itself is an installation — the presence of everyone in it is the event

What participation means for attendees: - Bring something to offer, even if it's small (your attention, your energy, your craft, your conversation) - Engage with what's happening rather than cataloging it - Don't spend the weekend photographing experiences you're not having - Volunteer for something if you want to understand the event at a deeper level

What participation doesn't mean: - You must have a scheduled camp contribution or organized role - You must perform or create at any particular level - You must be "on" at all times — rest, sit, walk quietly, decompress — all valid


What our group should do differently

For Amber: Her professional orientation is toward facilitating others' participation, not her own. The event inverts this: she is a participant. There is no one to facilitate for except her own experience. This is actually liberating — but it may take a day or two to settle into. The advice: follow your curiosity. If something looks interesting, go toward it. You don't need a plan.

For Matt: This principle is already second nature for someone who creates and performs. He participates naturally by existing in a music environment. His instinct to contribute — through sound, through energy, through building camp life — is the right one. This principle will probably feel obvious and comfortable.

For the developer: The experienced frame here is: help Amber especially understand that "just wandering and engaging" IS participation. First-timers often feel they should have a fuller agenda. They don't. The event works by accumulation of small unplanned moments.


The photographer / catalog problem

One specific failure mode for first-timers: spending significant time photographing or documenting experiences rather than having them. This is especially relevant given the social media context most people live in now.

Practical advice: - Take photos of things you actually encountered, not things you staged - Put the phone away for hours at a time - If you find yourself photographing something without stopping to experience it, stop

This is not about a no-phone rule. It's about letting the event in rather than documenting it from outside.


Minimum participation for the group

The group doesn't need to organize a theme camp or run a formal program. Even as a small private camp, participation can mean: - Making the camp inviting if people wander by - Putting music on and letting neighbors hear it - Offering something from the camp (drinks, food, conversation) to anyone who asks - Going out into the event with curiosity and openness instead of a tourist-camera frame

This is already more than most first-timers do. It's enough.


Decision memo

  • Keep: "No spectators — follow your curiosity" framing for participation
  • Keep: The photographer/catalog problem in psychological prep section (write a standalone memo)
  • Reject: Requiring the group to have an organized theme camp or formal contribution for the first year
  • Assign: Developer explains "what participation felt like the first time" in pre-event group conversation
  • Revisit: In a future session, consider what the group might want to offer (informal gifting camp, sound setup, workshop) — not this session