How do we practice deep and reciprocal relationships as resistance to our culture of transactionalism and extraction?
episodes in this series, but just briefly, we’re not talking about a toxic positivity form of hope. What we’re talking about is the hope that is rooted in our lives as survivors in oppressive systems.
That’s our analysis, that’s our community, in my opinion. That’s our ability to reflect, to really honor where we’re at and be deliberate in the things that we do and say in these moments while we’re feeling all the things that we’re feeling.: I absolutely love the comparison between despair and the Lightning Sand in The Princess Bride, and as a child of the 80’s, I am going to nerd out a little about why I love it.
And so, what I’ve been finding helpful right now is giving myself that time that I do need to go inward, do what I need to do, self-regulate, manage my triggers, get the rest that I need. And I’m so grateful that I’m actually in a position right now financially where I can rest. Kelly, there was a time in my life where I was working four-plus jobs just to make ends meet. Shout out to 2019, never going back there again.
And in my own life, in my own experience, that has been the thing that I did not do, and that was one of the pieces that was a downfall for a former project that I was working on. So, don’t do what I did, y’all. Make sure you’ve got enough people working with you. Make sure folks know how to keep things running so that we really can give each other the grace and the opportunity to tap out when you need to and then tap back in.: All of that resonates so much.
. The Clearing Circle is such a wonderful tool, and it’s just one of many tools that folks can use. Team up with somebody who’s a skilled facilitator to co-facilitate a space. And I would really recommend and invite us to hold space for this grief. It really does require us to take a chance on being maybe a little more vulnerable than we may be used to. And also, we don’t want to miss the opportunity to tap our collective grief.
We’re collectively going into winter. And so, this is actually a really great time to really embrace winter, embrace winter as a season, but embrace winter as a practice as well. So, we can take this time to go inward a little bit, and we can take this time to reflect, look back and really track what we’ve done thus far. And vision, right? What do we want to do moving forward? This is also a really good time to do the groundwork.
During a time of winter and a time of slowdown, we can practice popular education. We can skillshare with one another. We can ask each other, “Hey, what did you learn this year that is really sticking with you? Do you want to share anything about that with us? How can we use this thing that you’ve learned this year in our work next year?”
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