Racism over dinner

Racism over dinner #1

George Floyd, 46, died on May 25 in Minneapolis while being arrested. He was held down by a police officer’s knee and died while pleading in pain that he ‘can’t breathe’. Eight minutes and 46 seconds later, he shut his eyes and stopped breathing and talking. He was pronounced dead shortly after. 

The Black Lives Matter movement was sparked by George Floyd’s death and as a mom to three boys to men, I wanted to open up the conversation at the dinner table. Here is a bit of what I learned from my almost 19, 17 and 10 year old sons and an excerpt from the Facebook Post I shared later that night.

How goes your racism and white privilege conversations at the dinner table…?  

I’m not making light of this even a little bit. I seriously want to know what is happening in your home…? 

I’ll start… I was surprised by how passionate I was, (frankly how threatening I was) around the concept of the boys watching the ‘news media’ as entertainment. I actually made them say out loud my threat… 

‘Mom will personally hunt me down if I EVER watch someone else’s pain as an audience member – my entertainment is NEVER at someone else’s expense’.

Wow.

I am quite surprised by my own passion about this.

Thank you to Kyle Hawke for the Guardian article posted, tracking the 400+ years beginning with the first slave sold on American soil. This showed the magnitude of what is happening and I read it to my boys.

I also read an article about FEAR of any kind of ‘establishment’ and what that can do to a society, and what that means. This of course is a super complex conversation, and tricky.

I tried reallllllllly hard not to judge but instead created a table where people weren’t interrupted or talked down to.

I asked more questions and only gave a few answers.

These conversations are important.

  • We also talked about apathy – and what it means.
  • We talked about white privilege and what it means to us today.
  • We talked about divisive thinking.
  • We role played the George Floyd incident in all positions.
  • We talked about empathy.
  • We talked about the difference between blame and responsibility.

It was a big night at the table over burgers, and it’s our privilege to talk about it from the safety of the white bubble we live in.

The boys very clearly, were passionate about how stupid racism is. 

How it makes no sense at all. 

How the colour of someone’s skin does not determine their value.

That was easy.

Some of the other pieces took more time and more insistence on my part to ‘stay with it’.

Okay… your turn – GO.

What was easy? What was hard for your household?

And whatever you did… it was a start.

However you handled it, you are trying.

Whatever you know or don’t know, you are offering a possibility for change.

You got this…

Keep going.

Please don’t be a bystander.

And you don’t have to be an activist either.

DO talk about it.

Apathy is entitlement.

Apathy is privilege.

Apathy is part of the problem.

What affects you affects me.

Xxt

Here are some of the responses I received:

No dinner conversations needed here. My better half calls me out when I need to reconsider things that come out of my mouth and rightly so. Racism runs deep, deeper than we know, deeper than it’s comfortable to admit. We watched ‘The Hate U Give’ this afternoon. I cried, a lot. I was rattled by it, angered by it and that is good. Now I consider, where to go from here.

‘White Fragility’ will be in my hands for consumption as soon as my better half is done reading it.

We are talking over here too – my proudest moment was when my eldest said to us – “What can we do?”

We started the day with a video of 3 generations of black men at a demonstration. It is raw and difficult. We discussed why they were there and their different perspectives. Claus and I shed tears. We discussed white privilege, white saviorism, internalized and generational racism. We discussed how Canada thinks we aren’t as bad as the US and how Canada is racist. We discussed what it might be like if their dad were black and the boys were half black vs half German and half Jewish and how it is a privilege to hide their hidden minority. How there are people in the world who would hate them for being half Jewish… So heavy. I started a thread to share resources for white folks to start to dig into these subjects.

My partner is in the process of renouncing his U.S. citizenship to become Canadian, and is going through a lot of major life changes at the moment. So in a way, I was reluctant to bring it up, since he is under lots of stress. But I had made the decision to not remain silent anymore, so I said that I had been reading and watching and learning a lot about what’s happening in regards to racism these days. Even though I know that racism is one of the things that angers him, I noticed how I was a bit afraid to continue. After a few moments, he asked me to tell him more. So I did. About the struggles, and the mixed feelings out there, and the uncertainty of what to do, and that I’m not ok with being a silent anti-racist supporter anymore. That I am trying to find ways to be in action. He was receptive and interested. The biggest takeaway was my reluctance to talk about it. Perhaps it’s from having worked in a federal prison for 15 years and seen enough atrocities to last a lifetime. But that’s what privilege is, isn’t it? I get to choose how much atrocity to let in. They don’t. I will not leave them alone in it anymore.

Thanks for asking this, Tina. Here’s how it went in my household (with a seven year-old). Me: So, hey you know I read you that story that really upset you, that showed how black people escaped from slavery? Him: Uh, yeah. Me: Well look at this picture (photo of protests). This sign held by a kid your age says, “How could we come this far, to only come this far.” And then I go on to tell him about Ahmed Aubrey and George Floyd, and how horrible things like this happen every day, done by white people, to black people. And how here in Canada, most often horrible crimes like that happen to First Nations people most often. And then he said, “Can I go play now?”

