Round Table
Published on FebĀ 20, 2020 (updated JunĀ 6, 2024), filed under misc (feed). (Share this on Mastodon orĀ Bluesky?)
Yesterday was my last official table evening at Round Table, specifically Round Table 233 Alster-MilchstraĆe (RTĀ 233).
(If you donāt know Round Table, itās essentially a large group of friends who like to do good, preferably through hands-on service, instead of only donations, to others.)
What this causes in me is hard to describe. My time with Round Table was short but intenseāit started on May 25, 2016, when we as a small group of mostly non-tablers first met, to build what soon emerged to become RTĀ 233.
That table, then, was officially founded on September 28, 2016, and chartered on October 7, 2017.
My own role can best be described as someone who didnāt know anything about Round Table and ātabling,ā to one who has led RTĀ 233 through its founding years; as a vice-president who very often helped and took over for his president, to then president, to now past-president; and although Iāve had to learn, I did learn, and managed to eventually do a bit more good than harmĀ š
Some of the highlights of my almost four years with Round Table, and our years together at RTĀ 233:
Of 86 documented table eveningsāstatutory meetingsā, I attended 72.
I was at 50+ regional or national Round Table events, including visits of other tables, district meetings, special meetings, charity events, Funtas, and AGMs.
I was at 5 international Round Table events, in Switzerland, Sweden, Romania, and France, and I met a few tablers on other travels, outside of official events.
I was at all 3 of our tableās own weekend retreats (Klocksdorf, Stellichte, and Ascheberg), the first which I organized, the last which just took place past weekend.
During my time at RTĀ 233, we had 27 members and a few more who aspired to join. Iām happy to have met all of them, and humbled to have become good friends with a few.
Building a table from scratch we went from having and knowing nothing to having a permanent meeting location (the Buddels), comprehensive digital infrastructure (in Google Drive), a functioning protocol and sergeant system (big kudos Alex and Phillip; Iāll keep with first names), a website, quite popular Facebook and Instagram accounts (Markus!), and most other traditions and mechanisms characteristic for healthy tables (Kochlƶffel, draft days, handbook, &c.). This has been great to initiate, build, or just watch develop over time.
We went even further than that, actually, using our limited means to also support and promote Round Table: RT card games (the RT-Quartett that Iām proud to leave the table for further use), RT baseball caps (thanks to the amazing Markus), small RT events like summer festivals (again Markus), also an RT Hamburg Facebook group were among the things that we started right in the spirit of tabling.
We are 1 out of, what, 2 tables in Germany who violate the RTD (Round Table Germany) design guidelines. When a different good Markus and I had worked on the logo for RTĀ 233, we had no clue, and eventually managed to keep itāthe logo now known as the one with the three stripesĀ š
We organized 3 major events, including a charter party that almost ruined us but that people still talk about (2017), a Euro Meeting that brought the x33 tables closer together (2018), and a Christmas charity celebration, the Weihnachtsengel, that may turn into a yearly event (2019).
We tried and supported several other events, including selling pies, helping to feed homeless people, and teaching children about road safety.
Through charity events, card games, and Round Table caps we managed to generate several thousand euros in donations, mostly for the WeihnachtspƤckchenkonvoi.
And so on, and so on. As I said, my time with Round Table was shortābut intense, and itās in this place that I then thank the great number of great men Iāve met along the way, from the tablers at our āgodfatherā tables of RTĀ 84 and RTĀ 133 Sweden to the many tablers both here in Germany and abroad. Thank you, sirsāthis was all much more than reasonable.
The feelings about the goodbye, now, are hard to describe or summarize. Itās actually a rather relaxed affair, where I feel like Iāve done my part for a healthy group of very fine men who will now continue to shape RTĀ 233, and Round Table.
Iām quite at peace, and rather happy. This has been a pretty cool ride.
I wish āmyā table the very, very best now, for themselves, the table, and Round Table both nationally and internationally. Youāll rock this. I love you.
For me, whatās next? The next table is waiting: Over my past-presidency Iāve been actively working with tablers who have left RTĀ 233 and other tables to lay the foundation of: Old Table 233. And although weāre āold,ā weāre not dead, and so weāve been preparing to eventually officially found this OT, and get chartered, to continue living Round Table, and support our brothers at RTĀ 233 and beyond.
Once a tabler, always a tabler š» Hereās to you, my friends.
(If you still canāt make sense out of any of this, check out the different associations and consider joining Round Table, ClubĀ 41 (Old Table), Ladiesā Circle, or Tangent Club. See you around.)
About Me
Iām Jens (long: Jens Oliver Meiert), and Iām a web developer, manager, and author. Iāve been working as a technical lead and engineering manager for companies youāve never heard of and companies you use every day, Iām an occasional contributor to web standards (like HTML, CSS, WCAG), and I write and review books for OāReilly and Frontend Dogma.
I love trying things, not only in web development and engineering management, but also in other areas like philosophy. Here on meiert.com I share some of my experiences and views. (I value you being critical, interpreting charitably, and giving feedback.)