The Arise Podcast

Season 2, Episode 2: Maggie and Danielle, Critical Conversations, Engaging Community and Politics

Episode Summary

Danielle and Maggie chat about defining a “new normal,” finding a balanced between work and home life when both are at home, and offer some thoughts on how to engage in discourse around politics and build community while in a global pandemic.

Episode Notes

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In this episode, Maggie and Danielle connect over having a new imagination for what it’s like to live in these COVID days. Having once thought, “perhaps this will all blow over,” we are now knee deep in changing family dynamics, changing what it looks like for kids to “go to school” with distance learning, and adults shifting to a more long-term working from home situation. Normal is being redefined. 

Even still, nearly six months in to COVID-19, things feel raw and exposed.

With the end of summer and the beginning of the school year, there is a sense that “I’m not ready.” Maggie named that she is feeling ill-equipped to teach children and also help to them deal with social isolation… Simply put: We are not able to meet all the needs for all the kids.

Danielle names there is a hard balance: how do we manage screen time and engage with our kids and work (from home)? We are having to trust our kids lot more and these family dynamics are continuing to develop as we find ways to deal with losses and managing emotions.

In the midst of  a continued need for social distancing, how do re-form, or form from for the first time, community? Just how well were we connected before COVID?

As we enter into the political season it feels more divided than ever across our nation—people seem to be  lining up to pick sides!

We can ask ourselves: How much capacity do I have in this season, in a global pandemic, being maxed out with personal and/or work life, do I have to engage people who aren’t like me… or who disagree with me, when I still want to connect and be seen and heard?

Danielle says the reality is we just don’t want to  know people who are like us and yet we do just want people to know people like us. We want to agree because it feels good. And when we disagree, we aren’t just having disagreements [about politics], people believe that these things are connected to the core of who they are.

Danielle challenges us as we engage in debate and discourse this political seasons to ask ourselves: Am I in my body? Am I present with what I'm thinking? When you’re in your body you have a harder time accusing and dehumanizing another person. Honor humanity by being a human: be in your body.

What if I am in my body and my neighbor isn’t in their body? Start by asking questions, “You don't seem to be with me right now, where are you?” Start with curiosity. Acknowledge what you see them, it disarms them.

If we can have a conversation with someone without being seen and heard, what was the point of the conversation?

If someone hears what you said, they're going to remember what you say. They remember it in their bodies, for good or bad.

Danielle’s tips for engaging with others in this political season who may disagree with you:

Anger can be arousing and exciting over social media. And yet anger can cause damage that will require repair that you may not be able to over social media.

When we enter into a place that requires repair there can be this sense of despair, hopelessness, "this isn’t going to get better.”  We need sit in that for moment and mourn. We need to feel the weight of our grief for there can be no movement out of grief without engagement. We must allow space for our anger to transform into grief so that our grief turns to lament and morning which leads to repair and reconciliation and healing.

There’s been much debate around Abortion / Pro-Life this political cycle and it is not as black and white  as much as we’d like it to be, it’s so much more nuanced. There is this sense that if we are supporting the dismantling of systemic racism and white supremacy that somehow we’re also supporting abortion. Danielle asks why do you think these two are linked?

We can not do “the work” for others. If we give someone the completed work or “the answer,” without the scaffolding, framework and structure, it has no place to land.

Maggie talks about story work engagement and how others may be able to “see” clearly what’s happening but the person who is sharing does not. To just name or tell them what’s happening without building the framework to support that idea, it won’t hold and stick for the person.  Danielle says this is why math teachers tell you to “show your work” and not just give the answer. You have to know the steps involved in how and why you got there. When you compare your answer with another person on how you got to a conclusion, you can look and see where things are the same and where they aren’t the same and use that as a basis for repair, if needed.

We simply need community. We need someone else’s eyes and ears, to guide and walk with you. And we can still do that even in COVID. We can still make phone calls, send text messages, have FaceTime/zoom meetings… We still have the ability to connect and reach out. 

Some ground rules for difficult conversations around politics:

Maggie shared about “My Mouth is a Volcano” children’s book she read to her kids about interrupting and honoring other people’s important words. We must be wiling to listen. 

Danielle says we need to watch out for Name Calling, it’s a red flag! If you go to name-calling, you have gone off the rails in your conversations/discussion. When you feel yourself slipping into name calling, it’s important to reflect on what you’re defending. What is hurting that you feel like you want to hurt someone else?You may need to take a break "a grown-up timeout" and reevaluate how to reengage and if repair is needed. Perhaps a therapist is needed. There’s no shame in asking for help!

We learn and grow experientially. And we do so together. 

We would love to hear from our listeners! What has been helpful? What did we miss that you’d like us to talk about? Who was your favorite guests? thearisepodcast@gmail.com  Send us your questions.

You belong here.

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Danielle is reading: Jesus and John Wayne: How White Evangelicals Corrupted a Faith and Fractured a Nation by Kristin Kobes du Mez

Maggie is reading: Untamed by Glennon Doyle and My Grandmother’s Hands by Resmaa Menekem.

Danielle is listening to: “Last Shot” from the Hamilton Soundtrack.

Maggie is listening to: In the van: Phineas and Ferb music. The Bema Discipleship with Marty Solomon

Danielle is inspired by: her kids!

Maggie is inspired by: the beauty and glory of the Pacific Northwest!