Senior Producer & Editor: David Albright
Producer: Jessica Jones
Contributor: April Lawson
Artist in Residence: Gangstagrass
Cover Art & Graphics: Katelin Annes
Publishing Support: Mike Casentini
Show Notes: Ben Caron
Featured Song: “The Quiet Voice” by Alex Wong and Elise Hayes
A Braver Way is a production of Braver Angels.
We get financial support from the M.J. Murdock Charitable Trust and Reclaim Curiosity.
Submit a question: If you’ve found yourself mulling on a concern or reflection as you’ve listened, turn it into a question and share it with us in a quick email to abraverway@braverangels.org. Mónica and friends will be answering questions on an upcoming episode.
Subscribe: If you like what you’ve heard, hit subscribe, and leave us a 5 star review!
Share this episode: https://braverangels.org/a-braver-way-episode-5/
Follow us: Instagram | X/ twitter | TikTok | Youtube
Join our text line: Text “brave” to 206-926-9955 to join
- AllSides.com– AllSides Technologies Inc. strengthens our democratic society with balanced news, media bias ratings, diverse perspectives, and real conversation.
- Rehumanize International– is a nonprofit human rights organization dedicated to creating a culture of peace and life. They seek an end to all aggressive violence against humans through education, discourse, and action.
Mojica explains “somatics” and the relationship between trauma and the body [04:19]
- Mojica: “It means that you are trained to sit with people one-on-one or in a group space much like a psychotherapist would. But instead of being trained through D S M to diagnose them, you’re trained to see how their body stores traumatic events from their past. So you can help them actually access where that lives and even teach them the roots of some of their behaviors.”
Mojica explains how trauma responses relate to political polarization [07:39]
- Mojica: “So the way that looks in politics is what you disagree with me on, makes you a threat to me. And so now I’m in a trauma response with you. I can’t connect or be curious. I’m either fighting, fighting, freezing, or fawning.”
Mojica shares a pattern that emerged within his patients when Trump was first elected: a similar trauma response that was linked to past experiences with oppressive or abusive men [08:48]
- Mojica: “So Trump had won, you know, the election and this woman came into my office the next day and was like, destroyed. She couldn’t sleep. She was crying, she was shaking. She just felt like utter fear and panic. And as we sat with it, somatically. All this memory these images and these sensations of her abusive father were coming up.”
- Mojica: “Sitting with it somatically, for everyone listening, I’ll say it in the simplest context. It literally means where do you feel that in your body? So when, let’s say she walks in the room and I’m intellectually with her, it’s like talk therapy or it’s coaching, it’s more cognitive. We might try to figure out the meaning. What does it mean to you that he was elected? Or what are your thoughts about him? Or how can we create a strategy to, cope with this, these next four years? Somatically means, okay. When you think of Trump being president, what happens in your body? And in this case, you said, I can’t breathe. My, my chest is so constricted, I can’t even get a deep breath. Like I was up all night hyperventilating and we sat with that and one of my lead questions with people is where have you felt that kind of hyperventilating before? Like where in your history was this a pattern and it was with this person’s abusive father, Now, that was the first moment I like. Oh, interesting. I never had seen in my practice that direct connection between somatics trauma and politics. But what was profound was 20 more people that same week had the same experience with Trump and it was mostly women.”
Mojica defines “safety” in regards to trauma responses and political conversations [11:14]
- Mojica: “If we think about ‘safety,’ just like you said, I am not talking about ‘safe spaces.’ I’m not talking about a ‘safe word.’ I’m not talking about any of that. I’m talking about the biology of safety. So earlier when I said trauma has a biology, the stimulus, the event, the trauma response, and then the body regulates, we call it, so that that bear ran past you. It’s long gone. You look around, there’s no bear anywhere. Ah. You take a breath, your shoulders relax. You come back to yourself. That’s the biology of safety. It is actually a result of your body’s perception of non-threat. So that’s actually what I am talking about when I say I’m teaching you how to find ‘safety’ in yourself.”
Mojica shares how he was bullied, and how this work allowed him to find curiosity, empathy and compassion for those who once triggered him [18:31]
- Mojica: “I grew up being severely bullied for years and years and years through grade school, middle school, high school. So for me to feel when I was around certain people that I wasn’t able to be myself, I wasn’t able to speak to them, I wasn’t able to be seen. It was this thing in me where I thought it was up to them. Like they had to like me before I could be happy, before I could be myself, before I could be valid. And I lived that way for a long time until I found this work. And then after I would do these practices, I would find myself going into the rooms with these same people and not having an activated response, and my body was completely relaxed around them. And so this idea I had before, which was, ‘you are the cause of my stress. I have to stay away from you. I can’t think about you. I don’t want anyone to say your name’ turned into, ‘oh, you remind my body of stress and when I’m with my own stress, I can be around you and nothing even comes up.’ So I felt the transformation in me where I had a different feeling in my body around the same people that before I thought I had no control or power over how I felt.”
Mojica prays we could learn to ask, “what happened to you that made you vehemently believe this. And why does this belief feel safe for you and it doesn’t for me?” [20:58]
- Mojica: “Everyone’s belief is sacred to them. And that’s where my curiosity came through because even when I dealt with bullying and a lot of pain from people, I always had a wonder in my mind like, what happened to them? What made them so disconnected from their own heart and their own empathy that they could just be so cruel to somebody over and over again and not care. So once I didn’t have the trigger around them, like once I felt my body’s totally fine, even if you say something rude, right? Then I could see them as this person that was actually having endless reactions based on what happened to them.”
- Mónica: “‘Why does this belief feel safe for you? And it doesn’t for me.’ That’s a pretty profound question.”
- Mojica: “It’s really hard ’cause people over-couple ‘acceptance’ with ‘permitting’ or like ‘acceptance’ with being on the same side of something. Whereas ‘acceptance’ for me is literally my body’s not constricting against it. I’m not fighting with it. I’m not pushing it away. I’m like, ‘Oh, there it is. I accept that. That’s your reality. And I’m embodied to my own [reality.] Like, we can be in the same room, we can be in the same marriage.”
