Being Great

c12ae12f-36b2-42bc-ac25-8f77be55cb50PHOTO: by Mashable
Teammates Eli Harold, left, and Eric Reid, right, joined Kaepernick, center, in kneeling before a 49ers game.

Day 5 Kwanzaa

Principle #5 Nia (Purpose): To make our collective vocation the building and developing of our community in order to restore people to their traditional greatness.

This principle calls us to the practice of building and developing ourselves in our own interests as well as in the interests of the world, seeing greatness in the good we do and share in the world.

I am not a fan of any sports. I especially am not a fan of football, for too many reasons to name here. Despite my stand on professional sports, I have become a fan of  Colin Kaepernick. He ignited a movement by sitting, then kneeling during the national anthem as a method for protesting the killings of unarmed African-American men by police.

I admire that he stood up and put everything on the line, whether I agree with how he did it or not.

“I am not going to stand up to show pride in a flag for a country that oppresses black people and people of color. To me, this is bigger than football and it would be selfish on my part to look the other way.”

Various members of the NFL and other athletes across the country, such as Megan Rapinoe, also began kneeling.

I measure folks not by the money or status they may have but how they step up and serve their community. True greatness is measured by good deeds. It’s measured by how we handle adversary, how we stand up for those with less than us and how we never leave people behind as we ourselves move forward.

Slow, Deep, Irreversible Work

Hey y'all! My friend, April Baskin, was on a panel in San Francisco recently and was talking about white supremacy, anti-semitism, and anti-Black racism. April mentioned a quote from an artist and organizer, Ricardo Levins Morales: “The work we do should be slow,...

Soft with each other hard on systems

Hello friends! Last week, I had the privilege and honor of speaking on two different panels about how the systems we find ourselves in are hard on every one of us. They are hard on us emotionally, physically, socially, and spiritually. Yet, we continue to fight to...

Is it ok to celebrate an inch? Takeaways from 2023

Hi y’all,  A theme we've seen throughout the year with our clients is folks feeling disheartened because their DEI and racial equity work didn’t make as much progress as they’d hoped. We’ve watched staff managing the fallout from layoffs, funding gaps, resource...