Photos of Samana and Me

Samana Dec 2013 030Yesterday Seth Frankel sent me some candid photos of me that he shot last December while we were on a tour of the Samana peninsula in the Dominican Republic. I found them particularly interesting in that the expressions on my face seem to reflect abundant happiness. This impression reassures me that my self-perception at the time was accurate.

I believe you can watch them as an automated slideshow if you click on the third icon from the right on the bottom toolbar. To see all seven photos, click here.

FREE Webinar on Deepening Community

FREE Webinar!
Deepening Community: Finding Joy Together in Chaotic Times with Paul Born and Peter Block
Thu, Mar 27, 2014 10:00 AM – 11:00 AM PDT

To register, click here.

Membership to a strong community has the capacity to improve our physical, mental, and economic health, as well as our overall sense of happiness and fulfillment. In short, everyone benefits from a strong community. It’s in our DNA.

So how do we create a deep community in an age where we’ve learned to value keeping mostly to ourselves, only occasionally seeing our friends and relatives?

Bestselling author of Stewardship Peter Block joins us for a discussion on the subject of community with Deepening Community author and founder of the Tamarack Institute, Paul Born.

In the chaos of the world that we live in, with environmental, economic, social uncertainties, it is only natural to join together out of fear of what lies ahead. Fear shapes our communities in interesting and powerful ways and Born invites us to explore these ideas with him.

In this webinar, we’ll discuss:
•How to identify a “deep” community over a shallow one
• What leaders and organizers stand to gain from a stronger community whose members focus on serving each other
• Examples of stewardship and deep community in action

…and more!

Block and Born will share their thoughts in dialogue for 45 minutes, followed by a 15-minute Q & A session between listeners and our speakers.

BONUS: Everyone who signs up for this webinar will receive a discount code in your email for 40% off your next order from our website!

Deepening Community: Finding Joy Together in Chaotic Times

Deepening CommunityBy Paul Born

Why Read It? Community has the capacity to improve our physical, mental, and economic health, as well as our overall sense of happiness and fulfillment. It can unite us all in a common bond as we work together. But in the chaos of modern life, traditional community ties have become unraveled. Paul Born argues that as a result, many of us have opted for shallow community: keeping mostly to ourselves, only occasionally seeing our friends and relatives. Or, desperate for some sense of common purpose, we choose a community united by fear of those unlike us. Instead, we need to deepen our experience of community, actively seeking opportunities to cultivate connections with those we care about and reaching out to those around us whom we haven’t yet met.

In this thoughtful and moving book, Born describes the four pillars of deep community: sharing our stories, taking the time to enjoy one another, taking care of one another, and working together for a better world.

Read an excerpt here and buy the book for 30% off here.

From the B-K newsletter. To subscribe, click here.

To register for a free webinar with Paul Born and Peter Block, click here.

 

Global Transformation: Strategy for Action

Cover-artGlobal Transformation: Strategy for Action
by Wade Hudson

Comments:

Those of us bloggers engaged in daily analysis tend to be locked into the daily grind, political and military atrocities, partisan strategies. We hardly find time to delve into longer-range perspective and developments. “Global Transformation” displays evidence that Wade Hudson is a rare deep-delver, exploring long-term solutions for how to transform ourselves and our society and our planet. He’s helping create the intellectual framework for how to think about these vital matters, with idealism and hope.
Bernard Weiner, Ph.D.
Co-Editor, The Crisis Papers

Thank you so much for taking the time for putting your experiences and thoughts down in writing! We would love to help distribute the book over here. I am sure that as many (complimentary copies) as you feel like you can spare – we can move. I would have loved to come to the event on Sept 15th but that is the week that my wife is due so I can not make it. I hope we can find time to talk soon!
Taj James
Movement Strategy Center

thank you for sending me a copy of the book. upon a quick scan, it looks great. a lot of things i have been thinking about, but never wrote down. i am with you 100 percent. can’t come in september, but i am so glad that you are stepping forward and leading us into a more sane and loving space in this work. what a huge gift to our movement!
Van Jones, President & Founder of the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights.

wow wade. congratulations. I really admire your focus on big picture problems and long term macro solutions, rather than just yammering about issues of the hour, like getting out of iraq or impeaching B/C. well done. hope it really inspires a lot of people to do the same.
Tad Daley
Physicians for Social Responsibility

