To Feel Each Other's Pain
This is episode 7 of “Thinking Will,” but it is also the first part of a new series called “Thinking With.” Here, I think with Gregory Hicks about this question: how can we get to a place where we feel sadness each time another person is hurt (regardless of that person’s race, class, or cultural background)? Obviously, if we are asking this question then we are currently living in a time when this doesn’t happen. In the recent wake caused by the failure to hold Breonna Taylor’s killers accountable for their actions, the pain of our current reality is palpable and raw. Greg and I think through this reality together and work toward a list of activities that people can try to help us arrive at a place of greater empathy and caring.
Christen Rinaldi of Insight-Owl Counseling and Wellness discusses the fusion of Reiki and clinical mental health practice.
Ash Canty of Sovereign Spirit Death Care talks with will about his/their calling as a Death Walker, the bigness of the One, and the beauty of all the things we can barely understand.
Kicking off Season 2, Will thinks with highly decorated poet, performer, and sound artist Dr. Jonah Mixon-Webster
A thinking sessions for all the scholars out there. Will talks with theatre historiographer Pannill Camp about the intellectual underpinnings of his current book project.A thinking sessions for all the scholars out there. Will talks with theatre historiographer Pannill Camp about the intellectual underpinnings of his current book project.
An amazing linking-together of scholarly texts, close-readings of The Sopranos, and visions of a Chicago-based work of street theatre that centers the day-to-day experience of Palestinian Americans.
How can we get to a place where we feel sadness each time another person is hurt (regardless of that person’s race, class, or cultural background)? Listen to Greg and Will think through this question together.
Aligned with the international organization Performance Philosophy, Will helps explain the upcoming conference’s key theme: Problems. A problem is not something to be solved. Rather, it is something like the generative matrix that continues to inform all scholarly thought and/or artistic expression.
It is getting harder and harder to have productive, critical conversations with people who occupy different ideological stances than our own. What are we going to do about this? How can we meaningful talk with others?
The title of this episode draws inspiration from Nina Simone’s song, “Mississippi, Goddamn!”, the fire of which fuels Priya and Will as they think about intersections of grief, race, gender, oppression, and joy.