{"id":10872,"date":"2021-10-14T13:23:48","date_gmt":"2021-10-14T11:23:48","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/oeb.global\/oeb-insights\/?p=10872"},"modified":"2021-10-14T13:23:49","modified_gmt":"2021-10-14T11:23:49","slug":"critical-resilience","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/oeb.global\/oeb-insights\/critical-resilience\/","title":{"rendered":"Critical Resilience"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<div class=\"wp-block-image\"><figure class=\"alignleft size-large is-resized\"><a href=\"https:\/\/oeb.global\/oeb-insights\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/10\/2020-11-1516-57-33.237008-SeanMichaelMorris.jpeg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/oeb.global\/oeb-insights\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/10\/2020-11-1516-57-33.237008-SeanMichaelMorris-1024x1024.jpeg\" alt=\"\" class=\"wp-image-11202\" width=\"283\" height=\"283\" srcset=\"https:\/\/oeb.global\/oeb-insights\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/10\/2020-11-1516-57-33.237008-SeanMichaelMorris-1024x1024.jpeg 1024w, https:\/\/oeb.global\/oeb-insights\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/10\/2020-11-1516-57-33.237008-SeanMichaelMorris-300x300.jpeg 300w, https:\/\/oeb.global\/oeb-insights\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/10\/2020-11-1516-57-33.237008-SeanMichaelMorris-768x768.jpeg 768w, https:\/\/oeb.global\/oeb-insights\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/10\/2020-11-1516-57-33.237008-SeanMichaelMorris-1536x1536.jpeg 1536w, https:\/\/oeb.global\/oeb-insights\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/10\/2020-11-1516-57-33.237008-SeanMichaelMorris-125x125.jpeg 125w, https:\/\/oeb.global\/oeb-insights\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/10\/2020-11-1516-57-33.237008-SeanMichaelMorris.jpeg 2025w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 283px) 100vw, 283px\" \/><\/a><\/figure><\/div>\n\n\n\n<p>Many years ago, when my father was still alive, he used to tell me to keep my chin up. I came out of the closet and divorced the person I\u2019d loved most in the world for ten years. \u201cKeep your chin up.\u201d I struggled through graduate school while working and paying bills, student loans growing beyond numbers that even made sense. \u201cKeep your chin up.\u201d Heartbreak. Job losses. New relationships and their inevitable end. Seismic changes to my family. Even my dad\u2019s own alcoholism. \u201cKeep. Your. Chin up.\u201d<br><br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>This was my father\u2019s way of teaching me resilience and hope. Resilience and hope are perpetually tied together, feeding each other every dark and difficult morning, at every roadblock, at the crossroads where they meet defeat and despair.<br><br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>My father was profoundly hopeful. Never the cynic, always imaginative about the possibilities of his own life. His was the hope of a pop song, the dappled dream that sustains so many in Hollywood and New York, the plan that, just around the corner from Wednesday or Thursday, will become reality. I was eight and my parents still married when he told me about the novel he was writing. The novel that, by the time I was eighteen and I\u2019d graduated high school, had become the seed of a screenplay. The screenplay that, when I was thirty-eight, I found sitting among unpaid bills on his roll-top desk after he died.<br><br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Alcoholism took his life. But day after day, year after year for at least thirty years, he worked on that one story. He never stopped believing the story could become something people read, a bestseller, or a movie that might see him one day walking the red carpet. He never lost hope. One could say, \u201che kept his chin up.\u201d His resilience and his hope were etched on those pages, even as his defeat and despair were evident in the disarray of his life.<br><br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Paulo Freire writes that \u201c\u2018My hope is not enough!\u2019 No, my hope is necessary, but it is not enough. Alone, it does not win. But without it, my struggle will be weak and wobbly. We need critical hope the way a fish needs unpolluted water\u201d (<em>Pedagogy of Hope<\/em>, 2). Hope, he says, \u201cis so important to our existence, individual and social, that we must take every care not to experience it in a mistaken form, and thereby allow it to slip into hopelessness and despair\u201d (3). Inside these quotes lies a wicked balance. Hope on the razor\u2019s edge of hopelessness, with only our criticality to keep us from tumbling over that edge. \u201cCritical\u201d hope, Freire calls it. A hope that knows the world it confronts rather than looking glassily forward, wishful without a grounding in practice.<br><br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>If hope and resilience are married, and there is a critical hope, then there must also be a <em>critical <\/em>resilience, just as there must be a \u201cresilience\u201d we experience in a mistaken form, which threatens to slip into defeat. A friend of mine spoke of this latter resilience, that which is mistaken for critical resilience. He said to me: \u201cI don\u2019t see myself as resilient. I don\u2019t get up every day ready to take on new challenges, despite the setbacks, despite my disability. I get up every day and keep working <em>because I didn\u2019t die <\/em>whilst I slept.\u201d<br><br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In these words, my friend is expressing that one person\u2019s resilience is no more than another person\u2019s dogged resignation; that, as long as he lives and as long as there is work to be done, he will get up each day and keep working. But this is a resilience that, at any moment\u2019s notice, can slip into despair. Dogged resignation, or keeping your chin up, has its place in the world, can get us through many difficult times\u2014has, I would argue, gotten us through the first years of this pandemic\u2014but resilience, <em>critical<\/em> resilience, must be something else.