Mónica and Mojica discuss the difference between being “triggered” and being “harmed” [24:01]
- Mojica: “You said something really important: you said “reminded of harm.” I’m gonna underline that. So most of the time when we are triggered or having a conflict with somebody it either reminds us of something we’ve experienced, and, or because of that experience we expect a really painful result. Now when you’re reminded of a painful experience or you’re expecting a painful result, guess what happens? That gets somatically experienced, that becomes a biology. It hurts. So you are literally in pain…”
Supporting Partner – AllSides.com [34:16]
Mónica checks in with April Lawson [35:58]
April shares where she believes Reds struggle and succeed with ideas of somatics, harm and trauma [39:09]
- April: “Trauma response is not just occasionally how we respond to political things. It’s all of it…This is a human response. And because we all have bodies, we all respond this way.”
- April: “I kind of think that there’s the rise of therapy and therapists in the last, I don’t know, 50 to 200 years, depending how you think about it, and I think it’s largely in response to the fact that the church no longer is taking that role in society…People went to their pastors. People talked to the elder woman in the church who was wise. That’s how that all was handled in our life in that way and I’m not saying that was perfect, but I do think that that was where that work happened and that it was pretty powerful.”
Mónica shares ways that Blues struggle and succeed with ideas of harm and trauma, including negating their own agency [45:06]
- Monica: “I worry that we are taking away on the blue side our own agency to make this magic happen, because we believe that there’s always power at play and that therefore everything is harmful [and that] we have no agency, we have no influence, and so we will only be harmed and we cannot engage.”
April speaks about how conversations about Edward Snowden trigger her as a conservative who used to work in the intelligence community [51:20]
- April: “…what that makes me feel is scared for people around me, admiring of the sacrifice and work that people in the intelligence and military communities do to protect us, and then it feels desecrating of them and of the sacrifice that they are making to be callous and cavalier.”
Mónica shares about a time that someone gave her critical feedback about a workshop she lead, and how she managed feeling triggered, including taking the person to lunch to hear more [56:26]
- Monica: “I experienced all the temptations to fawn, absolutely, to freeze. I’m reminded of past trauma. I’m reminded of people who think that they’re right and they’re totally wrong. People who think they’re doing good in the world and they’re actually harming everyone. I don’t wanna be those people. I’m terrified. I’m reminded of being canceled, which is something that’s never happened to me, but I keep reading about it. And so I’ve internalized and identified those other experiences…I’m terrified about that. I’m terrified about all of it, right?…So I’m thinking of past and I’m thinking of future. What I need to be thinking about is this moment right now with this woman and this conversation.”
Supporting partner: Rehumanize International [1:02:55]
Community Voice: Richard Logis. Rich shares about listening to his own reactions and hearing what once seemed like awful, threatening ideas, very differently. [1:04:07]
- Logis: “I was one of the Trump voters of the belief that the election of Hillary Clinton was the end of America. I was very, very deep in the Republican MAGA partisan world. While I didn’t buy into all of the theories and conspiracies and the mythologies, I believed a lot of them in the MAGA Trump world. I was, I had a community. I was part of a community. I was, I felt validated. Those were those with whom I broke bread congregated. I felt that there was a legitimacy to what I was doing being around others. And that is a very underestimated part of why for some people, they become very, very immersed in what they’re not realizing is actually very politically traumatizing surroundings and relationships.”
- Logis: “Once we start to see that there’s actually a whole other world outside of what we may think, we start to be able to piece together and heal. Yes, on one hand, I left behind a community, but I also was able to find another. And I believe that my footing in this community more and better reflects and represents who I am than my prior community.”
Mónica closes the episode with an invitation to send questions, end credits, thank yous and the song “The Quiet Voice” by Alex Wong and Elise Hayes [1:10:12]
What did this therapist learn from his patients who felt deeply triggered by politics?
Mojica:
“What was profound was 20 more people that same week had the same experience. She left my office and I remember thinking, okay, and I took some notes. Next person came in same thing -next person came in – same thing. Men and women – it was amazing!”
Mónica:
And how do our two big political sides see these kinds of strategies differently – in ways we might not even be aware of?
April:
Conservatism and the right has like this toughness thing, which I love in some ways, right? Like the self sufficiency ethic and resilience. But I think the downside is that we are not very good at this piece.
Mónica:
All that and more, is just ahead.
Mónica:
Welcome to A Braver Way, a show about how you — yes YOU — can disagree about politics without losing heart.
I’m Mónica Guzmán, your guide across the divide, and I’m here to help you hear and be heard by people who confound you.
We don’t want to be at war in our country. We want to be at home.
So strap in.
‘Cause it’s time we learn how to turn up the heat, turn down the fear, and get real about things that matter with more of our fellow Americans than we thought possible.
Mónica:
Hello all, and welcome back.
Thanksgiving is around the corner. And with it, so much talk about how we’re talking with our families, over meals, wherever it is, and how we might do some kind of better job of it when big political disagreements come up.
But I didn’t want our surviving-the-holidays episode to be about how we talk. I wanted it to be about how we listen. NOT to other people! Not this time! No, this time we’re going a level deeper. We’re going to talk about how we listen… to ourselves.
Now. Before you think this episode is going to be some woo-woo session about our inner light, no no. Rest assured we are here for some real talk and oh boy — so is my guest.
He is a therapist. But unlike most therapists, he doesn’t start with what goes on in your mind, but with what goes on in your body.
I first met Luis Mojica through a really good friend of mine. She introduced me to his ideas at a time when I was just figuring out how important it is to stay curious in political disagreements. Not just about what other people say and mean when things get heated, but what I say and mean.
