Radical, differentiated neighboring on a global scale as the solution to abuse and poverty.
Reader, Sometimes the greatest risk isnât necessarily moving towards someone across a divide. Itâs standing steady and speaking up in the middle of oneââto people on your side of itââ when every pressure inside and around you says, "Just shut your mouth and let it go." During the civil rights movement in the U.S., many white Southerners who personally opposed segregation kept it to themselvesâchoosing silent survival over public witness But some didnât. Some spoke outâârisking their jobs,...
Reader, Nervy neighboring doesn't just mean reaching toward others.It also means risking being known yourself. Not the polished or curated persona. Not the safe, likable representative of you. Not the version of you who has everything together. But the whole youâmessy, imperfect, hurting, disoriented, and in-progress. Viktor Frankl, in surviving the unspeakable horrors of Auschwitz, made a very deliberate choice: To feel. To notice beauty. To grieve. To choose an attitude. To hope. To be...
Reader, On Saturday, I shared how Neighboring Intelligence helps us engage the world with mercy, discernment, and a commitment to human dignity. When things feel off inside our own story, it takes intentionality and wisdom to stay grounded.But what about when the divide stretches between us and someone else? Neighboring doesn't often start with certainty.Mostly, it begins with riskâthe risk of reaching across a divide, of some size or another, that you have no guarantee will be bridged....
So, Reader, Yesterday, I told you about an interaction that felt offâ Not dramatic. Not overtly dangerous. Just ⌠wrong in a way and to a degree that it left my nervous system buzzing. And I told you how, instead of brushing it off or placating or dehumanizing anyone, I chose to trust myself. That choice didnât come from instinct alone. It came from something Iâve spent years learning to practiceââand now, finally have language for: đ§ đ Neighboring Intelligence Neighboring Intelligence is...
HeyReader, Have you ever walked away from an interaction that seemed normal on the outside... but left your body buzzing with discomfort? Maybe nothing was overtly âwrongâ.Maybe they were politeâmaybe you were.But still, something felt off? I was only a few hours into a five-day house and pet sit when a manâwho turned out to be a neighborâknocked on the front door and asked me to pass a tool along to the tenant living in the side unit. I stepped through the shared laundry room, knocked on the...
Reader, When someone neighbors you with mercy that defies logicâwithout demand, without fanfare, without controlâand then sticks with you for a leg of your journey even while you struggle to receive it, it changes you. It rewrites your instincts.It reawakens your desire to be a person who offers that same mercy to others. And it does something else, too. The opportunity to face our needâand learn how to receive mercyâmatters more than we think. Because if we canât see our own need, we wonât...
So, yay for mercy, right, Reader? Well, I wish I could say I received that mercy with open, unassuming hands and let it wash over me with abandon. That I was immediately revived as my aching soul rushed in to be held, welcoming their care and attention with grace and dignity. But the truth is that it set me to wrestle myself as my system rushed to titrate it. At times I clammed up and closed off from what was offered. Not because it wasnât good or kind or realâbut because I didnât have a...