It is my pleasure to read your writing. You inspire me…. I particularly resonate with the section on the “system.” … I am very heartened to read your thinking! It makes so much sense to me.
Anne Kane

What an awesome accomplishment. I have skimmed it on line; i will need to actually read it more completely in a hard copy. It is truly amazing, Wade, and I’m looking very forward to (1) reading it myself; (2) recommending it to folks; and (3) thinking with you about some kind of event at The Stone House around this. The cover is amazing, too, by the way…. Much peace and congratulations and thank you for doing this very substantial and important piece of work for all of us.
Claudia Horwitz
stone circles

 

SpeakOUT

Rev. Cecil Williams of Glide Church in San Francisco recently posted the following on his Facebook page:

SpeakOUT – Wed, March 12, 2014 – 5:00 PM – 6:00 PM

When people come together to speak their truths, they know they are not alone. They feel the love and compassion from their brothers and sisters, and experience beloved community. Every Wednesday at 5pm, you are welcomed by me and Janice Mirikitani to come up to a single microphone and share your stories, songs, poetry, music, and whatever moves you. Community dinner prepared by the Daily Free Meals Program is served after SpeakOUT.

Inspired by a North Beach open mike at Coffee and Confusion that I witnessed in 1962 shortly after my arrival in the Bay Area, several years ago I suggested a Truly Open Open Mike:

Purpose: to share heartfelt communication and have fun.

Methods:

  • Presenters are selected randomly (after placing a card with their name on it in a container).
  • If needed, an amplified public address system is provided.
  • Each presenter has five minutes.
  • The notice for the event clarifies that presenters may:
  • Make a speech, ask a question, or engage in discussion.
  • Read a poem (yours or others’).
  • Sing a song (yours or others’).
  • Tell jokes (yours or others’).
  • Play a recording (yours or others’).
  • Read an essay (yours or others’).
  • Present a dance, scene from a play, or performance art.
  • Share a chant, lead a meditation, pray, or ask for silence.
  • Or whatever.

So I’m glad to see someone doing something similar!

Growing an “Activist Support Network”: An Invitation (3/11/14 Draft)

By Wade Lee Hudson

Political activists need to support one another in learning how to be more effective in their activism. The dilemma is how to do it most effectively. I invite you to help answer that question by participating in the “Activist Support Network Project” (tentative name).

Participants would share the following commitment:
• At least once a month they share a meal with at least two other close associates (perhaps including domestic partners) and conduct a conversation focused initially on the question: How can I help create a society that better serves the common good by becoming more effective in my efforts to improve public policy in the near term?
• After each participant responds to that question, the conversation takes its own course, as determined by the participants, with each participant having an equal voice in that decision.
• Following the meeting, one of the participants posts a brief report on their meeting (as approved by the participants) on the Web to inform other participants about their effort.

Hopefully different groups will use or experiment with different methods for conducting those conversations. By reporting on their efforts, other groups can learn about methods they might want to use with their own gatherings.

Eventually clusters of groups who use the same or very similar method might coalesce to share information and support. And regional and national gatherings of participants in the overall Activist Support Network Project might convene for the same purpose. As people get involved, a process could be initiated to consider re-naming the project and revising its mission.

The word “political” is used in various ways. The (common) definition employed here is “concerned with the making of governmental policy” in the near term. Other approaches are valuable and may be more valid. But individuals who seek incremental short-term reforms share particular experiences is common. That commonality provides them with the potential of offering mutual support to one another.

Those shared experiences include uncertainty, fear, outrage, disappointment, frustration, interpersonal conflict, power struggles, and at least occasional despair – as well as joy, fellowship, deepening friendships, and the satisfaction of knowing that we have done at least our fair share to help establish new policies that alleviate suffering and promote the general welfare. We tend to share certain problematic tendencies, such as being too judgmental, arrogant, and elitist and failing to really listen to others and collaborate as equal – as well as certain positive characteristics, such as compassion for the suffering of others and a commitment to try to help alleviate that suffering.

Support groups for political activists as proposed here would not involve telling any individual how they should behave or how they should experience their life. Those decisions would be left to each individual to determine for themselves.

The only requirement would be that each individual commit to serving the common good to the best of their ability. This commitment would involve constantly asking the question: is this course of action really the best way to “promote the general welfare,” as affirmed in the Preamble to the U.S. Constitution?

