Saturday, January 30, 2021

The Cults We Join


I've been thinking about cults, the ones we join, the ones we reject, the ones we leave once we recognize we're in them.  The cults where we STAY when we recognize them as functioning in the structure of a cult around us.

Cult    |    non-Cult x(cross with)    Awareness  |   non-Awareness

I am aware I am in a cult.        |      I am aware of the difference between cult and not-cult enough to 

                                                 |     articulate reasons why I am not in a cult.

_________________________________________________________________________

I am not aware I am in a cult.  |      I am not aware of the difference between cult and not-cult.    

In my upbringing, there are Christian-y scripts against cult-like behavior.  

Don't join things which look like cults--long flowing fabrics, singing, exuberance.  THey're moonies or hippies and definitely doing drugs, so stay far from that. They might even socialize with non-white people as equals.  Keep far from that.

[I'm developing a new writing genre of bulleted listicle of loosely connected ideas which eventually devolves into gibberish, like grains of sand blowing off the page, leaves of grass, representations of nature, or the nature of reality, cliches deconstructed into new cliches, into memes which are really subtweets which are really shade, which are really a way to write one's personal manifesto through coded signals in social media posts "I exist digitally!  And IRL!  And this artifact documents and archives my relations to these places, people, objects, ideas!" "I'm sharing"

I'm laid up with a sore back, and the last time it acted up like this I stayed home from spending the day with people who really didn't want me to be around them.  

It is as if my back pain is an urgent message from my body to stop doing water I am about to do.

A few years ago my bf and his kids went on a weeklong trip together.  Four days in and my back said no.  I stayed behind and it was good that I took it easy rather than push ahead.  But mostly because being with the kids and Marty stressed me so much.  It was an important step towards me recognizing I don't have to try to be stepMom to people who don't want me to be in their life like that.  [me recognizing a cult I'm not in--painfully at first, but now accept and everyone is much happier]

It isn't a failure.  They have a cult to which I don't belong, and that's ok.  I don't have to be in total accord with everyone in my family.  With people who don't recognize me as family.  

Putting clear boundaries around what I'll tolerate and what I won't looks suspicious to people who earlier didn't recognize my boundaries.

I have had them all along.  I am making them explicit so people know where I stand, what and who I will tolerate.  And by putting my word out here, on the line, I'm begging someone to hold me accountable to it.  An accountability buddy in the ether.  Make me do the things I say I want to do. please.

the cults I've joined, the cult of higher education (settler colonial, meritocracy discourse, pedigree/degree, exclusivity.)  The cult of whiteness, of American exceptionalism, of midwestern nice, of Bay View.  The "local food movement". 

the ones I reject, the social registry, 

the ones I leave (am leaving) once I recognized them. Breaking up with white supremacy, as Dr Tressie explains: https://tressiemcphd.medium.com/breaking-up-with-white-supremacy-was-always-the-end-game-e7101f578363

Breaking up with heteronormativity, with compulsory heterosexuality/marriage/procreation, breaking up with father-centric nuclear family model, breaking up with White Feminism (tm), breaking up with accepting that global oil cartels should dictate climate action, breaking up with political structures which do not answer to the democratic will of the people.  White evangelical christianity, breaking with being a "good ____" when that means compromising my standards for some asshole who doesn't reciprocate.

The cults where I STAYed even after I recognize them as functioning in the structure of a cult around us.

My writing cult

My deep listening practice.

My military veteran identity

Music

Dick

Yoga, buddhisty philosophy

feministy theories

---

I'm interested in the cults I STAY in because of the self-awareness.  And the power of denial.  And the possibility of figuring out strategies to deprogram myself.  To leave a guide for others who wish to deprogram.  What's on the other side we wonder?  

To decide which of my cults are worth it, which need to be rejected even if it's painful to me.  Painful to lose a job, to lose status/recognition, the future promise of a retirement account or world travel or whatever it was that I thought I was entitled to because of [education, whiteness, US passport, fill in the blank other subjectivities I am aware of and unaware of].  Painful to lose relationships, lifelong friendships, the esteem of a parent or sibling.  Divorce. To lose opportunities I felt entitled to because of my cult affiliation.

