Tara Brach speaks to what she calls the shadow side of “woke” culture.
She reflects on how our attention can become fixated on individual perpetrators of harm, directing outrage solely at specific figures, while overlooking the deeper systems that continuously produce and protect them. When we only locate the problem in individuals, the underlying structures, patriarchy, hiera...
Tara Brach speaks to what she calls the shadow side of “woke” culture.
She reflects on how our attention can become fixated on individual perpetrators of harm, directing outrage solely at specific figures, while overlooking the deeper systems that continuously produce and protect them. When we only locate the problem in individuals, the underlying structures, patriarchy, hierarchy, domination, and cultures of silence, remain intact.
Tara invites us into a more courageous emotional honesty. Anger, she suggests, is not something to bypass or suppress. When we allow ourselves to feel the full truth of this moment, anger can become a doorway, not toward punishment, but toward grief. And grief, in turn, can open the possibility for real repair.
Anger can clarify what matters.
Grief can reconnect us to care.
Together, they can move us toward meaningful change.
Her words offer a reminder that transformation asks us to confront the systems that normalize harm, and to stay present enough with our feelings that they can guide us toward accountability, healing, and structural change.
from The Architecture of Silence in Spiritual Culture conversation
#TaraBrach #ArchitectureOfSilence #CollectiveHealing
#StructuralChange #ShadowWork #TruthTelling
#SANDCommunity
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