Alien Nation and the Need for Brave Spaces
Michelle Holliday
Author of The Age of Thrivability: Vital Perspectives and Practices for a Better World
I’ve been involved with three groups with varying approaches to inclusion recently. In two, there was a strong reluctance to engage in unconventional topics or to try new meeting formats for fear of alienating some members of the community. It was striking to me that both groups used this same terminology of “alienation.” In the third group, such conversations and approaches were welcomed and embraced. In fact, the presence of some resistance and discomfort was seen as a healthy indication that the group was stretching and growing.?
When I hear groups express the fear of alienating some members, I often wonder about the corresponding risk of alienating those who silently crave the very new approaches and topics that are thought to be too risky. Sticking to safety and the status quo is not a guarantee that no one will be alienated. What creative impulse is stifled – or alienated – by accommodating only the way things have always been done??
We all want to feel safe and comfortable. But the challenges we’re facing at every level of society demand that we figure out how to stretch beyond the known and familiar. If we’re going to go beyond business as usual, we might have to get a little uncomfortable.?
In a chapter titled From Safe Spaces to Brave Spaces, educators Brian Arao and Kristi Clemens ”question the degree to which safety is an appropriate or reasonable expectation for any honest dialogue…. We argue that authentic learning … often requires the very qualities of risk, difficulty, and controversy that are defined as incompatible with safety.” They are writing about social justice work, but their point is relevant for any context where collective learning and profound change are needed. And I struggle to think of an industry or area of our lives where that isn’t the case.?
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The solution, in my experience, is to ask: what would help us feel brave enough to create space for these new topics or approaches, if there truly is an impulse among some to engage in them? What would sufficiently shield us from being judged or rejected as alien, as seems to be the underlying fear? How could we support this new exploration without losing our relevance and belonging??
For example, how could we offer new approaches or topics on an opt-in basis? Where could we create experimental space for those who are interested in and ready for the new? With clarity of invitation, how could we allow the reluctant to dip in at the margins – or not? And how can leaders model curiosity and the courage to ask bold questions??
There is an inherent conservatism woven into the truism that we have to “meet people where they are.” It too often presumes to know where they are and where they might want to be. But being inclusive is not simply catering to this assumed lowest common denominator of openness to change. In some cases, being inclusive means creating a space that is explicitly not for everyone – that is for the brave and the visionary – and then allowing each person to decide if it is for them.
These times call for spaces of authentic conversation and brave experimentation. Not everyone will be ready for this right away, and this must be acknowledged. But it is a mistake to assume that all people are not. And more than the risk of alienation is the risk of not making way for change.
Ayudando a organizaciones de base y emprendimientos en su transición a la regeneración en el turismo | Consultora | Educadora | Fundadora en The RegenLAB for Travel
3 个月Thank you so much for these reflections, as always! It is a tough one, and one that has caused me some headaches. I find that, although meeting people where they are is not creating change, using certain language in the invitation that is very different can also create confusion and even rejection, even amongst people that do want a change but don't know how or where to start. So, with some experimentation, I have tried to really think about words and how they can resonate with people. Not using the word capital, or impact... but more touching upon emotions: wellbeing, purpose, etc. Once we are together in a room, definitely some will be interested and some will not, but at least I got them in the room! Those who are not ready, can choose not to participate. I am now working on an invitation to a series of participatory workshops for a community, and working alongside locals to find that language. It's tricky! But worth really thinking about.
Re-imagining the multi-solving potential of bringing people together to cook together, eat together, and be together.
4 个月This also inspires me to think about how do we hold people if they aren’t ready to engage or need a moment to process emotions coming up. It makes me think that in community food spaces or nature, or evolutionarily we had physical tasks for people to process. As my nervous system was dysregulated yesterday a friend reminded me that lifting own body weight or heavy things can be helpful. So I did some yoga and whatever movement by body felt like and it helped. There’s often an assumption we’ll be safer and braver in conversation than in our bodies when I think the opposite is true most of the time. Although we’re so often not “in our bodies” this can also be scary
Re-imagining the multi-solving potential of bringing people together to cook together, eat together, and be together.
4 个月Thanks for sharing Michelle. The “meeting people where they are at” and “as if we know” really struck me. Thank you for the questions. We often ask “what do you need to fully show up.” A word creates a world when co-creating safer or braver spaces. A ton of harm has been done through the process of creating safe spaces to neuro diverse and people or colour. It strikes me that alienation happens with poor design, speed of process, or unexpected cultural factors. It strikes me that “brave” and “safer” are limiting and used as short form for the entire culture we want to create.
Science Communicator | Regenerative Tourism | Strategic Partnership Development
4 个月The part about the inherent conservatism in “meeting people where they’re at” ????