You can’t wonder about something you barely notice. And what I’ve realized — and biology bears out — is that noticing my part in tough conversations doesn’t begin with what I say, or even what I think. It begins with the physical reactions I have. Reactions that tell me I am stirred up. Provoked. Or dare I say the loaded word, “triggered.”
I invited Luis to do a workshop at the Braver Angels Convention in Gettysburg this July. Before the session, I thought about a stereotype I’ve picked up on around liberals and all things “therapy” and wondered if only liberals would show up. I shouldn’t have worried. There were more conservatives than liberals at that session, and they all left wanting more.
So today, we’re gonna zoom way in to those moments we all have. Moments when someone who disagrees with you says something jarring to you — and with a physical flinch or cringe or a sensation like a “punch to the gut” — you react.
What do you do next, if you still want to hear and be heard?
How can we handle — really actually handle — being “triggered” in political disagreement?
Here is my conversation with Luis Mojica.
Mónica:
Let’s start with this. You’re a somatic therapist. So for people who have never heard that term before, what does that mean?
Mojica:
It means that you are trained to sit with people one-on-one or in a group space, much like a psychotherapist would, but instead of being trained through DSM to diagnose them, you’re trained to see how their body stores traumatic events from their past, so you can help them actually access where that lives and even teach them the roots of some of their behaviors.
Mónica:
Okay, and I know that you focus also on trauma. What’s the trauma body connection there?
Mojica:
The trauma body connection is really biology. We thought trauma was a mental experience, but trauma is a biological response to an experience, so if a big experience occurs, let’s call it the stimulus. The body has a response to every stimulus that seems possibly threatening, and that response is called the trauma response, and it literally means you make a bunch of adrenaline, your blood pressure rises, your blood vessels constrict, and you get a rush of neurotransmission through your nervous system. The whole purpose of this, it’s like a propellant. It forces you to go into fight, flight, freeze, or fawn, so you can survive a situation, so your mind shuts off, body takes over. So trauma responses happen like all day long. The people I tend to work with, and when you think of someone going to therapy, it’s someone who’s traumatized, where the response doesn’t turn off. It’s meant to be short -term, until you’re, let’s say, like a bear is chasing you, and you freeze, and the bear runs by you because it doesn’t see you frozen against the tree, and the bear is long gone and you take a breath and you’re back in your body. So the trauma response, let’s say it was on 15, 20 minutes, just in this example, when your trauma ties, it just stays on. The situation’s over, but you stay braced for decades.
Mónica:
Decades. Okay, real quick, to go back to something you said, you said “fight, flight, freeze,” which I think many people can more or less know, and you said “fawn.” Fight, flight, freeze or fawn. What is “fawn?”
Mojica:
“Fawning” is a people-pleasing mechanism. So it’s actually a reflexive charm or reflexive pleasing strategy that’s used when the other person has some kind of control over your well -being. The best example of this is when someone gets hijacked by somebody or abducted or held hostage and we hear those stories where I became friends with my kidnapper. So that’s like an extreme example of why fawning exists. A simple one is like a dog is growling at you, like it’s going to bite you and you’re going, “nice doggy, nice doggy.” That’s a fawn. You’re trying to relax the nervous system of the potential predator so you can escape. Fawning is the most used strategy in society and it ends up becoming the way we actually relate and connect. So when you hear like politically performative allyship, that’s a fawning mechanism where you’re reflexively agreeing with someone just to not be canceled to belong to you.
Mónica:
Oh my gosh. That’s amazing.
Mojica:
Okay. It’s amazing. I know. Yes.
Mónica:
Perfect segueway because I was going to ask you that. You do trauma, you do somatic therapy. Where do you see all of this in our political disagreements?
Mojica:
It’s literally the reason why there’s political disagreements. I shouldn’t say disagreements. It’s a reason why there’s polarity, right? Because you can have disagreement without polarity. So the way that looks in politics is will you disagree with me on makes you a threat to me. And so now I’m in a trauma response with you. I can’t connect or be curious. I’m either fighting, fighting, freezing or falling.
Mónica:
But connection is actually unavailable as long as I’m in those areas.
Mojica:
And so most people, especially if you think of like people that are yelling at each other on different sides of the aisle, they are in an active, let’s say fight response. response, like when they’re arguing versus asking questions and pausing and reflecting.
Mónica:
Mm, yeah. And I guess we all we all spend time in those responses. All of us, all of us. No kidding. So at the Braver Angels Convention, you shared something you observed in your practice back around 2017, where you saw, I think you said it was a woman who came into your office and mentioned Trump in this trauma connected way. Can you tell us about that and what you observed after that?
Mojica:
Yeah, so Trump had won, you know, the election. And this woman came into my office the next day and was like, destroyed. She couldn’t sleep. She was crying. She was shaking. She just felt like utter fear and panic. And as we sat with it somatically, all this memory and these images and these sensations of her abusive father were coming up.
Mónica:
So wait, I’m gonna stop you right there. Just explain what you mean when we sat with it somatically.
Mojica:
Good question. So sitting with it somatically for everyone listening, I’ll say it in the simplest context. It literally means “where do you feel that in your body?” So let’s say she walks in the room and I’m intellectually with her. It’s like talk therapy or it’s coaching. It’s more cognitive. We might try to figure out the meaning. “What does it mean to you that he was elected or what are your thoughts about him or how can we create a strategy to cope with this these next four years?” Somatically means, okay, when you think of Trump being president, what happens in your body? And in this case, she said “I can’t breathe. My chest is so constricted, I can’t even get a deep breath. I was up all night hyperventilating.”
And we sat with that and one of my lead questions with people is “where have you felt that kind of hyperventilating before? Like, where in your history was this a pattern?”
It was with this person’s abusive father. Now that was the first moment of like, oh, interesting, I never had seen in my practice that direct connection between somatics, trauma and politics. But what was profound was 20 more people that same week had the same experience with Trump. Wow. And it was mostly women because because– –
Mónica:
Wait, that same week, that same week.
