This webinar is about having Difficult Conversations. How are we approaching the difficult conversations in our lives around racism and white supremacy? What frameworks, tools, and interventions can support us to stay grounded in embodied awareness as we connect with friends, family, and others about challenging topics? While we’re focused on racism, these tools can of course be applied to conversations about other systems of oppression, such as ableism, sexism, etc.

Timestamps:

00:12:45: Guiding Stars

00:13:57: Embodied awareness and grounding

00:27:30: Transformative power of practice

00:45:43: Contextual Strategy

00:57:30: Closing & Commitments

Here are some of the resources and links we reference directly in the webinar:

Here are a few additional resources that are related to the content and may be helpful: 

White Fragility and Whiteness as a Trauma Response with Dr. Robin DiAngelo, Dr. Jacqueline Battalora, and Resmaa Menakem

This is a brief history reviewing pivotal foundations of racism and classism built into policing in the US, specifically focusing on the evolution of slave patrols and night watches. There is an intentional focus on the evolution of domestic policing and internal control, as opposed to the evolution of military, policing borders, and colonial occupation.

This video was originally created and uploaded to YouTube on May 5, 2016.

This is not meant to be an exhaustive history, but to offer a clear counter to the current narratives of modern policing. We did a wide range of research for this piece, and it has gone through many revisions. Please let us know if something seems inaccurate. Our goal is to support folks socialized with white privilege and gender(ed) oppression to better understand ourselves situated within a longer historical context, and to support conversations articulating how white silence and white complicity maintain these systems of violence.