By supporting one another in our efforts to answer that question honestly and correctly, we can help this nation live up to its ideals and enable everyone to more fully realize their potential.

Developing a Theological Vision for Social Change

jakadaBy Jakada Imani

Excerpted from an essay by Jakada Imani, the Director of PSR’s Center for Spiritual and Social Transformation

The need for social and spiritual transformation is more critical now than ever before. It is important that we grasp the moment we now face to fully appreciate the peril and potential of the current age.

Most indicators underscore this point: the U.S. has the largest income gap of any industrialized nation; many of our communities have become re-segregated along class and racial lines; there are over 7 million people under correctional control in our prisons; America has been waging two major wars (and many “little ones”) for more than ten years. Perhaps most troubling, the hottest 9 of the 10 hottest years on record have been since 1998.

The current economic and social systems are oppressive, exploitative, and fundamentally altering our planet in ways that will have long-term, devastating consequences. These structures are maintained by time-tested method of “divide and conquer.” A “zero-sum game” only works if there is scarcity, whether it is real or perceived, and where there is an “us” and “them.”

At least two theological postures or assumptions fuel this current moment of challenge and opportunity. The first we might call “pop theology,” or what many people in the U.S. tend to believe rather unconsciously. One of the strongest tenets of today’s pop theology is the notion that the way things are is simply the way that God made them to be, including all the ways our society is stratified by the “undeserving poor” and the “deserving rich.”

hands_united_colorsA second explicitly theological posture, related to the first, is this: the mistaken belief that our differences reflect a divine plan to remain separate. Human beings tend to confuse what makes each of us distinct from one another to mean that we are and should be separate from one another and indeed from the rest of the world around us. This mistake leads to a host of horrific outcomes: racism, sexism, war, extreme poverty, and genocide, not to mention planetary-wide ecological disaster.

These theological problems demand theological solutions. And this will mean examining closely our various understandings of God, who humans are in relationship with and to God, and how God would have us live. In this way we can develop a self-aware and not merely an unconscious theology. We need, and urgently, a theology that respects the intrinsic dignity of all life on this planet. And I believe a range of theological traditions provides compelling sources for this approach, an approach to correct our mistaken ideas about God and thus transform the root causes of social and ecological devastation that threatens the future of all life on the planet Earth.

This great work could begin both modestly and profoundly with the three Abrahamic traditions, all of which share the opening words of Genesis in common: “In the beginning, God…”

These four simple words can be the anchor for a “reverence movement” that promotes respect for all of God’s creation. If we root our understanding in the truth that the entire universe is a divine expression of God, then everyone and everything we see is God manifest. None of it is throw-away. We are always in the presence of God to the degree we are conscious of it. If a theology for social transformation begins there and stays rooted there, we can work collectively to create shared prosperity, a fundamentally just society, and a sustainable ecology for our planet.planet

There are already thousands of organizations working to solve social ills. We have email lists, micro enterprises, online crowd-source funding platforms, Facebook, Twitter, blogs – all of these give us the ability to reach thousands of people in a moment’s notice. In addition there are more and more socially-engaged spiritual practitioners who are weaving together the “beloved community” in church basements, community gardens, clearings in the woods and start-ups.

Places all over the country are lifting people up, rebuilding hope, working to increase the peace, train new leaders who can lead with their whole self and live into a different vision of life. Places like: Urban Peace Movement, Pachamama Alliance, Home Boy Industries, Impact Hub Oakland, the National Day Labors Alliance. These and so many more are working out what it means to be with people and the world in a way that honors our intrinsic interconnection.

All of these are base camps for social transformation and we need strong spiritual practices and carefully honed theological ideas to expand these camps into an even broader movement for the thriving and flourishing of all.

Theology alone will not save us. But theologically informed and spiritually rooted leaders can help to lead us into a brighter future. That’s exactly what inspires me about PSR’s new Center for Spiritual and Social Transformation. Please join us – the future is now.

Original post.

A Fascinating Discovery: True North Groups

true-north-groupsWhy do so many in the Christian Right and Corporate America take self-development seriously, but activists do not?

True North Groups: A Powerful Path to Personal and Leadership Development by Bill George and Doug Baker from the True North Institute is a remarkable book that presents a simple, well-tested method for conducting member-run, open-ended, peer-support groups that enable members to support one another in their self-defined personal growth efforts.