<br><br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>*<\/strong><br><br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>When I think about resilience, I think first of the way that the concept has been misused, or at least misunderstood. In academe and business, I think <em>resilience<\/em> has been appropriated from those whose lives require it by those privileged enough to pontificate about it. I think it has been stolen, much like the ideas of <em>decolonisation<\/em> and <em>equity<\/em>, in order to spur a dialogue that only results in a.) a rubric for successful resilience, and b.) a lot of back-patting by those who would like to call themselves resilient. Who would like to see their troubles as metonyms for others\u2019 troubles. The rhetoric of resilience is, in so many ways, nothing more than metonymic, standing in for an argument for the status quo.<br><br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>After a catastrophe like the COVID-19 pandemic (and I say \u201cafter\u201d with extreme caution as every light at the end of the tunnel so far has turned out to be a torch in the darkness), the resilience we hope for, or that so many earnestly need, is a return to normal. We want a party at the end of this horrible thing we\u2019ve all been through, a celebration of our resilience, a new New Year\u2019s Eve or Mardi Gras, a reason to throw caution to the wind because we have been so cautious for so very long. Resilience, the <em>grit<\/em> we\u2019ve shown, needs a payoff. And that payoff is the normal, the status quo we so cherished without ever knowing how much.<br><br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>This <em>resilience <\/em>offers us a promise of closure. We accomplished the thing, we made it through the trial, we graduated, we lived through the divorce, we didn\u2019t die when so many around us did die. We wait for the thing to pass. We welcome the chance to rest. We long for the labour of working under the pressure of the unimaginable to ease. So we can shop without a mask, or start dating again, or get back to Puerto Vallarta. We summoned our resilience, and we deserve a reward.<br><br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In truth, though, resilience is not something one has. Resilience is something one does. And doing it once changes behaviour ongoingly. That person who does resilience is not bearing down, not pushing through, not \u201cgetting it done\u201d\u2014they are changing the landscape of what is possible.<br><br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>To do resilience is to recognise that nothing stays the same. When the world around us changes radically, resilience is the willingness to engage in the new. Resilience is not persistence. It is not grit. It is creativity, criticality, engagement, and imagination. The resilient person knows when they are tired, knows when they can\u2019t take another step\u2014and what makes them resilient is not that they take the next step, but that they reimagine what stepping looks like, they recognise the power and usefulness of being tired, the reason for it. Resilience is productive, generative, and blasphemous.<br><br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Why blasphemous? Critical resilience does no looking back, no reminiscing on the structures and policies and practices that came before the catastrophe. Critical resilience recognises, even before the catastrophe, that those structures and policies and practices never would hold against the unexpected. The critically resilient person has always relied more on creativity, community, and care\u2014those human characteristics that are needed during a catastrophe like this pandemic, and that were needed before, and that will be necessary after\u2014instead of placing any faith in the way things have always been done. The critically resilient person is <em>always<\/em> resilient because the world is always unstable. Because what is not known is so much greater than what is known and holds far more potential too.<br><br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Once upon a time, bell hooks left to go to school at a majority white university. Before she became the bell hooks who wrote <em>Teaching to Transgress, Teaching Community<\/em>, and other volumes of stories that are not how white people measure education, she left to go to college and her mother told her: \u201cYou can take what the white people have to offer, but you do not have to love them.\u201d<br><br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In \u201c<a href=\"https:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44111660?seq=5#metadata_info_tab_contents\">Choosing the Margin as a Space of Radical Openness<\/a>,\u201d hooks takes her mother\u2019s words as a caution against conformity.<br><br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>\u201cShe was saying that it is not necessary to give yourself over to them to learn \u2026 she knew that I might be faced again and again with situations where I would be \u2018tried,\u2019 made to feel as though a central requirement of my being accepted would mean participation in this system of exchange to ensure my success, my \u2018making it.\u2019\u201d<br><br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Or, even more to the point: \u201cShe was speaking about colonisation and the reality of what it means to be taught in a culture of domination by those who dominate.\u201d <sup>(36)<\/sup><br><br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The way I interpret this\u2014from my lens as a gay, disabled man, but also a white man\u2014is that the resilience hooks enacts through her going to school is her <em>remaining Black<\/em>, remaining at the margins; and more, reimagining the margins as a fruitful landscape, one across which brilliance and knowledge flows. Resilience, in this case, is recognising the value of your own nature despite those who wish to change it and thriving even in a culture of domination.