----

Prof Glick's assignment on self-reflection of cult indoctrination behavior

My freshman year at Lawrence, I took Prof Peter Glick's Intro to Psych course (he eventually became one of my advisors).  He had an awesome essay assignment for us to learn about the traits of cult indoctrination/compliance, and then for us to reflect on a time when we were subjected to examples of cult indoctrination.  I had just returned from army basic training that summer, so I had plenty to write about with regards to sleep deprivation, chanting songs and phrases, wearing uniforms (I mean really, even head shaving for the males), identifying a common enemy etc.  I mean, the command chain for basic training is called TRADOC:  training and indoctrination.

So I've been thinking about cult indoctrination since at least 1989.  More formally the past few years as I process my educational experience of grad school in relation to the subject.  In order to survive college ("traditional" college, which I deconstruct elsewhere), one has to leave one's family and social structures.  By definition the process of higher ed is meant for personal transformation--from a child to a "man", an "educated" adult, perhaps even a more valued member of society, raising one's social position and earning power. I  mean, all of these definitions are creepily elitist constructions that we in higher ed just OVERLOOK? wtf. yes, of course higher education is a structure which produces and reproduces structures of inequality.  If you want to read my 270 page dissertation on the subject, click here.

One must "orphan" oneself in order to participate in these structures of Whiteness, Settler Colonialism, Plantation-class: in order to participate in higher education in a "traditional" sense (18 year old unencumbered by bills or dependents or off-campus work, at present usually mortgaging the future with a student loan with the  plan to get a high enough paying future job which will cover that monthly bill(a highly exploitable human commodity, not even a cog in the machine but the fuel which turns the rusty cogs of the higher ed machine, some of the same gears which grind up our students in the process (gumming up--)))

Hannah Arendt (below) wrote of "we refuges" 

and interpellation--having an identity thrust upon you, which doesn't make sense.  Refugees we became as we joined the cult of the college, thereby being rejected by family/supports with whom we used to have reciprocal relations.  Alien to both landscapes.  Unrecognized because untethered by commonality and mutuality.

Many many of us are untethered.  Many more will become so as internally displaced people due to climate change, due to covid disruptions to their living situations.  Due to leaving family structures which had been toxic and finally became untenable because they recognized they had boundaries that their family wasn't respecting and the best thing to do was to reduce access to safe levels for harm reduction.  

People are mobile and are looking to the future, how to build the future.

I'm building the structures.  I'm the welcome wagon.  Welcome to the future--we're glad you're here.

Join this cult.

We fully acknowledge our belief systems--who we are and what we stand for, what we'll tolerate and what we won't.  You're free to come and go as you please, without coercion, but being with us means behaving to our group norms.  You're in or out based on what you do/choose.

___



Joy comes in the Covid Morning

Who survives? What will they need? How do we bring in the orphans?

How to deprogram from a cult?

How to join a cult? (reference Prof Glick's assignment on self-reflection of cult indoctrination behavior)

Valkyries and White Entitlement

Greta Thunberg is a climate Valkyrie--bring us through this battle nordic witch!  Tell it like it is!


https://www.brainpickings.org/2017/01/30/hannah-arendt-jewishness-we-refugees/

Arendt addresses the complexities of that identity in a powerful essay titled “We Refugees,” penned in the 1940s and included in the Arendt anthology The Jewish Writings (public library). Although its subject is Jewishness, the essay speaks stirringly to the broader tragedy of being thrust into refugee status on account of some fragment of one’s identity — be it religion or nationality or gender or ethnicity or any other variable of exclusion and discrimination.


In the first place, we don’t like to be called “refugees.” We ourselves call each other “newcomers” or “immigrants.”

A refugee used to be a person driven to seek refuge because of some act committed or some political opinion held. Well, it is true we have had to seek refuge; but we committed no acts and most of us never dreamt of having any radical political opinion. With us the meaning of the term “refugee” has changed.

