How Activists Organize Self Care and Collective Care?: Difference between revisions
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* Self-care can be just be hanging out with friends, spending time alone, really whatever brings you pleasure. | * Self-care can be just be hanging out with friends, spending time alone, really whatever brings you pleasure. | ||
* Most of us have a hard time practicing self-care. | * Most of us have a hard time practicing self-care. It's not relatable to everyone, because everyone comes from different cultural contexts. Also, as activists don't know how to ask for help. | ||
* Friend means different things to different people. When I need help in physical space is very difficult. |
Revision as of 15:17, 30 April 2020
- Activists feel guilty for taking a break and selfish. They also feel this pressure from the network.
- Our notion of what is self-care makes us think its a certain group of things: yoga, meditation, shopping, etc This is enforced by social media, which has made it a multi-million industry.
- Many of us now think we can't afford it. However, we need to unpack what it means to self-care. Its individual prefernces and related to pleasure. In this context, women and LGTBQ groups have been denied pleasure. So what does this mean for us?
- Self-care can be just be hanging out with friends, spending time alone, really whatever brings you pleasure.
- Most of us have a hard time practicing self-care. It's not relatable to everyone, because everyone comes from different cultural contexts. Also, as activists don't know how to ask for help.
- Friend means different things to different people. When I need help in physical space is very difficult.