<br><br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>To those who dominate, this resilience blasphemes the status quo, the normal. This is resilience that rocks the boat\u2014but not in the way of setting it to rocking, rather in the way of revealing that it has been rocking all along. Critical resilience, like critical hope, looks at the world honestly, the way it actually is, and moves to move it forward.<br><br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>*<\/strong><br><br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>But here\u2019s thing: not everyone has been afforded the conditions under which to exert critical resilience. Where I may be able to speak and write about resilience, I do so under conditions of privilege. It is a privilege I was both born into as a white cisgender American male, and a privilege which I toiled to achieve after growing up poor with an undiagnosed disability. Sure, I\u2019ve been resilient at times, even <em>critically <\/em>resilient, but my resilience is enacted from a social location where I am not endangered.<br><br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Critical resilience only works if we are able to be uncomfortable without being endangered; otherwise, human resilience is reduced to an effort to survive. When we must work to just survive, we may have hope, we may reach for resilience, but it is our doggedness and resignation that will get us out of bed each morning. Hardship doesn\u2019t breed resilience. Hardship only breeds hardship.<br><br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Resilience isn\u2019t about overcoming, but about <em>becoming<\/em>. And everyone must be afforded the respect, the right, the room in their lives to become what they will.<br><br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>For educators\u2014and for anyone concerned with the project of education; that is, the raising of critical consciousness for the betterment of all human beings\u2014this means providing classroom spaces where students can cultivate their imaginations toward greater understanding of their world and their own capacities. It means identifying the structures and policies and practices that hinder <em>becoming<\/em>, that instead insist that children and learners of all ages must <em>overcome<\/em> to succeed. If we are to cultivate resilience in each other (and we must, for there is no future for humanity based upon the individual), we must create communities that are diverse, dispersed, multivalent, and at the margins. Everyone must feel welcome to test their mettle in the most productive, brilliant ways possible.<br><br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>We must all ask ourselves: Who is resilient for us? And for whom are we resilient?<br><br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>*<\/strong><br><br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>One final note: In the world we have now, the world we\u2019ve made of viruses and climate change, anti-intellectualism and authoritarianism, we do not need systems that hold things in place. We should have no use for the status quo. It hasn\u2019t served us. It hasn\u2019t served us during the pandemic, it hasn\u2019t served us in our response to the climate crisis. It doesn\u2019t ward off authoritarianism or educate anyone. The status quo hasn\u2019t contributed to the world we are leaving our children.<br><br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>We have to create systems that threaten us. Because systems that threaten us respond honestly to the world we have, and to the vibrant, irreducible, unimaginably creative resilience of which we are capable. As Jesse Stommel writes, \u201cOur ability to develop community will depend on our willingness to continue feeling joy, having epiphanies, asking hard questions, and sharing our curiosity with one another\u201d (\u201c<a href=\"https:\/\/www.beautiful.ai\/player\/-Mj6CyTtXEknSRrgv0f1\/Designing-for-Care-Spokane\">Designing for Care<\/a>\u201d). Only when we keep ourselves on the edge\u2014not the comfortable edge of technology and privilege, of trends and innovation, but the discomfiting edge of a pursuit of equity and compassion, of being wrong and being humble in the face of new knowledge and ways of knowing that we\u2019ve marginalised\u2014only then will we truly harness what we are capable of. It will only be out of systems that threaten us, practices that make us nervous, discoveries that bewilder us and which no one can capture under a trademark, that we will solve the problems we face.<br><br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Written for OEB21 by Conference Keynote Speaker <strong><em><a href=\"https:\/\/oeb.global\/conference#keynotes\">Sean Michael Morris<\/a><\/em><\/strong>, Director, Digital Pedagogy Lab &amp; Editor,&nbsp;Hybrid Pedagogy at University of Colorado Denver.<br><br><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Many years ago, when my father was still alive, he used to tell me to keep my chin up. I came out of the closet and divorced the person I\u2019d loved most in the world for ten years. \u201cKeep your chin up.\u201d I struggled through graduate school while working and paying bills, student loans growing [&hellip;]<\/p>\n<div class='heateorSssClear'><\/div><div  class='heateor_sss_sharing_container heateor_sss_horizontal_sharing' data-heateor-sss-href='https:\/\/oeb.global\/oeb-insights\/critical-resilience\/' data-heateor-sss-no-counts=\"1\"><div class='heateor_sss_sharing_title' style=\"font-weight:bold\" ><\/div><div class=\"heateor_sss_sharing_ul\"><a aria-label=\"Linkedin\" class=\"heateor_sss_button_linkedin\" href=\"https:\/\/www.linkedin.com\/sharing\/share-offsite\/?url=https%3A%2F%2Foeb.global%2Foeb-insights%2Fcritical-resilience%2F\" title=\"Linkedin\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\" style=\"font-size:32px!important;box-shadow:none;display:inline-block;vertical-align:middle\"><span class=\"heateor_sss_svg heateor_sss_s__default 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