 The Disposable Single Use School District Infrastructure, thanks to Boomer Rationale

"You Best Keep Moving:  Some Proud Boys Just Checked Into this Hotel"

https://tressiemcphd.medium.com/breaking-up-with-white-supremacy-was-always-the-end-game-e7101f578363

Breaking up with White Supremacy, breaking up Cis-heteronormativity, breaking up with male supremacy, breaking up with christian supremacy, breaking up with bad relations in general

How to get more to break up?

How to bring in the orphaned?

thisishumantrafficking.com. coercion, misrepresentation, how UBI would disrupt the structures of human trafficking


Thursday, January 21, 2021

Learning about consent from traumatized kittens

 We got two kittens from the humane society--brothers--who are shy and need human socializing.

When we met them at the human society, one of them didn't even come out of the crate--just trembled and hissed.

I've been socializing these kittens, and it's reminding me of all sorts of things I used to know about positive and negative reinforcement, about how to change behaviors, which seemed like a big part of my job as a middle school teacher.  

I think about parents who feel out of control in their parenting--they don't' have the ability or the authority to reinforce positive behaviors or extinguish negative behaviors.  In fact, some parents reinforce racist and bigoted behaviors and extinguish empathic behaviors. (Article/Book about nice white parents, school choice, nice stuff for white kids but not for other kids, so white kids get advantage, encouraging a sense of entitlement and impunity) (JG: The white world is guarded--don't hear white people talking about this world re equity) (Keep secrets, hidden info, twisted the situation, xenophobia--don't want to have diversity actually, just as a brand enhancement but not the actual work/investment to enact the vision)

Socializing feral kittens has been a master class in paying attention to small indications/gestures, helping someone feel safe, recognizing when it's not a good time, tiny celebrations of building trust.  It's so easy to lose trust with one action.  Relationships are built with hundreds of positive interactions which build predictability, acknowledgement and even affection.

Things I am remembering:

1. Relationships are built on repeated contact.

1.a. Repeated contact requires recognition of an event.  Shared acknowledged recognition of another being, a head nod, a per bow, a "how you doin'?" --these behaviors begin to acknowledge reality by recognizing beings in your environment.  Human people, pets, animals, plants, birds, rocks, trees--whatever you perceive.  Amplify them by acknowledging them.  Eye contact, a smile, wave.  A finger-raise from the steering wheel--you recognize it when someone recognizes/acknowledges you.  That's the first part of my work.  Seeing and recognizing the beings in my path, in my ecosystem, flowing through the Market.

2. Consistency.  Every time.  We build our integrity through every individual interaction with ourselves, our thoughts/feelings and other beings.

3.  Learn the names.  Learn first names or preferred terms of address of people in your sphere.  Learn the many names they may have.  Do the same with plants and birds.   

Clerks at the store with nametags--try using their name in your interaction:  "Thank you, Carol.  Have a good day".  Start simple.  

Get brave and introduce yourself to "regulars" in your life--delivery people, people in your neighborhood.

4.  Part of our problems communicating is that we look past people in our immediate environment because their are different from us, especially white-identifying people.

Look AT people, not past them.

Drive through service workers--yes, they are also people.  Greet them.  Say thank you.  Make eye contact. ffs.  Human--they're a fellow human.  Celebrate that by smiling or nodding or making eye contact or bowing or waving--a gesture of recognition, a ritual of integration.  Namaste--hello--hi, I see you.