For thirty-five years, George and Baker have facilitated the formation of hundreds of True North Groups that have enabled participants to share their most important experiences, generally meeting for 75 minutes weekly or four hours monthly. Now George and Baker offer a user-friendly manual that any group of well functioning individuals can use to start their own support team.

They believe that “self-awareness is the foundation of all successful leadership development” in organizations, communities, society and families [and] “small groups are a powerful way of developing self-awareness.”

Unless we get frozen, human beings are social creatures who constantly evolve through their interactions with others. Alone, we are limited. We need the benefit of others’ opinions and knowledge as well as their support and encouragement.

Two minds are better than one and several are better than two. Hearing multiple viewpoints and giving and receiving open, honest, compassionate attention from others are invaluable.

Of particular value is support from peers – people we consider to be our equal who understand us due to similar experiences. As we mature, we learn and benefit from peers more than we do from authorities.

Making decisions about key transitions is often difficult. Staying true to one’s core without being seduced by ego-driven desires is not easy. Truly good friends can help us be the same person publicly that we are privately.

Yet in the modern world individuals experience intimacy with ever fewer people. Many have only their spouse or partner. Many others have no one.

The forces of modernization that produce this isolation are relentless. Obsessions with work and play overwhelm deeper impulses. Being honest jeopardizes climbing the ladder of success and can even threaten job security. People learn to be inauthentic and carry those habits with them throughout life

Finding greater intimacy generally requires conscious, intentional effort as well as building trust. Rooted in strict confidentiality, the True North approach seems to offer a great way to do so.

The True North approach does not involve authority figures training others with some pre-determined agenda. That hierarchical authority-based model fosters dependency, takes time to train the trainers, and is less responsive to the needs of the participants.

The horizontal peer model, on the other hand, empowers. It asks each individual to define his or her own needs, maximizes peer-to-peer learning, and can spread quickly.

For some time now I’ve been interested in finding or developing a simple support-group format that progressive political activists (including those who devote very little time to activism) could employ quickly and easily to help them be honest and open with another about their self-improvement efforts.

In addition to being inherently valuable, a project of this sort could be an organizing tool. It could enable progressive organizers to help grow activist communities by serving unmet needs. Historically, progressive organizers have connected with their constituency by addressing material needs. They could do the same with nonmaterial needs.

Many progressive political activists, it seems to me, could benefit from participating regularly in a small, member-run, peer-support group rooted in their common experience with activism.

The Christian Right gets it. As Malcom Gladwell reported in “The Cellular Church,” they’ve used this approach effectively in their community organizing. As one participant reported, “I don’t give because I believe in religious charity. I give because I belong to a social structure that enforces an ethic of giving.” Although “enforcement” may not be proper, commitments and accountability are surely valuable.

Now, thanks to the immensely valuable Berret-Koehler Publishers newsletter, I’ve discovered that much of Corporate America gets it too. Many corporate leaders realize that long-term effectiveness depends on personal development.

But so far, few progressive political activists have indicated much interest in integrating the personal and the political. Perhaps the success demonstrated by the practical, step-by-step True North approach can encourage them to take a closer look at the possibility of using intentional peer support to enrich their lives and strengthen their work.

Here are some excerpts:

Preface

True North Groups comprise six to eight peers who meet on a regular basis to discuss the important questions of their lives and to support each other during difficult times….

We believe there is a unique role for personal, intimate groups that differs from the multitude of groups formed for specific purposes. By providing a safe place for deep, intimate discussions about life’s most challenging questions, True North Groups enable us to become fully human and more fully alive, awakening to the enormous possibilities within each of us….

This book is written for you, if you are interested in forming such a group. Or perhaps you want to enable your current group to have deeper or more meaningful discussions about the vital questions of life….

Introduction: Finding Depth and Intimacy in Your Life

We need people around us to whom we can look for support and advice, who can help us develop as human beings….

The challenges we face these days are so great that we cannot rely entirely on ourselves, our communities, or our organizations to support us and help us stay on track….

We call these groups True North Groups because they help us follow our True North, (which) represents what is most important to us in life: our beliefs, our most cherished values, our passions and motivations, and the sources of satisfaction in our lives. True North is the orienting point that keeps us on track as human beings and as leaders. It represents who we are at our deepest level….