Mine’s 11, and ASD, so our conversations aren’t quite as nuanced, yet, but we’re talking.

Tina Overbury is a core-communications specialist who works with individuals and organizations who feel called. She is a storyteller, performer, and a professional listener who works with narrative and story structure as a vehicle for human connection. Her work is rooted in Myth, Mysticism, and the practice of personal faith. She brings thirty years of collaborative storytelling in theatre, film, marketing, team based selling, and workshop facilitation. She is the founder of Live Your Best Story, a weekend retreat of deep listening held on Bowen Island, BC, Canada and is the voice and story behind TinaOLife, home to Story Stones, TinaO’s weekly online gathering of listening in to sacred stories. Tina is a proud associate of PowHERhouse media where she listens and supports the ‘stories’ of whole and integrated leaders of tomorrow. 

If you would like to know more about Tina’s approach to story, click here

Blog- This Grief

Yes. This. I walk with this daily. It’s my latest companion, as is friendship. They came as a package. As I let my heart soften, let the broken bits through, and came apart a number of times over the last four months, I also landed in some amazing laps of friendship.

Grief and Friendship came as a package deal for me this year.

What is your word for 2020? Mine is Devotion… every week I get why that word chose me a little bit more.

Feel

Breathe

Cry

Feel your feet in the earth.

Every day:

Earth

Water

Fire

Sky (stone).

We are always home.

Xt


Tina Overbury is a core-communications specialist who works with individuals and organizations who feel called. She is a storyteller, performer, and a professional listener who works with narrative and story structure as a vehicle for human connection. Her work is rooted in Myth, Mysticism, and the practice of personal faith. She brings thirty years of collaborative storytelling in theatre, film, marketing, team based selling, and workshop facilitation. She is the founder of Live Your Best Story, a weekend retreat of deep listening held on Bowen Island, BC, Canada and is the voice and story behind TinaOLife, home to Story Stones, TinaO’s weekly online gathering of listening in to sacred stories. Tina is a proud associate of PowHERhouse media where she listens and supports the ‘stories’ of whole and integrated leaders of tomorrow. 

If you would like to know more about Tina’s approach to story, click here

Ruby Glasses

I am working on a one woman show called O MY GOD for my 50th birthday, and so much more. I’ve been wading through moving images from my childhood for days and this one keeps comes back to me over and over. As I pulled it up I realized I don’t remember moving. At all. But I do remember wrapping the ruby glasses my mom used to collect carefully in newsprint and placing them in boxes.

Ruby Glasses 

It’s cinema to me

dust on light becomes mist,

dissolve


evening sundown

to dusk

to twilight,

lighting


my knees on the linoleum

a tint of pale not yellow

but not green

and cool

with grooves that form map lines on my skin

from sitting for so long


It’s okay

I’ll trace them later

under a summer sheet

her picture tucked under my pillow

and a faded window curtain

breathing sleep over me,

set deck


We are moving

and I’m wrapping ruby glasses

with my dad,


I

am

quiet

I am never quiet

I am a tiger

a magician

a trapeze artist

a clown in long blue chiffon

trailing the ocean at my feet

I burble

I giggle

I wonder

out loud

always out loud


I am the maestro of this

this

circus of music

of black cherries and red poppies,

of blue bells

of white sheet wonder

and of mystery,

sound design


I tilt here,

so full

my throat

and the sky I see through my window

has wrapped me

and my shoulders

in a shawl to forget

all the things I will miss

when we leave this place


it slips

and I shiver

the depression glass, the broken porch, the pears

the plums and the cherries

the blossoms

so messy

so pink

and always in my hair,


the sound of my feet

running

tripping

twisting my ankle

falling down the stairs

again


dipping my fingers into the chocolate paint

that smothered

everything in the 70s,

editing


everything you built with your hands

for her

will be gone

like her

from both of us


I won’t remember my last sleep in this house

I won’t even think of it until

now

like cinema


but I will remember

wrapping

ruby

glasses

at seven years old

my hands, your hands, her glasses

in newsprint

like moving pictures

This poem was originally published on Medium.

TinaO is a storyteller, performer, and a professional listener who works with narrative and story structure as a vehicle for human connection. Her work is rooted in Myth, Mysticism, and the practice of personal faith. She is the founder of Live Your Best Story, a weekend retreat of deep listening held on Bowen Island, BC, Canada and is the voice and story behind TinaOLife. Tina is a proud associate of PowHERhouse Impact Media Group where she listens and supports the ‘stories’ of whole and integrated leaders of tomorrow.

As part of TinaO’s audience, CLICK HERE to receive a personal message from TinaO about the power, beauty and invitation of Story, and your personal Story from the Core. You will also be able to stay up to date about TinaO’s performances, storytelling events, and upcoming retreats and workshops.