CONSENT:  fearful kittens do not consent to interactions with scary people.  How to build trust on the road to consent?  Lots of interactions based in good will, paying attention to their needs, pushing them ever so gently to become bold and brave.  To enact their innate curiosity requires a baseline sense of safety.  When they first came to us, the smaller one JiJi hid from us.  When I would inch closer, he'd hiss and growl.  He came with an upper respiratory infection and meds, and we had to "force" them into the kitty--grab with a towel, fill the syringe, get as much as we can into his mouth.  It was awful.  Within a day we figured out what food they liked and was able to mix the medicine into the food, making it much less traumatic.  Over the next several hours and days, I worked to create conditions for JiJi to feel safe and secure, gradually inching closer and closer during feeding and resting and playing.  There's still a way to go, and perhaps he'll never be a gregarious kitty who approaches strangers.  However, I love that he's allowing pets and purring <3


[I'm using these posts to help me organize ideas/get feedback from my co-writers--forgive their incompleteness/errors as they are process tools]

Friday, January 15, 2021

We are not safe here

 Months ago I had a conversation with a friend about Black students at her university.  It was during/just after the BLM protests were getting attention this summer, and however belatedly, the university or one particular administrator, reached out to her (as a Black woman) to help them brainstorm ways to make Black Lives Matter on campus.  

The more she reflected on it, she could not in good conscience help the university re-brand themselves as suddenly woke, suddenly supportive of the unique needs that Black students in particular might have on a predominantly White campus, with disproportionately White faculty and disproportionate representation of people of color in maintenance roles on campus.  Who is maintaining what here?

It looks like lots of folks maintaining the structures of inherited privilege, of a White settler colonial mindset which posits that all the non-White folks around here can benefit from learning, can make their way up the corporate ladder if only they spend tuition dollars here.  

We realized that not only is it disingenuous to welcome students who are not welcome.  It is dangerous.  Students have been shot by security on this campus.  Heck, staff and faculty have been driven out of town by the structures of Whiteness and preserving privilege.  We are not safe here.

As the summer wore on, we realized that the needs of the NCAA and associated contracts with media were going to make sure college football happened this fall, which necessitated "opening campus".  Even before Covid, we knew that universities didn't give a duck about their athletes as humans, as students.  Risk of Closed Brain Injuries from repeated blows? Don't hate the player, hate the game.  Biology lab is scheduled during practice?  I guess you don't get to major in biology, son.  We are not safe here.     

Two days ago, armed men strolled into the US Capitol, with the assistance of Capitol Police who just months ago were teargassing peaceful protesters.  They placed two explosive devices.  They bragged of plans to execute elected officials.  They took selfies, trashed offices, stole things, posted photos on social media, and walked right back out, back to their hotel rooms and their flights out of town.  

Saturday, January 9, 2021

Building the Beloved Community

Martin Luther King, Jr said, “The aftermath of nonviolence is the creation of the beloved community. The aftermath of nonviolence is redemption. The aftermath of nonviolence is reconciliation.

Begin in the self and build out: love in the heart, love in the home, love in the block, love in the community.

I've written a lot about Orphaning, Fabricating Legitimacy

What does it look like to come in from an "orphaning"?

--refugees
--homeless
--people struggling with poverty
--people struggling with health problems, including mental anguish
--people experiencing destabilizing health effects (hello Covid!): nutrition, housing, basic needs
--people who have been systematically exploited and excluded from supports intended for people like them--survivors of human trafflicking (including adoptions)

Residential schools with graveyards--as an educator, it galls me to think of running an organization that has so many deaths of children that it has to set aside a plot of land to bury them.

Internment and concentration camps, prisons, detention centers.

Naive pollyanna Karen suggests perhaps this coming in can look like relational food.

I draw a binary between relational food and branded food.

Relational food is food that I know and acknowledge and trust all of the relations who produced it--I trust who managed the soil, who picked it in the field (and who "supervised" that person was just and fair, paid a above-table living wage), who washed it, prepared it, served it, cleaned up after it, composted it.

Branded food--all those relational trust points are obscured by a STORY about the food.  Photos of a heritage farm.  Price points that indicate luxury, which surely must imply that if I pay this much for this steak or whatnot then everyone down the line has also been paid well.  That this isn't in fact raccoon meat ground in with what it is supposed to be because some USDA inspector never has the resources to actually inspect the meatpacking company.

Either I have relationships with food producers

or

I have brand stories which are placeholders for relationships.  Sometimes deceptive by intention.