Writing Feminist Life Together
This episode offers my PhD research at the intersections of neuroscience, therapy, and feminist writing practices to talk about what the processes of recognition—and non recognition—do to us. I especially highlight Black feminist thinkers at this nexus of ideas.
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Neuroscience tells us recognition is important for how our brains grow. What parts of yourself do you need to name and recognize? What parts of yourself would you like to ask others to recognize? How is recognition part of growth and healing and flourishing into all the aspects of who we are and why we are here?
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How can feminist writing practices help us get closer to the knowledge inside ourself that is both powerful and entwined within deep grief labor? And how do we learn to hold that process as it unfolds? What changes in ourselves and our relationships along the way?
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Self-care is useful as a coping mechanism, but it's also an attempt at an individual solution to a problem that has deep, systemic roots. i talk about identifying our needs and deprivations, as well as the abundant resources of various kinds that we have to circulate to others as feminist practice.
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One of the reasons people fear change in the feminist journey is because challenging patriarchy usually is not profitable! I talk in this episode about what it means to build alternative community structures that support the change of the feminist journey.
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Often, we unconsciously block our next steps of healing because we fear the ripple effects of our changing. But the feminist journey is about change—so it is important to be able to consider and name our fears of change and breathe into those places inside ourself and our relationships. This episode gives some context for thinking about change at the intersection of personal and social-cultural systems.
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This podcast engages across trauma studies to consider Gloria Anzaldua's writing on healing: "You don't heal the wound. The wound heals you." I also discuss mind-body connection and the deep anxiety many people have to be/dwell consciously within the sensations and feelings of their own bodies.
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This episode furthers the discussion in my July 16 blog post (see kimberlybgeorge.com) that identifies a specific and very common interpersonal power dynamic of patriarchy connected to projection and manipulation.
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What comes into view when we think about feminism as fundamentally a practice of memory work, and one that facilitates healing through re-membering and integrations of all kinds? And what if the next step of this journey is as simple and complex as listening to the wind today? This episode continues the idea that spiritual feminist practices are about all the ways we come to presence and integration.
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How we hold our grief and allow our grief to connect us to greater transformation is a very difficult part of the feminist journey. I discuss why I believe grief needs a creative process that can help us access the knowledge within us we have been systematically cut off from knowing—including our knowledge of interconnection with all beings, all life, all wonder.
info_outlineThis is the first pod done just to assist graduate and university students on the pressures of writing within institutionalized education. It is based on my Wellness Writing Workshops (see kimberlybgeorge.com for more information). We will talk about what it means to reconnect to the affective meanings of your work, the purposes and communities you are writing for/with, and why writing amidst relations of power is such a challenge.