In the early years, they helped me recognize that I was trying so hard to get ahead that I was behaving very differently in my work and community than at home and in my personal life. That led me to “decompartmentalize” my life by attempting to be the same person at home, at work, and in the community—with less façade and more authenticity….

The counsel and support I received are not unusual for friends to provide, but the variety of perspectives that improves the judgment of our group and its collective wisdom lends the power of numbers to the advice….

Unless we have people around us with whom we can be completely honest and open, it is surprising how alone we can feel in our work, and even at home….

As one interviewee observed, these groups are a place to get frequent, 360-degree feedback from people whose motives you trust completely….

In recent decades, opportunities for personal development have proliferated,… While these vehicles provide opportunities for personal development, they do not address the gnawing need we have for depth and intimacy in our interactions with others….

Chapter One: True North Groups

At various times your True North Group will function as a nurturer, a grounding rod, a truth teller, and a mirror. At other times the group functions as a challenger or an inspirer. At their best, the members of your group serve each other as caring coaches and thoughtful mentors….

The trust of your group enables all members to be open and intimate, building on your shared commitment to maintain strict confidentiality.

In spite of significant differences in our faiths and beliefs, we have a common commitment to sharing our lives openly, respecting our differences, and discussing the challenges and difficulties we face….

Tom Schaefer: “It provides a moral compass, a way of checking on my sense of what’s right and wrong.”

We have a brief check-in to enable people to bring up anything significant in their lives. Then one of us initiates discussion of the program. Responsibility for leading the program is rotated….

Our group prefers having our members take responsibility for facilitating, to ensure everyone feels equal responsibility for the group….

On a regular basis, we take a check to be sure that everyone in the group is feeling satisfied and fulfilled. Periodically, we ask ourselves, How are we doing? Are we getting out of our heads and into our hears and souls?…

Chuck Denny: “We talk about our values…. Do we stay true to them under stress? It’s introspective, not just intellectual. What are we doing to make society better? How do we allocate time between ourselves, our family, and society?”

John Cunningham: “At some point in their lives everybody asks the big questions like Why am I here? What is life all about? What is my purpose?”

Ron Vantine: “We all have more questions than answers.”

Jonathan Morgan: “The group provides a venue for discussing existential questions and life’s mysteries that stretches the mind almost to the breaking point.”

We don’t think we are different from any eight people who genuinely want to explore together the important questions of their lives. What is crucial is the willingness of each of us to share openly, join in the give-and-take of a peer group, and listen in a nonjudgmental way to the challenges others face….

Small groups are certainly not a new phenomenon. We learned from our field research that participation in small groups is gaining strength… These groups are affinity groups whose members come together around a common set of interests or a common concern such as chemical-dependency, life-threatening illness, or loss of loved ones….

One way of categorizing small groups is by their degree of openness and intimacy. At the base of the pyramid are travel, running, cooking, or bridge groups, and so forth. People come together in these groups for an activity rather than for personal sharing. To the extent that there are personal discussions, it is independent of or incidental to the group’s activities. At the next level are book groups, study groups, and company groups that have intellectual discussions that occasionally delve into personal matters….

On the third level are Bible study groups, prayer groups, grief groups, therapy groups, Alcoholic Anonymous, and twelve-step groups that are affiliated around a particular purpose and share deeply about that area, including discussions of personal feelings, convictions, and beliefs. Many prayer groups and Bible study groups offer their members opportunities for examination of their religious beliefs and provide strong bonding around share values.

True North Groups, as described in this book, provide a forum for deep, intimate discussions of all aspects of one’s life, not only matters of belief and faith. These may include personal issues, such as family problems, leadership and career concerns, or healthy living, as well as convictions about a wide range of subjects. They are fairly unique in providing a safe place for confidential discussions of highly personal subjects across the full range of life’s issues, but without any particular affinity….

Malcom Gladwell…explains that megachurces adopted the cellular model because they found that “the small group was an extraordinary vehicle of commitment.”

True North Groups are not built around affinity models that provide the glue that brings them together and gives their members opportunities for sharing common interests. Our research confirmed that no prior bond is required for a True North Group; in fact, a diverse set of strangers is just as effective as preexisting affinity among members. They often have no particular connection except for the longing for affiliation, openness, and commitment to personal growth and leadership development.