Mojica:
– That’s what, like she left my office. I remember thinking like, okay, and I wrote some notes. Next person came in, same thing. Next person came in, same men and women. It was amazing. And it was every single person, it took them back to either an abusive father or an abusive boyfriend. Some memory of like an oppressive male figure.
Mónica:
Oh, that’s amazing. And we should note, you live in New York, you had– – I live in New York. – A blue area.
Mojica:
This was in Woodstock, New York. Very blue, very liberal.
Mónica:
Very blue area, right, right. Wow. So you teach people something that sounds pretty radical. You teach them how to find safety inside themselves. Now I wanna zoom in on the word safety because with things like safe spaces and safety, you know that that in and of itself can become a charged word across our divide. What do you mean by safety? What do you mean by safety? You teach people how to find safety within themselves. What do you mean by safety?
Mojica:
I love to ask the question because if we think about safety, just like you said, I’m not talking about safe spaces, I’m not talking about safe word, I’m not talking about any of that. I’m talking about the biology of safety. So earlier when I said trauma has a biology, the stimulus, the event, the trauma response, and then the body regulates, we call it. So that bear ran past you, it’s long gone, you look around, there’s no bear anywhere. Ah, you take a breath, your shoulders relax, you come back to yourself.
That’s the biology of safety. Safety is actually a result of your body’s perception of non-threat. So that’s actually what I’m talking about when I say I’m teaching you how to find safety in yourself. So finding safety in yourself means learning how to help your body perceive that you’re okay in this moment so it can biologically regulate. You can have a little break from a lot of adrenaline.
Mónica:
Okay, so the question I wanna ask is when I think to myself, you can learn to find safety within yourself. And I bring it into the realm of politics when something we hear about some issue that really matters to us, someone who really disagrees with us and we’re so disappointed brings up that threat response. And the question I want to ask is “how is that possible to find safety within yourself when there’s these giant issues and they matter so much and you care deeply about them. They occupy you. And that feels correct. Go where you’ll go on that question because it’s a big one. But how do you know it’s even possible to find this kind of security safety within yourself no matter what’s going on out there?
Mojica:
Yeah, yeah, I mean, it started with me. It started with me finding discovering this in my own body and thinking I really need to teach other people this is possible. And then from a sense of curiosity and a desire to serve, seeing other people do it in the most powerful situations. I’ve worked with people in the Middle East that are dealing with war. I’ve worked with people who are living in abusive relationships and houses, like environments of abuse, situations that seem impossible, and they can find safety in themselves. And so I’m going to explain this a bit.
There’s this thing that happens with all of us. We call it talk about empathy. Empathy is somatic. It’s biological. So when I look at you, and let’s say I’ll use the political example, you’re saying something to me that I like vehemently disagree with, right? That feels like a threat to my system, like you believe in something that feels oppressive to me, right? So I’m seeing you, I’m hearing that that rush comes up, just like you said, the rush is coming up because I’m attuning to you. My body is mirroring your stance about what you believe in, and I’m attaching my safety to you, which is why we get desperate to change the mind of the person we’re in front of.
Mónica:
Wait, so so, attaching my safety to you, does that mean I’m looking to you and what you do and what you say for my sense of safety?
Mojica:
Exactly. Like if you believe in this and I believe in this, I need to change your minds, I can’t rest till I know you agree with me. That’s me finding safety in you. I’m looking toward you as once you change, I will finally relax. Finding safety myself in that same experience would be okay, there you, there’s Moni, just believing what she believes. Here’s me believing what I believe. What’s actually happening in the room right now? Nothing. Just two people having different beliefs. What it’s bringing up in me comes from my past, and it comes from what my body is expecting in the future, and that feels like threat, right? So I attach it to you. The stress that comes up, I say is because of you. When what you’re saying is reminding my body of past stress, right? Past situations.
When I can realize that’s in my body, then I also realize in the safety is also in my body. You didn’t create the stress, you don’t create the safety, my relationship to myself does either of those.
Mónica:
Yeah, that sounds like a journey to get through that experience. And I want to hit pause on another word. You did mention the word triggered, that’s another word that can have partisan connotations, trigger warnings and whatnot. When you say “ trigger,” what does that word mean?
Mojica:
It means two things to me. So one thing it means just to respect the lineage of the word is trigger often means let’s say someone who came back from war, combat, and they have PTSD, and a very loud horn or sound or explode like a broken glass or something. They experience this big sound and their whole body takes them back to combat. That’s like when we think of the origin of the word trigger, that’s the origin of it. So I want to respect that because a lot of times we use trigger, like when someone annoys us, “oh, you triggered me when you chew with your mouth open,” it’s like, not really, it’s a little different than that. But I also, I’ll play with that, that use too, because trigger can also just simply mean reminded. When I walk into the room and I don’t even know who you are, but I’m triggered by you. That tells me that something about you, there’s an unconscious bias or memory in my body about you. Your face, what you’re wearing, what you’re saying, it opens something up in me that I have yet to even maybe know is there.
Mónica:
Even though you don’t know me, it has nothing to do with who I am because you don’t know me, so it can’t possibly come from me.
Mojica:
And that’s how I know in my body triggers are reminders triggers aren’t proof that you’re wrong or you’re scary or bad or evil. We get triggers and intuition very mistaken. Trigger means you remind me of something. My body attaches a meaning to you before I even know who you are.
Mojica:
Right. So the session that you did at Braver Angels, the main title was, “You Are Not Responsible for My Reactions.” And I remember, you know, yes, let’s be provocative. But that, that is, tell us why you think that’s true. You know, this sense of you are not responsible for my reactions. “Wait a minute, but they’re saying this thing that is wrong and that I need to change.” Like how could we not think that way? You are not responsible for my reaction. What makes you think that’s true?
