by Donna Butts
No one told Martin Luther King Jr. he was too young to change the world.
Even without the aid of today's digital tools, he led a movement when
he was 26. Young and old joined his causes, marching together for
social justice and economic equality. Today, ordinary citizens are still
reaching across race, class and age, often using social media to demand
a world with opportunity for all King once envisioned.
To keep the momentum going, we need to take a psychologist's approach
to how we see America's psyche and confirm our diagnosis before we can
move forward with a solution. That's how King was able to accomplish
what he did, according to Dr. Jennifer Leigh Selig, who chairs the
Jungian & Archetypal Studies department at Pacifica Graduate
Institute in Carpinteria, California.
"His treatment of the country paralleled Karen Horney's treatment of
the neurotic: he helped his client -- the country -- to see the gap
between her ideal self and her real self," according to Selig's paper,
"The Unfinished Mission of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr." "He used marches
and protests and demonstrations to bring America's shadow to the surface
where she could no longer deny its existence, and then... he offered
her specific redemptive measures she could take toward healing and
wholeness."
Now, nearly 60 years since the Montgomery Bus Boycotts -- when King
reenergized the civil rights struggle -- our ways of bringing America's
shadow to the surface is a far cry from picket signs and marches.
Today's "depth psychologists" -- as Selig would call them - are online,
organizing through social media sites like Facebook and Twitter.
read the full article at the Huffington Post
Showing posts with label humanity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label humanity. Show all posts
Thursday, January 23, 2014
Monday, December 30, 2013
Let's Raise Our Grand Voices in Support of Children and Families
co-authored by Drs. Mary Catherine Bateson and Joan Lombardi
Nelson Mandela left his mark on his country and the world, dedicating his life to justice and equality.
We want to talk about a cause that Mandela championed: The Elders, an independent group of global leaders, chaired by former UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan and whose members include, among others, former Presidents Jimmy Carter, Mary Robinson (Ireland) and Ernesto Zedillo (Mexico).
Six years after Mandela launched this group, with help from other leaders from South Africa and around the world, The Elders continue to promote the shared interests of humanity by working on issues ranging from climate justice to promoting equality between men and women to ending conflict in the Middle East to political reform and peace-building processes in Myanmar.
The Elders set up a strategic 2014-17 framework with the hope of establishing a just and inclusive global community for future generations, one free from fear and want.
read the full article at the Huffington Post
Nelson Mandela left his mark on his country and the world, dedicating his life to justice and equality.
We want to talk about a cause that Mandela championed: The Elders, an independent group of global leaders, chaired by former UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan and whose members include, among others, former Presidents Jimmy Carter, Mary Robinson (Ireland) and Ernesto Zedillo (Mexico).
Six years after Mandela launched this group, with help from other leaders from South Africa and around the world, The Elders continue to promote the shared interests of humanity by working on issues ranging from climate justice to promoting equality between men and women to ending conflict in the Middle East to political reform and peace-building processes in Myanmar.
The Elders set up a strategic 2014-17 framework with the hope of establishing a just and inclusive global community for future generations, one free from fear and want.
read the full article at the Huffington Post
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