What does power feel like, look like, sound like?
I felt powerful and free as a child, running in our backyard catching snakes and biking two blocks from home to the nearby university to gaze peacefully at the flowing water of the library fountain. Until a neighbor boy skidded his bike to a stop and pushed me into the frigid water.
This topic of power raises many more questions than answers for me. I am curious and questioning. Let’s look at some definitions of power.
Power is unequally distributed globally and in U.S. society; some individuals or groups wield greater power than others, thereby allowing them greater access and control over resources. Wealth, whiteness, citizenship, patriarchy, heterosexism, and education are a few key social mechanisms through which power operates. Although power is often conceptualized as power over other individuals or groups, other variations are power with (used in the context of building collective strength) and power within (which references an individual's internal strength). Learning to 'see' and understand relations of power is vital to organizing for progressive social change.”
The last few years have drawn my attention to the fragility of power, as displayed in the willingness to stop at nothing to keep power and to look away when power is wielded unjustly. Power is closed off and self-protective. It demands respect and acts defensive, impersonal, and inauthentic. Power is violent; whether overt or cloyingly subtle. From nooses hung outside the US. Capitol a few short weeks ago, to making it illegal to hand out water to those waiting in a voting queue. From a leader publicly denouncing the anti-racism committee’s efforts because whiteness is named, to the leader that will not allow the collection of exit data regarding Black and Brown employees for fear of what it will uncover. From the white woman demanding to see the boss to an organization writing anti-racist public statements without working toward justice and equity of its internal systems and leadership practices and mindsets. Do you see power moves as leaders act unaware yet wield power mightily?
Power is a hierarchy. The more you have it, the more you protect it. Does it have to be this way?
Power moves may not always be nefarious, but the inequitable byproducts are horrific: no federal law banning lynching, anti-racism committees run by consensus that serve to protect the comfort of the majority, refusal to consider one’s whiteness, lack of accurate hiring or exit data by race, and tone policing or silencing those that speak out about oppression. The examples are endless.
Not many people overtly disagree with the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Junior’s definition of power found above. We love to tout the myth of ubiquitous opportunities to shape our lives and the world around us. Our situatedness in identities that bring power, or lack thereof, tell a different, more accurate story.
I glance at my identities on the Wheel of Power/Privilege by Sylvia Duckworth. I come face to face with my power, based on a horrific hierarchy. I sit face to face with a majority of privileged identities and very few marginalized identities, while many people still claim equal opportunity and deny the existence of this hierarchy. I work to deconstruct, to hold up the mirror, to see power and marginalization more clearly.
The ever-present question: how do we use our power for good instead of evil?
How are you increasing awareness of your power? Where do you see components of your intersectional identities of power or marginalization? How are you working to disrupt power dynamics and center marginalized people without acting as their saviors?
Fellow leaders and learners, I wish you courage and resilience for the journey.
Peace to you,
What I’m Reading
Regarding Power:
Questions for Consideration
Regarding Power:
Upcoming
Leadership & Learning Topics: