{"id":2180,"date":"2018-05-02T08:26:53","date_gmt":"2018-05-02T12:26:53","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/lifeaftercarbon.net\/?p=2180"},"modified":"2018-05-02T09:24:23","modified_gmt":"2018-05-02T13:24:23","slug":"finding-joy-in-the-struggle-working-with-the-poor-peoples-campaign","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/in4c.net\/2018\/05\/finding-joy-in-the-struggle-working-with-the-poor-peoples-campaign\/","title":{"rendered":"Finding Joy in the Struggle: Working with the Poor People\u2019s Campaign"},"content":{"rendered":"
Joann is a recovering bureaucrat, having worked with the State of Michigan’s Commerce and Education Departments. She escaped at one point to spend a decade as an organizational consultant at On Purpose Associates with John Cleveland and Pete Plastrik, stirring up questions, constructing statistical control charts and encouraging organizations to live “on the edge of chaos.” Retired now, she is a quilter, a Quaker, and an enthusiastic RoadTrekker with spouse Carolyn Lejuste and poodle Dalva.<\/em><\/p>\n I enjoy the satisfaction of cleaning up messes and solving problems. For a while I earned my living by \u201clending my confidence\u201d and applying those skills to organizations in need of change or repair. On the home front, as clutter accumulates, it\u2019s gratifying to clear off the tabletop, put away the folded laundry, vacuum up the crumbs and settle with a cup of tea to enjoy restored beauty and order. In organizations, when we\u2019ve been able to enlist shared intention, find a root cause or contributing factor, outline an alternative and watch people feel the relief of things untangling, it feels great.<\/p>\n But this sense of myself as someone who can \u2013 if I choose \u2013 set things right has a flip side. I\u2019m coming to see it as also an unwanted part in what Robin DiAngelo calls my \u201cwhite fragility.\u201d When I turn my attention to persistent, systemic ills in the world around me (poverty, racism, war, polarization, economic devastation, for example) my habit suggests that they too will yield if we (maybe I?) just put a confident, creative shoulder to the wheel and \u201cget it right\u201d once and for all. That they\u2019re still here 50 years after Dr. King called us to racial and economic justice … nearly 50 since Earth Day celebrated our intention to care for the earth differently … that doesn\u2019t fit my picture. It challenges my sense of empowerment, offends my view of progressive progress, discourages me and makes me want to turn away and bury my nose in the latest murder mystery. And then another. And then another. And in my grumpy, defensive retreat, Mother Culture protects her status quo by whispering in my ear: \u201cIt\u2019s too big for you. It\u2019ll all work out somehow. Just go back to sleep. Nobody put you in charge.\u201d<\/p>\n