Mojica:
So what makes me experience that is true is there’s someone’s action. And then there’s my reaction. And these are two completely different things. Your action is a hundred percent yours. Like I’m not responsible for what you say or do to me. Okay. What comes up in my body, I’m responsible for. What that just means to me is my ability to respond to it. So when we’re talking about me in, you know, this example, I get triggered by you, which I haven’t haven’t yet in our friendship, but maybe it will happen. I’m open to it. But I get triggered by you. And I feel that feeling in my stomach, right? That’s coming up in me that lives in me now. Even if it’s something you said horribly to me, you’re that’s yours, you’re accountable to what you said to me. Where that goes and where that comes up in me is in me. And now how I know this is I, we had talked about this in the beginning. I grew up being severely bullied for years and years and years through middle, grade school, middle school, high school. So for me to feel when I was around certain people that I wasn’t able to be myself, I wasn’t able to speak to them. I wasn’t able to be seen. It was this thing in me where I thought it was up to them. Like they had to like me before I could be happy, before I could be myself, before I could be valid. And I lived the way for a long time until I found this work. Then after I would do these practices, I would find myself going into the rooms with these same people and not having an activated response. And my body was completely relaxed around them. And so this, this idea I had before, which was you are the cause of my stress, I have to stay away from you. I can’t think about you don’t anyone to say your name turned into, “Oh, you remind my body of stress. And when I’m with my own stress, I can be around you and nothing even comes up.”
So I felt the transformation in me, where I had a different feeling in my body around the same people that before I thought I had no control or power over how I felt.
Mónica:
And how does that change? How did that change your ability to connect with those people, get curious about them? Did you see them completely differently?
Mojica:
Completely differently. Because what I was, and this was part of what I taught at Braver Angels, that one of my mentors, Bill Riddick, who does incredible work with conflict resolution, he taught me that everyone’s belief is sacred to them. And that’s where my curiosity came through. Because even when I dealt with bullying and a lot of pain from people, I always had a wonder in my mind, like, what happened to them? Like, what, what made them so disconnected from their own heart and their own empathy that they could just be so cruel to somebody over and over again and not care? So once I didn’t have the trigger around them, like once I felt my body’s totally fine, even if you say something rude, right? Then I could see them as this person that was actually having endless reactions based on what happened to them. It didn’t justify, you know, what they did to me. It didn’t make me want to, like, have them over for dinner. But this whole story about them left my mind. They weren’t these horrible, evil people. They were also someone in their own trauma response. And it just gave me much more compassion for everybody, you know. And politically, that’s one of my prayers, is we could learn what happened to you that made you vehemently believe this. And why does this belief feel safe for you and it doesn’t for me?
Mónica:
Why does this belief feel safe for you and it doesn’t for me? That’s a pretty profound question.
Mojica:
That’s what I wish we were talking about in debates. Instead of you’re wrong, I’m right. Like, well, why does it feel safe for you and why does it scare me? Then we get to the bottom of it.
Mónica:
Right, because then you can exchange all kinds of really interesting different experiences, insights, but you said something, the idea that whatever you believe is sacred to you and I somehow accept that, I think is a really hard one to swallow for a lot of folks.
Mojica:
It’s really hard because people over couple, like acceptance with permitting, or like acceptance with being on the same side of something, whereas acceptance for me is literally my body’s not constricting against it. I’m not fighting with it. I’m not pushing it away. I’m like, oh, there it is. I accept that that’s your reality. And I’m embodied to my own, like we can be in the same room. We can be in the same marriage.
Mónica:
That’s amazing. Well, I was just thinking about on an earlier episode, folks heard from my mom and my mom and I disagree on abortion policy and she’s pro -life and I’m pro -choice. And she told the story about when I was a teenager and she heard from me for the first time in real clear terms that I am not pro-life. I think abortion should be legal and she talked about how it absolutely broke her heart and how for a long time she carried that in her but she talked about, I’m trying to remember the words she said that after a while she became okay with it and she said, “it’s not that I became okay but I got used to it” is how she put it and so what you’re saying is reminding me somehow of that process. She and I can talk about abortion all day long and she gets probably, I should ask her whether she would call it being triggered but somehow we’re able to stay in it and yeah, get curious about the “why” and how is this safe for you and not safe for me is a really interesting way in.
Mojica:
That’s why I love calling it “sacred” because it’s not, I’m not asking anyone to find a sacred for them but if we just have this practice of oh, like “I’m pro -life, you’re pro -choice” and someone says, “I believe in this, I believe in abortion” like they say the words, “I believe in abortion” and someone who doesn’t, imagine if the first thing we thought would be, “okay, their belief in abortion is sacred to them, it’s sacred. How do I treat something that’s sacred to somebody?” It’s very different from like, “how do I treat an opinion? How do I treat an ideology? How do I treat a truth or a false?” It’s like, it’s sacred to them. So I think when we show up to something that’s sacred for someone, we get curious, we get gentle, we get kind, we have compassion. Like “that means a lot to you, teach me this meaning, teach me about this.” Not ’cause I’m gonna believe it but I just wanna know why you do.
Mónica:
Yeah, well, let’s talk about another, I mean, important distinction that comes up, I think a lot with this, is the difference between “being harmed” and “being triggered.” I hear about a lot of questions, people going, “what do you do when people have ideas that are harmful and so you have to engage with ideas or even the conversation, if you feel disrespected or dehumanized to a certain degree. Are you being harmed? Aren’t you being harmed?” So how do you know the difference between “I’m just afraid of harm. I’m reminded of harm.” versus “No, no, no, right now in this moment sure they’re not hitting me with sticks but they are harming me.”
Mojica:
Mmm, we need a whole other podcast about this.
Mónica:
We probably do. I don’t know if you can sum this one up. But for the listener having that thought.
Mojica:
Right like yeah, absolutely. Evan and I had a six-hour conversation about this the whole ride home by the way.
