Returning: Deep Reciprocity from the Dig Intensive

15825888_10102895846137922_8205230617123903449_nLast night was the first session of the Brilliance Remastered online Dig: Womanist Archeologies Intensive.  We offered up our layers, listed everything we could recognize about ourselves and then asked, what’s under that? And what’s under that? We made a space for our multi-layered muddy dirty water reservoir secret cave core of the earth selves to be present.  We gave ourselves permission to learn from every layer of our being.  We grave dug for the relationships to work that haunt us, through the legacies of Zora Neale Hurston’s fear of being forgotten and craving a “cemetery for the illustrious negro dead” through to Alice Walker who bemoaned the “mountain of work” ahead of her generation which she felt must work “as if we are the last generation capable of work” so that their books and dead bodies wouldn’t be lost to history like Zora’s was until that same Alice Walker went digging for her.   We looked at what it might mean to be grateful for the major work our elders and ancestors did in order to make themselves legible to us in print while at the same time not taking on a tradition of working ourselves to death or in a way that harms our relationships in practice.   Pause right there.   Deep breath.

We thought about the moment when Akasha Hull challenged a room of hardworking black feminists gathered at the Feminist Poetics Conference in honor of June Jordan to consider loneliness and whether it might be time to focus on our relationships more than the tangible objects (like books, essays and manifestas) and historical victories we have cherished thus far.

(You can watch the livestream of that amazing conference organized by Mecca Jamilah Sullivan here by the way: http://feministpoetics.blogspot.com/)

We excavated the layers of labor in our lives.  We shifted “working like there is no tomorrow” (a phrase in Barbara and Beverly Smith’s collection of black feminist letters) into a serious question about what on our long work lists we would still do if there literally was no tomorrow.   We gave ourselves permission to evolve.  We gave ourselves permission to let go.  We turned mountains of work into rivers of reciprocity and recognized intergenerational urgency as a gift, instead of a burden.   We took responsibility for a present and a future where we honor the hard work of previous generations by working softer and with more intimacy than we thought was possible.

And we wrote you a poem about the deep reciprocity this type of layered lovework takes. See if you can take on one of these mottos and refine your day with it.

If you want to be on the email list for future online and in-person intensives join that number here: http://eepurl.com/bsb6rj

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returning: deep reciprocity  

by the participants in the Dig: Womanist Archeologies Intensive

 

my motto

as I live and learn

is dig and be dug

in return”

-Langston Hughes

 

 

love and be loved

in return

inspire and be inspired

in return

see and be seen

in return

shine and be shown

in return

dig inside and be discovered

in return

change and be changed

in return

connect and be connected

in return

give and be delighted

in return

move and be energized

in return

fly and be fly

in return

meditate and be grounded

in return

release and be peaceful

in return

stand up and be visible

in return

speak and be heard

in return

listen and be wiser

in return

gather and be community

in return

write and be with everyone

in return

write and be fulfilled

in return

practice and be impractical

in return

breathe and be free

in return

praise and be danced

in return

dance and be embraced

in return

rock and be rocked

in return

touch and be touched

in return

kiss and be kissed

in return

nurture and be fed

in return

cook and be nourished

in return

dig and be found

in return

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