Apr
2
2020
Written by Deepa Iyer. This article is cross-listed on Medium.com.
I am a rapid responder but over the past few weeks as the coronavirus pandemic has spread across the world, I have felt disoriented and lost.
Quick Links: If you want to skip the context, you can download the resources on the left.
In the wake of 9/11, I built my rapid response muscle, and over the past twenty years, I’ve relied on it to spring into action and respond to crises by supporting community-centered campaigns, interventions, and mobilizations. But lately, I’ve been stuck in a fog, cycling through periods of motivation and stillness, outrage and exhaustion, determination and grief. Even though I’m connected to various networks, mentors, and organizations, I couldn’t figure out where I fit in, what my lane was, or how to begin.
What is slowly awakening and centering me is my broader ecosystem. As I listen to and understand what others are doing and how they are (re)imagining what is possible in this moment, I have been reflecting and asking myself: what are my values, how can I be aligned and in right relationship with them, what are the needs of the communities who anchor me, and what can I offer with my full energy?
Identifying the right actions in times of crisis requires reflection, and it’s in that spirit that I’m offering a new version of a mapping exercise that helps us identify our roles in a social change ecosystem. The map (below and in PDF here) includes new roles that I’ve learned about through workshops and trainings. I’ve also developed a reflection guide (PDF here) that goes with the map. Together, the map and reflection guide can be used at an individual level to reflect, assess, and plan, as well as at staff and board retreats, team-building meetings, orientations, and strategy sessions. This exercise can especially be helpful to re-align ourselves when we feel lost, confused, and uncertain in order to bring our fullest selves to the causes and movements that matter to us.
As the pandemic crisis unfolds, I am inspired by the healers on the front lines of emergency rooms and triage stations, the weavers who are connecting the current crisis to the climate, the economy, and racial justice, the builders who are organizing mutual aid collectives, the caregivers who are sewing homemade masks and dropping meals off to elders, and the storytellers who are reminding us of how our planet and our people have survived over time.
Please feel free to adapt the framework and guide to suit your individual and organizational needs and goals. Duplication permitted with attribution (Deepa Iyer, SolidarityIs and Building Movement Project). I’d love to hear from you if you’ve used this framework; you can reach me at Deepa Iyer ([email protected]) and @dviyer on Twitter. Gratitude to Shelby House for her help with this framework.