In offering opportunities for deep discussions about challenges people face, True North Groups provide a safe place where members can discuss personal issues they do not feel they can raise elsewhere—often not even with their closest family members—and can explore questions about the meaning and purpose of life….

Support Group Experiment

my toy factory rainbow line
Adam Foster | Codefor / Foter / CC BY-NC-ND

To explore the viability of a particular format for an “activist empowerment” support group, on 2/26/14, I individually sent 25 people the following email with “Experiment” as the subject. So far two individuals have responded to the questions and I’ve had a series of exchanges with a third. This response prompted me to postpone a road trip throughout the States, during which I had hoped to experiment with this and/other formats to facilitate such support groups. Rather than spending so much time behind the wheel driving, I plan to spend more time writing. Those three responses and my replies are posted below as comments. You can click on Comments to see them.

+++++

Please imagine that you’re with a few close friends in your living room and each of you respond to the following questions (If you will, please reply to the questions here. Whether or not you do, I’d be interested in your thoughts about this idea.)

1. In what way or ways have you worked on becoming a better human being last month?
2. In what way or ways would you like to work on becoming a better human being this month?
3. In what way or ways have you volunteered to help build a stronger face-to-face community last month?
4. In what way or ways would you like to volunteer to help build a stronger face-to-face community this month?
5. In what way or ways have you engaged in political action last month by supporting near-term, achievable change in public policy?
6. In what way or ways would you like to engage in political action this month by supporting near-term, achievable change in public policy?

After responding to those questions, you and your group of close friends would conduct an open-ended conversation and plan any future activities in which some or all of you might engage.

I’d also be interested in your responses to the following questions:
1. If you did not reply to the questions, can you say why?
2. What do you think about the potential value of this approach? Any suggested changes?
3. Are you aware of one or more other user-friendly tools that self-governing groups are using to support one another in their personal growth, community building, and political action efforts?
4. Do you have ideas about possibilities for such tools?
5. Can I share your responses privately with the other respondents (I will not identify you publicly as the author of any responses that I quote)

This format is merely one possible such tool. I’m not wedded to it. I’m not even convinced that anything along this line is feasible. But I put it out there to clarify my thinking and to seek feedback. I’m very interested in your response.

Fostering Deep Morality: Activist Empowerment

sunset's trumpet : plate from the children's story
torbakhopper / Foter / CC BY-ND

By Wade Lee Hudson

The Moral Monday movement that began in North Carolina is extremely promising. My hope is that it evolves into a nationwide movement that nurtures the morality of its own members as well as that of policy makers. If it does, the movement could become an even more effective instrument for changing our society for the better.

Moral Mondays has been applying universal values to concrete issues in a non-ideological, inclusive manner. As Rev. William J. Barber II, Moral Monday’s leader, stated during the closing speech at the February 2014 rally in Raleigh that drew upwards of 100,000 people:

We are black, white, Latino, Native American. We are Democrat, Republican, independent. We are people of all faiths, and people not of faith but who believe in a moral universe. We are natives and immigrants, business leaders and workers and unemployed, doctors and the uninsured, gay and straight, students and parents and retirees. We stand here – a quilt of many colors, faiths, and creeds.

So far the movement has been outer-directed. It talks about what they should do. The movement also needs to talk about what we should do.

We need to be inner-directed as well as outer-directed. We need to examine ourselves, notice our problematic tendencies, acknowledge our mistakes, and resolve to avoid them in the future. We need to support one another in our personal growth, community building, and political action. Doing so will enable us to better develop our personal and collective power.

We activists have done much to help this country live up to its ideals. Yet we often get wrapped up in our activism and fail to consider ways in which we can improve the quality of our work by becoming better human beings. We need to confront ourselves as well as the governing elites.

In a recent essay, Richard Eskow, Senior Fellow at the Campaign for America’s Future, addressed this issue eloquently on that organization’s blog. He quoted the phrase used decades ago by the Brazilian educator Paolo Freire, “internalizing the oppressor consciousness,” to describe what happens “when people identify so deeply with their rulers that they deny themselves the permission to work toward, or even to dream about, a better future for themselves.” Eskow called on activists “to remove those self-imposed limitations William Blake called ‘mind-forg’d manacles’” so they “can unleash [their] own imagination and courage.”

