That’s the number of community leaders I’ve had break down to me in the last 48 hours, exhausted and feeling abandoned and unsupported after giving every drop of themselves to the community and different organizations.
It’s a heavy lift right now. We’re working out hundreds of years of oppression, a spiritual awakening, a new generation of emotional intelligence, the great resignation, and a planet’s weight in PTSD from isolation, grief, and mistrust and that’s just Monday and Tuesday.
This ain’t for the weak of heart. And the folks on the frontline are getting their asses kicked daily. And a lot of them make it look easy because they’ve learned how to take a punch.
Well, it still hurts just because you don’t see them cry. We all have work to do for a better world daily. Go tell the homies you see them. Make sure people have what they need.
People aren’t transactions.
1. community
Whenever I meet a new organizer that i’ll be working with, I ask them their favorite coffee place and how they take it. I try to figure out what their diet looks like discreetly (do they eat meat, eggs, or cheese?).
This is so I can show up to actions with coffee and a breakfast sandwich. Not only does this make sure that people get fed physically, but as the person who put all the time and energy into organizing something so small can feel sooooo big.
Give your organizers their roses at all times. If shit means something to you then let ’em know. Folks have literally given up families, friends, careers, and more for some of this work. Some come home to empty houses. Feeling seen and appreciated isn’t why to do the work, but it is part of how it is sustained emotionally and spiritually. We gotta make sure that our community leaders never doubt how with them that we are.
2. community leaders
“No” is the biggest part of self-care. You have to truly understand that as your energy, patience, love, and compassion are drained so is your effectiveness in leadership.
This is why self-care and self-prioritizing is crucial. It feels selfish at times, but you can’t provide a spark and charge to the movement that you don’t have.
Right now i’m practicing a step-in step-out approach because I know my mental health is still working to come back from a couple years of isolation. This is part of the reason that the recent First Church of Poetry was only a two month activation. It is also why there were different speakers every week.
Don’t overcommit. There are a lot of us doing this healing work and we can pick up where others leave off, but we can’t afford to lose people to burnout.
We also need to continue pushing for what we know we are worth. There are healing efforts going on in this city that are HUGE and are being nickel-and-dimed by people in perceived power. Make sure you support each other.
Also go ahead and raise your rates because everything else is going up. Saying no doesn’t make you ineffective in the work, saying yes when you don’t have capacity does though.
3. organizations
If you keep vampiring our community activists eventually you’re going to run out of power sources for your org. A lot of you aren’t out here. Period. We see who is. It’s not too late to be though.
We’re waiting for you. You can have “building,” “empowerment,” “marginalized communities,” and all the buzzwords in your mission statement and it doesn’t mean shit if you’re not actually showing up on a human level for employees.
A lot of you are acting like we’re not recovering from global trauma right now and you look like the capitalists you claim to be working against.
Some of y’all are downright oppressive to your employees, just xeroxing the same abuse of the American culture while claiming to create change. Do better.
I worked at one of the city’s leading arts non-profit institutions in leadership for over a decade and let me tell you that there was never a time when one of us was left to do the dirty work without support from the rest of the team. Because there was real love and comradery that was built through genuine love and support.
That’s what most of y’all are missing. You work together but you don’t love each other.
Only this work isn’t fixing pipes or building cars fam. This is war. And idk about you. But i’m not marching into a war with (and especially not FOR) people who don’t want to protect me.
Take care of us y’all. We all we got.
I love you and you can’t do $%!? about it.
—andru defeye
Flommist Andru Defeye is the Guerrilla Poet Laureate of Sacramento. Copyright © 2022 Andru Defeye.
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