So you said something really important: you said “reminded of harm.” I’m gonna underline that. So most of the time when we are triggered or having a conflict with somebody it either reminds us of something we’ve experienced, and, or because of that experience we expect a really painful result. Now when you’re reminded of a painful experience or you’re expecting a painful result, guess what happens? That gets somatically experienced, that becomes a biology. It hurts. So you are literally in pain…
Mónica:
But the pain is real. Either way
Mojica:
The pain is real.
Mónica:
The pain is there.
Mojica:
Maybe we can talk for a minute about the demo I did. The whole thing is, if you’re calling the stress and pain in my body “ harm,” I’m attaching an action on to you. This is where it gets dicey for me, because when I think of the people I’ve worked with, the situations I’ve gone through, my experience of harm is in someone. It actually impinges on my agency, like when I think of harm I think of, and there’s so many levels to this, there’s parents to children. Like if you tell a child every day growing up that they are worthless, right, we can call that a form of “harm” because this child has no agency. They’re looking to these two people as all they have in the world. If I’m 30 years old and my best friend says like, “Luis, you know what, you suck. Your music is worthless.” I don’t know if I personally would call that “harm.” I call that “rude.” I would call it “painful.” I wouldn’t call it “harm.” It doesn’t impinge on my agency. So for me, again, just somatically, when something impinged on someone’s agency, I see it as “harm.” That’s where I could call it that. When I feel pain because of what you said, I feel pain. I wouldn’t say “you harmed me.” I’d say, “What you said to me, brought me to pain inside of my body.” I’m going to be with that too.
Mónica:
“What you said to me brought me to pain.” Not “you brought me to pain.”
Mojica:
That’s right.
Mónica:
That’s a big– that’s a big jump for some folks.
Mojica:
It’s huge, because when you say to someone, “you harmed me.” Most people don’t have the capacity to even sit with the idea of harming someone. So you’re not really going to get much out of that by pointing the finger at “you harmed me.” And then let’s say you do, let’s say I look at you like, “Moni, you harmed me when you said that. I’m harmed now.” Like your fawning mechanism is going to kick in really quickly.
Mónica:
“I’m so sorry. Oh my gosh. I apologize 100% for—” Because all I want to do is repair what’s been broken. Not that person.
Mojica:
Exactly. But that’s actually not a relationship or a repair. That’s me performing connection to soothe you, to tamp you down.
Mónica:
That’s not connecting. That’s performing.
Mojica:
Exactly. It’s an imitation. And fawning is all about imitating connection to soothe the other person’s body. So what you said this earlier about triggers, and what I was hearing was, when you have a really deep relationship with someone, it’s the kind where you’re open to getting triggered. I don’t want you to tiptoe around me because I trust you. I trust your beliefs are sacred. And I’m willing to hold what opens up in me and be responsible for them. And you’re willing to hold your actions and be responsible for them. That’s the kind of relationship I feel actually safe in, rather than someone like skirting around me because they don’t want to say the wrong thing. That doesn’t feel safe to me. That feels performative and it feels tense.
Mónica:
Yeah. Well, something that’s coming up for me as I hear all this is, it almost feels like if I’m going to talk to someone whose ideas, or anything about them, might trigger me politically, then, oh my gosh, I need to be kind of a Zen master superhuman of myself.
Mojica:
Yeah.
Mónica:
How do I do that? And is that really the ask?
Mojica:
No, and it’s not possible. It’s not about not getting triggered. And it’s going to sound like that. We’re all going to take like the takeaways and be like, okay, I have to get to a place where nothing bothers me. Not not possible. That’s not the point here. It’s about when something bothers me, do I leave myself to attach it to you to fix? Or do I sit within myself, get some clarity, then bring it to you to share with you. “That thing you said, I just need you to know I have a real sensitivity around that word, because for a long time, dot to dot to dot, it doesn’t feel good in my body.” That is so different than coming to you and being like, you know, “you’re phobic,” or “you’re red” or “you’re blue,” you know, whatever we’re going to call somebody. When I make you and your character based on something that came up in me, I don’t even share myself with you. I’m just making it about you. So again, no connection. Then how many people can just sit there with open arms? “I receive your anger toward me.” No. So it’s about feeling it and responding to it yourself first, and then sharing that with the other. That’s all this is about.
Mónica:
Right. So in other words, it’s more bite size. It’s much more one thing. There’s one thing you’re triggered by. Just practice it. When it’s too hot, take a break. You know, you’re still in control very much in control.
So in the in the last bit of time that we have, I wondered if you could help us identify other tips, strategies, and I’ll kick it off because I sat in your breakout in the convention and the chairs had backs to them. And you told us, if you’re having a difficult conversation with someone or you’re getting ready to, check to see if your chair is comfortable.
Mojica:
Absolutely. So everyone can try this right now and you’ll feel exactly what I’m going to say. So sit in whatever your chair you’re in and sit without your back touching. And just notice the amount of tension that that takes. You have to constrict a lot of different muscles to like erect the spine and hold yourself up. Not a bad thing, but that doesn’t create a sense of ease in the body. So if I’m speaking with someone about something I know I’m going to disagree with or I might, this isn’t a very supportive posture. Now the moment we sit back, just feel that. So if I’m focused on my body, taking breaths, taking pauses before I speak, feeling my back resting, the ease from my body gets mirrored in their body.
Mónica:
And then let’s state the obvious. The ideas you’re talking about will also relax.
Mojica:
Yes, because think about what you just said. Even that statement, “the ideas you talk about will relax.” Where do they relax in your body? Ideas are just floating. You know, the body responds to them. So if I’m in a restful state, my ideas and your ideas, especially are going to land an arrested body instead of a constricted body.
Mónica:
Yeah, no, that’s great. And it makes me think of the internet. We all lose our bodies online. That’s right. All the conversations and disagreements have no embodiment whatsoever. So no wonder that when we do get into conversations, even in person, we ignore our bodies. We were doing it already. We were doing it already. It’s just the default.
