I spent the end of last week reminding myself what it means to relax. I donāt know if youāre in that mode, it being summer and all, but I struggle, sometimes, to just rest. I love the rush. I love being busy. I love having to-do lists, obligations, responsibilities, and plans. But sometimes itās so hard to detach from that lifestyle, to be centered in the moment and put work aside.
I think itās even harder when my āworkā isnāt really work at all. I love writing, connecting, sharing my heart through social media. But this passion can make it difficult to draw a line between when Iām working, or just living in the present. And this past weekend I tried to be a bit better about that. I tried to log off, to unplug. I listened to music, didnāt even record for my favorite DJ because I wanted to watch the whole thing in the moment and not behind a screen. I didnāt wake up at the crack of dawn to write. I slept in, I talked, I sat at a coffee shop and sipped on a cold drink and pet a dog and took deep breaths. As silly as this sounds, sometimes itās hard for me.
Do you ever feel so inundated with information, articles, blogs, lists, LIFE that you forget how to live it?
Anyways, all that is to say I didnāt get around to sharing my reading list until today, but hereās what Iāve really ruminated on over the last week. Reading together and sharing thoughts connects us culturally, globally, spiritually, academically, etc. So I hope you always feel welcomed to comment and take part in the discussion.
1.
This week, what has challenged and encouraged me the most is the variety of articles Iāve read on feminism and amplifying women, like this piece from GirlBoss.
Just last week, I published an article about women stepping into their inner power after a conversation with Lucinda Hanover: bossbabe, feminist, and CEO of Lumeri. We talked about this exact termāamplifying womenāand what means in the workplace. This article by GirlBoss mirrors that exact concept.
Amplifying is the process of reiterating what a woman says and bringing attention to her thoughts in a way that forces others (especially males) to listen.
āItās actually pretty simple. When a woman makes an important point or suggestion in a meeting, but that point is either ignored or immediately shot down, other women at the table repeat the first womanās idea, giving clear support and credit to its source.
For example, you might say something like the following: āIād like to go back to what Kristin said previously. This idea was strong because it provided a number of viable solutions that deal with our problem at the source level. I second her approach and can offer a few ways to help make it happen.ā Not only does this force male coworkers to listen to their female coworkers, it keeps them from taking credit for ideas that arenāt theirs.ā
I love this tactic because itās subtle, but powerful. Personally, I think thatās the most effective way to get a point across. When people (esp. women in this case!) are calm and collected, it shows that there is a silent battle happening instead of a destructive, outward one. Reading this article in conjunction with the powerful interview with Lucinda has really pushed me to take a look at my feminism, and see ways I can amplify women more in my everyday life.
2.
Are you a āclock-timerā or an āevent-timerā type of person? This interesting article explains what that is, and what the benefits of each are.
If youāre someone who depends on the time to plan out a day, for example, when itās noon you eat lunch, youāre probably a clock-timer person. If you are someone whoās more likely to eat when youāre hungryāregardless of the timeāyouāre an event-timer.
According to this article, āeach approach has its advantages ā clock-timersā ability to zoom out and think big-picture can make them more creative, for example, while event-timersā inward focus helps them to be more in touch with their emotions ā but one in particular sticks out: Event-timers seem to be significantly better at staying in the moment.ā
Iām intrigued. And now Iām thinking through my days, wondering where I fit, or if Iām a mix of both. What are you? What does this say about your lifestyle? #thoughtstoponder
3.
Iām particular intrigued by feminine leadership and the conversation surrounding that ābuzzterm,ā if you will. What does it mean to have a āfeminine vibeā in the workplace, and is that a good thing? This article explains perfectly.
āCan you imagine boardrooms, invention think tanks, and cancer research facilities full of women, infusing femininity into spaces that have been traditionally masculine for many, many years? (Note that weāre talking about archetypal āfeminineā and āmasculineā energies, rather than associated genders, as all humans can benefit from a resurgence of this particular energy. When we look to this archetypal āfeminineā vibe, we are talking about qualities such as intuitive decision-making, compassion, empathy, nurturing, and a fierce, protective heart.)
What would this look like?ā
I love that we are beginning to both define, and proudly own āfeminine energyā without pushing it away and saying itās too soft or weak. Iāve always believed that thereās a beauty to traditional āfeminineā vibes and seeing them come into play in a professional senseāand as empowermentāis huge!
Having a nurturing, āmotherly,ā or even delicate approach to business or career goals is not weak. There is power in feminine energy.
(More on this in that behind-the-scenes interview with Lucinda Hanover, if youāre interested.)
4.
A genre Iāve always been fascinated by is memoir. In this essay by Laura Haugen, memoir is explained as a search for the present in navigating an often unknown past. I really thought that was beautiful.
āNovelists, Vladimir Nabokov once said, are āmore fully at home on the surface of the present than in the ooze of the past.ā Great memoirists, on the other hand, are not fully at home in the present until they navigate their way through this ooze, searching for overlooked pathways and revisiting old landmarks with fresh eyes. They tread into the murkiness of past events and share where their memory or understanding falls short and where their probing and questioning begin.ā
Itās fascinating that in writing through the past, we create space for the present (and future) understanding of who we are and where weāve been.
5. With the ongoing conversation around #MeToo, this article, which talks about poetry and violence women face really struck a cord with me.
I think the hardest thing in writing about trauma is that it, in a sense, forces you to relieve some of the pain youāve experienced all over again. I think thatās why I find it so commendable when women write about things like rape or sexual assaultāeven aggressively. To me it feels like their way of claiming their bodies and lives back.
5.
Last, but not least, this poem by Rachel Mannheimer really spoke to me in terms of grief.
I think grief is universal, and as I was reading this poem, I couldnāt help but feel this speakerās anguish. She was talking about herself while talking about the deer. Thereās such a connection that we allāhuman or animalāexperience in this life, and itās both wonderful and heartbreaking that we can understand.
Feel free to catch up on past reading lists.
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Ā
Featured Image Credit: Kinga Cichewicz

