The Invisible Backpack is an analogy originally developed by anti-racism activist Peggy McIntosh. Members of a majority culture, like straight white men like me, benefit in many ways from the privileges that accrue to them. This kind of privilege becomes so pervasive that it feels normal, and in fact doesn’t feel like anything at all. This is dangerous because it can lead us to believe that racism, sexism, and other exclusionary -isms either don’t exist at all or are not that big a deal. The glib response of a white person saying “All Lives Matter” to a black person saying “Black Lives Matter” is an example of how the invisible impacts of privilege can cause us to perpetuate systematic racism.
Monthly Archives: July 2016
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Important, But Not Urgent
What is important is not urgent, and what is urgent is rarely important. – Dwight D. Eisenhower
Take a minute to think about the typical activities that make up your day. Where would each one fit on the matrix above? A lot of us find ourselves spending a lot of our time working on things that are coming at us. They hit our inbox and we feel the pull to respond and deal with them right away. Continue reading
Johari Window
What is it?
The Johari Window is a visual depiction of what we and others know and don’t know about us. A classic four-square grid, it has two categories on each axis. Along one side are those things that are known to us or known to others. Along the other side are things that are know to ourselves or not known to ourselves.