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Going beyond asking what happened: building beloved community

“Our goal is to create a beloved community and this will require a qualitative change in our souls as well as a quantitative change in our lives.”- Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

 “beloved community is formed not by the eradication of difference but by its affirmation, by each of us claiming the identities and cultural legacies that shape who we are and how we live in the world.” –bell hooks


One of the most notable descriptors of trauma-informed care is shifting the question of what is wrong with you to what happened to you. While certainly less harmful than asking what is wrong, for RYSE Youth Center, asking what happened still falls short of affirming and recognizing young people of color’s fortitude and agency. Asking what happened continues to render the problem in/on the individual, overemphasizing behavioral change while foregoing the ever-needed scrutiny and emphasis on systems change.

RYSE’s work with young people occurs in the context of atmospheric trauma.  Our members live, die, navigate, hustle, struggle, and succeed within a context of persistent danger, distress, and dehumanization. Within this context, we already know what has happened and to large extent, what is happening.  We have the science, the understanding of adolescent development, allostatic load, and hypervigilance; of the embodiment of chronic stress and health impacts of adversity. On a daily basis, we see the burdens of inequity, pain, and insidious racial trauma they bear.  We also see the fortitude, tenacity, resilience, and resistance it takes to survive when living with persistent stress of social identity threat and racial trauma.

 When young people come to RYSE, or when we meet them at school, at the hospital, or in court, we make sure they know we are glad to see them, that we love them however they are, that we love them while they grapple with and determine where they want to go. We thank them for entrusting us to support them.  The question we do ask is how can we better support or be there for them. How can we make their way to and with RYSE safer, more predictable, less vigilant, and more fulfilling?

By asking what we can and should do as an organization, we are better able to understand, address, and adapt to the complex and dynamic realities of our members. What is shared is their lived expertise, their priorities, needs, and interests as described and defined by them.  This then is what drives and enables RYSE to enact programs and supports for each member while simultaneously cultivating a sense of community and collectivity. A beloved community.

When we engage from a place of recognition and reflexivity, we understand we have to work to gain and sustain the trust of our young people, not the other way around. We have to be ready and willing to change our behaviors as an organization, to support and mobilize our partners and stakeholders to do the same, and to work from and towards a place of mutual accountability and support.  A place of beloved community.

So what does beloved community look like?  Below are some of RYSE’s key learnings and offerings.  We would love to hear from others what it looks like for you.

        Creating Beloved Community: RYSE’s Key Learnings and Offerings

  • We acknowledge and address the social ecologies of violence and dehumanization
    • Name and validate young people’s experiences.
    • Tell young people we love them.
    • Foster social emotional learning AND socio-political development.
    • Make race/ism and positional power central to the work.
  • We work across roles and systems
    • Prioritize people not programs.
    • Implement radical inquiry.
    • Commit to healthy struggle and vulnerability.
  • We avoid simplistic moral frames
    • Good vs. bad coping.
    • Perpetrator vs. victim.
    • Zero tolerance policies.
    • “At-risk” frames.
    • Overemphasis on behavioral change.
  • We heal ourselves, together
    • Practice self-care AND collective healing.
    • Discuss our wounds, make repairs.
    • Bear witness and be adaptive.
    • Celebrate, laugh, and have fun.

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Jen Leland posted:

Thank you Kanwarpal for lifting these principles and actions up--especially people before programs--my favorite.  Appreciate your fierce love and commitment to saying the unsayable and keeping race, historical and system trauma central to our conversations, strategies for collective wellness, and actions.

 

Thank you Jen.  I am truly grateful and humbled to be part of such a loving, bold, righteous, and gentle organization, and to continue to connect and cultivate beloved community with you, the team, and the multiverse of folks ready and willing to do to the work necessary for all our liberation.

Thank you Kanwarpal for lifting these principles and actions up--especially people before programs--my favorite.  Appreciate your fierce love and commitment to saying the unsayable and keeping race, historical and system trauma central to our conversations, strategies for collective wellness, and actions.

 

Donielle Prince posted:

Thank you for writing this; as always, thank you for writing!

Powerful line: "Within this context, we already know what has happened and to large extent, what is happening. " What an amazing shifting of the question, bringing the issue, once blurred, into laser sharp focus. 

Also, thank you for the gift of a fundamentally new frame for people looking at these issues either as service providers, or researchers & policymakers. My wish is that all of these actors would adopt these principles of what a beloved (effective!) community looks like, and adapt their service(s), funding, argumentation, to this way of knowing and working.  

Thank YOU Donielle. Glad to know we are so close in proximity and purpose. 

Christine Cissy White posted:

Kanwarpal:

I just started reading through the Listening Campaign Report. It's so good and has SO MUCH that SO MANY of us can learn from and about. My brain and heart are exploding. 