This “internalized oppression” is deeply embedded in our culture and ourselves. It affects all of us and drives away potential collaborators. The forms vary from person to person, but certain tendencies are common.

We tend to be judgmental, self-righteous, arrogant, harsh, and strident. We define leadership as the ability to mobilize others, rather than the ability to facilitate collective problem solving. We assume that some one person must always be in charge, so we rarely collaborate as equals. We’re afraid to be honest because we’re overly concerned about what others think of us. We get trapped in our anger and set aside the understanding and compassion that unites all of us. We forget to love the Universe and fail to enjoy our fellow activists, which leaves us less able to attract new members.

To overcome these and other hurtful propensities, we first of all need to admit them, especially when they shape our actions. This honesty can be difficult. The Swiss psychiatrist Carl G. Jung wrote:

Nothing is more feared than self-confrontation. Whoever looks into the mirror of the water will see first of all his own face…. The mirror does not flatter, it faithfully shows whatever looks into it…. This confrontation is the first test of courage on the inner way, a test sufficient to frighten off most people.

Then we need to admit those weaknesses to our colleagues, if only in small groups of trusted allies. Naming our demons is liberating. The Swiss psychologist P.W. Martin wrote:

Individuation [by which he meant full personal development] is not likely to come of itself. From the very outset anyone undertaking the experiment in depth is well advised to do everything in his power to bring into operation two great integrative factors: the fellowship of a working group; and the contact with the deep center.

Martin called this working group a “fellowship-in-depth,” in which a “mutual kindling of the flame can happen.”

Personal growth, community building, and political action are three sides of the same reality. The personal, the social, and the political are each inherently valuable. Each is both an end and a means. In a positive upward spiral, being more effective in each of these three areas reinforces growth in the other two. In cultivating all three simultaneously, we can build “holistic communities” as did Mahatma Gandhi and Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

Merely voting is not enough. We are also obligated to help improve public policies between elections. Merely taking care of our immediate family is not enough. It takes a community to raise a child well. Merely looking out for number one is not enough. Selfishness ultimately leads to emptiness. We need to follow the nonviolent Gandhi-King path and cultivate caring communities whose members are dedicated to serving one another.

In our modern, hyper-specialized, deeply divided world, trying to cultivate such communities involves swimming against the stream. To move in that direction, two elements could be helpful: 1) a brief written purpose embraced by community members that clearly commits the community to holistic organizing, and 2) a user-friendly method that self-organizing groups can easily employ to provide mutual support, similar to what Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) groups have done.

The closest manifestation of this approach that I’ve discovered so far is Mujeres Unidas y Activas, a grassroots organization of Latina immigrant women in San Francisco, which has “a double mission of promoting personal transformation and building community power for social and economic justice.” They are striving to fulfill their mission by:

  • Creating an environment of understanding and confidentiality
  • Empowering and educating our members to provide mutual support
  • Offering trainings to build economic security and leadership
  • Working in diverse alliances on the local, regional, national, and international levels
  • Organizing campaigns to win immigrant, workers’ and women’s rights.

Their methods include “mutual support meetings that provide a space for women to tell their own stories in a safe and confidential environment and receive support from other women who have had similar life experiences.”

The “Gift Circle” as practiced by the Gift Culture movement illustrates more concretely the kind of user-friendly tool that a grassroots holistic movement will need. As they describe it:

We always begin with some social time, hold hands around the table, everyone checks-in very briefly around the theme of the month, then we share a pot-luck meal for more connection and camaraderie. Eventually we circle up and begin the process. Going around the circle one at a time, each says what he or she needs. It always ignites a wonderful abundance of exchange. The riches of time and services offered range from window washing to book editing, from singing lessons to bereavement counseling. Someone acts as a scribe to record the wants and gifts, usually posting it later via e-mail.

Mujeres Unidas y Activas and the Gift Circle suggest how we could deepen and strengthen the growing populist movement and shift power away from the elites who dominate our society. Being an activist in the United States of America provides a “similar life experience.” If we develop a brief statement of purpose and agree on a user-friendly tool for conducting meetings, this commonality could be the foundation for a community of “activist empowerment” peer-support clubs across the country.

The time is ripe to create a more just and democratic society with the peaceful transfer of power and a compassionate populism rooted in deep morality.