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Dear Exchange Community,
Nimah Gobir, in a recent MindShift article
writes about the detrimental effects of focusing too much on positivity during times of stress and grief. She offers this story:
“When Arléne Casimir was teaching during the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, she experienced a school system that wanted teachers to put on a brave face for young students. It didn’t work. ‘And teachers were having nervous breakdowns. There was not a time to pause and witness what was happening to us,’ says Casimir. ‘I often asked myself, Who takes care of the caretakers? Who nurtures the nurturers?'
Casimir focused on how taking care of herself enabled her to show up better for her students. She directed her attention towards ‘inner work,’ namely cultivating her core values of integrity and authenticity. She examined how her lived experience, culture and past school experiences shape the way that she shows up in the classroom.”
Gobir uses the term “toxic positivity” to refer to “a phenomenon that was acute during the COVID-19 pandemic – in which people focus on the good and reject the bad in a way that is unrealistic and borders on gaslighting.”
We at Exchange know how disheartening it can be to think something is behind us, such as the worst of the pandemic, only to have it return as Covid cases are spiking again with the Delta variant. So we will be careful not to practice toxic positivity. This is a challenging time and we acknowledge that. We see your hard work, we honor your courage, and we urge you to allow your feelings to be whatever they need to be right now.
Please know that we are here. We offer our support and our caring,
The Exchange Team
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