Blog – Dominance Model

My heart pleads out to those who are still in the ‘game’ of hierarchy within the dominance model. It’s not capitalism which is the ideological problem, and it’s not socialism which is the idealistic solution (therein also a problem), its dominance as a ‘structure’, where we believe we can play alpha with nature/god/creation itself which is where we are stuck.

Whatever motivates us to lay it down, to give it up, to simply STOP believing we can WIN over anything… like anything… (like there’s anything to win OVER anyway), is our call now.

Nature always wins.

It isn’t about paying penance – not in my way of thinking anyway, and it’s also not random.

My guess is that most of us in North America think we are ‘beyond it, or or have been so far removed from what survival actually feels like that we forget the importance of taking care of each other with each word and action.

I’m praying, chanting, breathing, storytelling – for well-being.

No one deserves pain, or this virus, or violence.

I have a bit of a thing about ‘justice’. I wonder if the word justice exists beyond a model of dominance?

Hierarchy I understand – it’s a container for our safety.

Dominance – not so much. That’s power ‘over’ and in that someone always feels ‘less-than’, or ‘owned’.

I wonder if this time of great impact is a reminder to all of us that we are never, ever, like ever going to be ‘above’ the true force of life itself.

Call it God, nature, source, creation, the mystery… whatevs…

We are not stronger than life itself.

Be well.

Soft hearts.

Grace to all.

Practice equality.

Xt


Tina Overbury is a core-communications specialist who works with individuals and organizations who feel called. She is a storyteller, performer, and a professional listener who works with narrative and story structure as a vehicle for human connection. Her work is rooted in Myth, Mysticism, and the practice of personal faith. She brings thirty years of collaborative storytelling in theatre, film, marketing, team based selling, and workshop facilitation. She is the founder of Live Your Best Story, a weekend retreat of deep listening held on Bowen Island, BC, Canada and is the voice and story behind TinaOLife, home to Story Stones, TinaO’s weekly online gathering of listening in to sacred stories. Tina is a proud associate of PowHERhouse media where she listens and supports the ‘stories’ of whole and integrated leaders of tomorrow. 

If you would like to know more about Tina’s approach to story, click here

Audio-#6 Group Listening

It’s a fascinating thing: Groups.

I have children who are in elementary school and of highschool age, and I don’t know if you remember what it’s like to be in highschool, but it’s a daily practice of confrontation because there is nothing but group dynamics going on.

Things happen in groups.

There is momentum in groups.

Stuff goes down in groups. 

You are either outside the group, or inside the group. 

There is often an alpha personality who runs the group even if he/she doesn’t want to. It’s just part of their personality, so it happens by default. 

I was at a conference table once where there were 30 year olds sitting on one side, and 45+ year olds sitting on the other. Some of the voices were wanting to emerge while others were wanting to share wisdom. 

And out of love and nourishment, these over 45 year olds watered the shit out of these emerging buds of voices. They were just trying to come out of the ground, and they got blasted by a whole bunch of well meaning wisdom…

Tina Overbury is a core-communications specialist who works with individuals and organizations who feel called. She is a storyteller, performer, and a professional listener who works with narrative and story structure as a vehicle for human connection. Her work is rooted in Myth, Mysticism, and the practice of personal faith. She brings thirty years of collaborative storytelling in theatre, film, marketing, team based selling, and workshop facilitation. She is the founder of Live Your Best Story, a weekend retreat of deep listening held on Bowen Island, BC, Canada and is the voice and story behind TinaOLife, home to Story Stones, TinaO’s online gathering of listening in to sacred stories. Tina is a proud associate of PowHERhouse media where she listens and supports the ‘stories’ of whole and integrated leaders of tomorrow. 

If you would like to know more about Tina’s approach to story, click here

Blog- Age of the Artist

The age of the artist has begun. It starts here. Now. Feeling beings, receiving beings, action oriented beings from a place of connection. It’s not ‘art’ people – it’s a way of living.

In trust.

In faith.

In love.

In full on RISK.

In courage.

In BOLD, brave action.

Stepping out with our hearts in our mouths, with our soul driving the f*cking bus.

Integrated.

Whole.

Savage courageous love (to borrow a term from my friend Jim).

Courage to take action with the fire in your heart.

Slowing down enough to hear the wisdom and gifting entrusted to you.

We so f*cking got this. As my friend and colleague Charlene SanJenko says… we are MADE for it.


Tina Overbury is a core-communications specialist who works with individuals and organizations who feel called. She is a storyteller, performer, and a professional listener who works with narrative and story structure as a vehicle for human connection. Her work is rooted in Myth, Mysticism, and the practice of personal faith. She brings thirty years of collaborative storytelling in theatre, film, marketing, team based selling, and workshop facilitation. She is the founder of Live Your Best Story, a weekend retreat of deep listening held on Bowen Island, BC, Canada and is the voice and story behind TinaOLife, home to Story Stones, TinaO’s weekly online gathering of listening in to sacred stories. Tina is a proud associate of PowHERhouse media where she listens and supports the ‘stories’ of whole and integrated leaders of tomorrow. 

If you would like to know more about Tina’s approach to story, click here