So one of the places that I found a lot of hope in your workshop toward the end, somebody was saying, I think, something basically around, “wait a minute, what if I come, you know, ready to try to be more conscious about what’s going on in my body, ready to be responsible for my own reactions? But the other person doesn’t. Don’t I need to get them to agree with this method or like, you know, to agree to be curious and to soften their bodies so they can be open.”
And I think you said something like, “no, it only takes one.” So can you say something to that?
Mojica:
Yeah, so our bodies already have so many things happening just from looking at each other without knowing it, right? So this is why it takes one. Notice how it feels in your body when I just sit back?
Mónica:
Oh, I want to sit back. Immediately. I just did it.
Mojica:
You feel that? Your body mirrors my body. So it only takes one. So you don’t have to teach anybody or rely on them. You do it in yourself and other bodies will respond.
Mónica:
There you go. That’s it. You can work on yourself. And that does more than affect yourself.
Mojica:
That’s right.
Mónica:
And that, that seems like such a radical and I think very hopeful idea. And hopefully our listeners are feeling their own power here.
Mojica:
I’m so excited for your listeners to hear this because we don’t talk about this in the political realms.
Mónica:
We don’t. We just don’t talk about it.
Mojica:
And the amount of people that came up to me at the convention saying, I’ve never had the permission to put trauma with politics. And these were largely red. I couldn’t believe it. I didn’t have permission. And they were so open and all made sense suddenly. So I’d love to recreate this conversation where we can bring these two things together.
Mónica:
Yeah, absolutely. And the idea of if you find safety within yourself, how much less stressful does the world become? Could we become more creative?
Mojica:
And creative is a good word for it because you’re not fighting anymore. You’re getting curious. And through that you get to actually be really creative and how can we make this work for all of us?
Mónica:
Right. And it’s freeing ourselves from the trauma response. Fight, flight. What was the third one? Freeze and fawn. Freeze and then fawn. ‘Fascinating.’ There’s another F. Yeah. The fifth one. Well, at least it was an absolute delight. As always, thank you so much for bringing your wisdom and your experience to all this. And I’m sure this won’t be the last conversation you and I have.
Mojica:
Thank you, my friend. It’s good to see you.
Mónica:
Thank you. Bye.
Mónica:
Before we move on I want to tell you about one of our Supporting Partners.
Have you ever been in a conversation where you felt misunderstood for your beliefs? Have your relationships fractured over differences of opinion? Or have you ever seen a news article that misrepresented your side of things?
AllSides.com is here for you with tools designed to heal our divided society.
AllSides helps people get outside their filter bubbles so we appreciate differences of opinion and find something closer to truth.
Its balanced newsfeed serves up news from the left, center, and right, all side-by-side so you can get out of your bubble, spot bias, and think for yourself. Spotting bias is not easy, but as a longtime journalist, I can tell you, they’ve made something of a science out of it.
Their newsfeed is powered by over 1,400 AllSides Media Bias Ratings™ they’ve gathered that rely on the judgment of everyday Americans, not one elite group. They also host conversation to help us to communicate across divides.
Check out the newsfeed and help rate media bias yourself at Allsides.com.
Thank you to Allsides for being a supporting partner of A Braver Way.
Mónica:
After talking with Luis, I was pretty eager to check in with my friend and colleague, April Lawson.
This episode is about listening to yourself in disagreement, a bit of a different angle. What does that bring up for conservatives, like April, or liberals, like me?
Here’s our conversation…
Mónica:
Hello my friend. How are you?
April Lawson:
Hello, good. How are you?
Mónica:
I am now more conscious of my body. I’m sitting in a chair. I’ve propped pillows behind my back so that my back is somewhat supported. What is your body doing right now?
April:
Well, I’m noticing with my chair. I’m sitting in a folding chair because I moved recently and I didn’t like I don’t have a good desk chair yet. It’s not the most comfortable, but I I slept well. And so my body is fairly loose because of that. So excellent. Plus I’m talking to you and that makes me happy. Yeah, I feel pretty pretty chill
Mónica:
Very cool. Well, we’ve just heard from Luis Mojica, somatic therapist, and the driving question is, “How do you handle being triggered?” So let’s start with our favorite moments. April what, what stood out to you?
April:
Oh my gosh. I mean, like, so, I also just like, I’m feeling comfortable right now because I love being in trauma-informed spaces. I think you know this about me, but I spent a little under 10 years working on a sexual assault hotline. And so I loved, loved this interview, and I love Luis’s work. I like actually have a bit of a professional crush on him.
Mónica:
We’re very candid here on a Braver Way.
April:
That’s right. So, I had a bunch of moments that were like, “whoa” for me, but I think the one that was in some way the most foundational is just when he said, “Trauma response is not just occasionally how we respond to political things. It’s all of it.” It took something that is often made sort of niche and helped universalize it and say, “okay, this is a human response because we all have bodies, we all respond this way.” And in politics, which we think of as this super intellectual, cerebral, polished, in some ways more masculine area. Yeah, and you know, like yeah, we are all responding out of that. So that that was amazing for me.
Mónica:
Yeah, I think that’s spot on so my favorite moment. Man, I really loved when he articulated a question that seemed so helpful, which was asking the question in disagreement, “why does this belief feel safe to you, but not to me?” Or “why does this belief feel safe to me, but not to you?” And that flowed out of when he was talking about one of his mentors, a facilitator named Bill Riddick. Bill teaches that you have to understand that somebody’s belief is sacred to them, whatever it is, it is sacred to them. And what a daring, crazy, like, weird thing, right? To try to internalize that somebody’s belief is sacred to them. And something about listening to them, respecting them requires accepting that. What? And how hard that is with like certain beliefs for certain people. And anyway, so that that really stood out to me.
So let’s move to where the blue side and the red side are good and bad at the strategies, the aforementioned, in the aforementioned interview.