Thank you for attaching it to your post with guidance about creating community. Beloved community! The way you describe atmospheric trauma and how the way the RYSE team responds, meets and supports young adults by being validating, warm and curious - changes the atmosphere. It made me teary as a reader because it's so different than the "how can we fix broken you approach" that has failed, hurt and re-traumatized so many. Even when healing and social change efforts have been well-intentioned. Something can be well-intentioned and damaging. Sorting through that is not always easy, personally or more broadly. 

Anyhow, thank you. There's so much that can be learned about how we interact with one another, especially for those of who don't get it or know or haven't lived with the same atmospheric trauma. It offers guidance as well.

I know I'll be thinking of it as a parent with ACEs, as a trauma survivor, as someone with privilege and oblivious in ways I might not even realize but can learn more about. I know I'll be thinking of an And also, for parenting with ACEs, it makes me think about what type of a campaign 

Amazing work.

Cissy 

Hello Cissy,

 

Thank you for your kind and generous sentiments. And for the recognition that we can change our atmospheres just by acknowledging it.  So much is possible in the microclimates. .  I know my life and livlihood was saved and nourished in those rare but critical sheltered spaces. Thank you for reading the report  - I am glad to find it touched the heart and mind.  It has been profound for RYSE and we continue to be grateful that our members trust us to share so deeply and thoughtfully.  Looking forward to hearing about your campaign.

 

Jane Stevens posted:

Terrific project with profound results, Kanwarpal. We'll add the report to our Resources Center. Thank you for posting this.

Thank you Jane.  Appreciate you putting forth the work.

Todd Garrison posted:

Thank you, Kanwarpal, for poking our mind and hearts. This work we're all in is messy -- and we must be okay with that. Over the last five year's I have watched the science of ACEs and toxic stress drive an environment of evolving change. The common question we get after training on ACEs is, "What do I do now?" When we had Rob Anda here back in 2013 his answer was, "That's for you to figure out." People (the public and ones directly involved in the work) are not comfortable with that answer. Most folks I know what a checklist of what to do, and want to know when they've achieved completion. Not gonna happen! It;s messy! But it's people like you and your team that push the conversation forward, challenging thinking. That is where the solutions come forth! I am your fan, and enjoy learning from you.

Thank you Todd.  Good to connect on this platform.  And yes, the doing is messy and also changing all the time - because our lives are like that.  I try to remember that the most tender work of healing and liberation is about being - with ourselves, each other, and in service to all our humanity, without anyone's costing more than others.  And for any of us who are in this work, we know this  most necessary and difficult. And I believe possible. Thank you for taking the tie to read and respond. 

Thank you, Kanwarpal, for poking our mind and hearts. This work we're all in is messy -- and we must be okay with that. Over the last five year's I have watched the science of ACEs and toxic stress drive an environment of evolving change. The common question we get after training on ACEs is, "What do I do now?" When we had Rob Anda here back in 2013 his answer was, "That's for you to figure out." People (the public and ones directly involved in the work) are not comfortable with that answer. Most folks I know what a checklist of what to do, and want to know when they've achieved completion. Not gonna happen! It;s messy! But it's people like you and your team that push the conversation forward, challenging thinking. That is where the solutions come forth! I am your fan, and enjoy learning from you.

Kanwarpal:

I just started reading through the Listening Campaign Report. It's so good and has SO MUCH that SO MANY of us can learn from and about. My brain and heart are exploding. 

Thank you for attaching it to your post with guidance about creating community. Beloved community! The way you describe atmospheric trauma and how the way the RYSE team responds, meets and supports young adults by being validating, warm and curious - changes the atmosphere. It made me teary as a reader because it's so different than the "how can we fix broken you approach" that has failed, hurt and re-traumatized so many. Even when healing and social change efforts have been well-intentioned. Something can be well-intentioned and damaging. Sorting through that is not always easy, personally or more broadly. 

Anyhow, thank you. There's so much that can be learned about how we interact with one another, especially for those of who don't get it or know or haven't lived with the same atmospheric trauma. It offers guidance as well.

I know I'll be thinking of it as a parent with ACEs, as a trauma survivor, as someone with privilege and oblivious in ways I might not even realize but can learn more about. I know I'll be thinking of an And also, for parenting with ACEs, it makes me think about what type of a campaign 

Amazing work.

Cissy 

Thank you for writing this; as always, thank you for writing!

Powerful line: "Within this context, we already know what has happened and to large extent, what is happening. " What an amazing shifting of the question, bringing the issue, once blurred, into laser sharp focus. 

Also, thank you for the gift of a fundamentally new frame for people looking at these issues either as service providers, or researchers & policymakers. My wish is that all of these actors would adopt these principles of what a beloved (effective!) community looks like, and adapt their service(s), funding, argumentation, to this way of knowing and working.  

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