Introduction to the Inner Field Trip Podcast

Inner Field Trip® - Ein Podcast von Leesa Renée Hall

After a 13-year hiatus from podcasting, Leesa Renée Hall is back with the Inner Field Trip podcast. In this episode, Leesa shares what’s to come in Season 1. She shares what the Inner Field Trip is and who benefits the most going on one. In particular, here’s what you’ll learn:How Leesa’s background in podcasting prepared her for the work she does todayThe reason why her work is directed to Highly Sensitive People and Deep FeelersWhy marches, protests, and sit-ins don’t work for Highly Sensitive People and what they can do insteadThe reason why anti-racism or anti-bias work cannot be undone in one meeting or workshopWhy #BlackLivesMatter doesn’t mean painting the words on a city street and what people of African descent are truly asking forWhy Leesa is NOT an anti-racism educator and why her body of work encompasses more than just critiquing skin colour privilegeWhat perspective Leesa uses to help us understand the origins of our unconscious biases (including the two educators who helped create her deep interest in this discipline)How a teacher’s denial of chattel slavery in Leesa’s Grade 10 American history class influenced her to be #SilentNoMoreWhy uncovering how her mother got a French last name on an English-speaking Caribbean island sparked Leesa’s deep interest in uncovering her lineageThe nuance of Leesa’s complex ancestry and how she resolved being the child of the oppressed and the oppressorsWhy having NO biological children is NOT an excuse not to have 7th generation thinking, as coined by the Iroquois peopleHow the tragedy of Hurricane Hazel that hit Toronto in 1954 changed a bylaw that generations today benefit from (an example of 7th generation thinking)Why the inner work of exploring unconscious biases is neither glamourous or pretty, and why you need to have the courage to get messyClick here for show notes and lighted edited episode transcripts Get Exclusive Guided Prompts on Patreon Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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