Truth hurts. So now what?
Courageous Wordsmith
English - December 30, 2020 20:34 - 29 minutes - 26.9 MB - ★★★★★ - 4 ratingsBooks Arts Religion & Spirituality Spirituality creativity writing stories spirituality creative writing life coach journaling healing through writing narratives story editor Homepage Download Apple Podcasts Google Podcasts Overcast Castro Pocket Casts RSS feed
Azna Amira was the first Black woman reporter for the Wall Street Journal. She's lived in Milwaukee, Atlanta, and Northfield, Minnesota—the town where we both attended Carleton College.
I met Azna in Northfield, where she returned to live following a reunion. She was among the first Black students, graduating the year I was born, and first to challenge prevailing white perspectives. Eighteen years later, Carleton was where I first had my white mindset challenged. So it felt like coming full circle to sort through this year's landmark events with her.
In Azna's words:
We've survived 2020, and—surprise!—graphically grasped the fatal flaws in our trusted institutions laid bare by the COVID-19 pandemic. Whew!
Radical change is necessary, but it seems to offer as much pain as promise. There's no "normal" to return to, so what do we do?
Well, what if we learn to TALK with those who seem so different from us? Maybe they're not as "crazy" as they are simply human. Demonizing others damns us all, but hearing hearts and minds through their STORIES might reveal much of value for all.
We are our stories, and our stories are US.