So let’s start with you. Where do you see the conservative side, your side, being good and bad at these sorts of things?
April:
Yeah, I thought about this. And I have to tell you, I don’t think we’re very good at this.
Mónica:
Well, define this, like when you say good at this, what do you mean? Sure. Well, specifically at engaging trauma -informed ideas about this stuff and admitting that safety is relevant to it, that like the body is part of this. Conservatism on the right has like a toughness thing. It’s got like a, which I love in some ways, right, like the self-sufficiency ethic and the like resilience. And, you know, there’s a lot of things I love about that. But I think that the downside is that we are just not very good at like holding space for your own internal discomfort with things, and like acknowledging that. It all feels very, very mushy.
Mónica:
I have to I have to stop you for a minute because I’m noticing that as a conservative you are using terms that are often really related with the left. You know, you’re saying “safety.” You also just said “hold space.”
April:
Yes.
Mónica:
Which tends to be this phrase that comes out , or even the phrase “trauma-informed spaces.” I bet it’s just really unfamiliar to a lot of folks who aren’t in the kinds of context, frankly very blue context, most of the time where people even know what means.
April:
Yes, and then it sounds like jargon, and then it sounds intimidating, and it’s being used as an assertion against somehow that you’re not privy to. So yeah, no you’re right, it’s because I spent so much time on the hotline and have some background in this that’s the reason I’m using those words. But it’s funny because as you say it I am actually kind of speaking, that like, I’m conscious of speaking a dialect, that is like, not at all universal in American political culture, but I do think that the right’s version of this often shows up in religious spaces and it’s very powerful there. And that so here’s what I can say about what I think we’re good at. I think that this is a sort of grand and over-generalizing comment, but I kind of think that there’s the rise of like therapy and therapists in the last I don’t know 50 to 200 years depending how you think about it, and I think it’s largely in response to the fact that the church no longer it’s taken that role in society previously. People went to their pastors. People talked to the like elder woman in the church who was wise. Like that’s how that all was handled in our life in that way and I’m not saying that was perfect, but I do think that that was where that work happened and that it was pretty powerful.
Mónica:
Let me ask a question on that. When I think of spiritual, you know, community type spaces that were more prevalent and present in people’s lives some generations ago, don’t think of a lot of body-aware somatics. I think of Buddhism, like yoga and the Buddha. There’s traditions where the body, I think, has been more present than Christianity. We’re not going to probably go down a rabbit hole on religion, but I guess my question is, do you find that the somatic piece is something that we didn’t do as well ever?
April:
Yes. Touché. I do think that Christianity and the West goes back to Descartes and the mind-body split, and the soul is totally this other thing. It’s not- the relationship between body and spirit in Christian history is very, I would say, fraught, painful, broken, so that’s a good point.
Mónica:
All right, well, I took a lot of notes on what I think the blue side is good and bad at, so, what is the blue side good at? Well, apparently, it’s kind of housed a lot of the language, the dialect of some of these practices. I don’t think that’s a good thing because when a language feels foreign and unfamiliar to the other side, it becomes less accessible and it whispers underneath itself, “you’re not part of this,” and I hate that. I hate that.
I think the blue side is good at embracing trauma as real and potentially debilitating and widespread. I think the blue side is more comfortable with the whole idea of therapy, which I know when I talk to my parents, when I talk to a lot of conservatives in my life, there’s more of a, “ooo, if you need therapy, there’s something wrong with you.” But the kinds of practices Luis is talking about do not have to be part of some repair type, you know, I need to go see a therapist every week. This is more about, no, this is how you are aware of yourself. So yeah, we accept that, we embrace that, I think pretty well. And to good ends. The severity of pain, you know, and the idea that that whole, what is that quote? “Sticks and stones may break my bones, but words will never hurt me,” has really become complicated in the last generation or two. It’s true that they won’t draw blood, but we know from research that your mind will treat a psychological assault as just as threatening in a lot of cases. And so when you dismiss that as, well, it’s not physical and therefore it doesn’t, we don’t need to treat it as seriously, then there’s a lot of unaddressed pain and a lot of, you know, tools or spiritual practices or things that people that won’t know.
Okay, this is a nice bridge to what I think the blue side can be quite bad at. During the interview, Luis said that he distinguishes between pain and harm. And I thought this was such a key moment. To him, harm is something that impinges on your agency. So he gave the example of parents telling their child that the child is worthless. In that scenario, the child just doesn’t have a lot of power or agency. So one could claim he thinks that that’s harm. But if somebody tells him, you know, I hate your music, you’re a bad musician, like that’s rude, but it’s not harm. So that distinction of between pain and harm is where I think sometimes the blue side can be bad, bad at this. Conflating pain for harm every single time. And then taking the concept of safety and basically externalizing it all the time, I think is just taking things too far. That, you know, my safety is your problem. Which again, it’s like if we’re at war, if you’re, if I’m in jail and you’re, you know, my torturer, like there’s certainly relationships where again, the agency piece. And this is where like this makes me understand the blue perspective on power better. I mean, it’s the perspective that’s native to me already, but I’ve always been really curious about, you know, what is it that makes the blue side really preoccupied with power? I mean, there’s a million valid reasons. But when Luis distinguished pain from harm and he said, harm is about impinging on my agency, I said, aha, right? The blue side says, if you have power over me, the pain that I experience as a result of something that you say is harmful. So then what you do is you take all the labels in the groups that we’ve separated ourselves into by race, by class, by economic privilege, and there’s always someone who’s above someone else, so there’s always someone harming someone else. And so then I think we get caught in this trap. There’s always someone harming someone else. We become more and more kind of preoccupied with identifying the oppressor in every single situation. And what I think that does going back to the distinction between pain and harm is, if harm impinges on your agency, and you believe that every time you feel pain about when somebody else, you know, says something that you disagree with, then it’s causing you harm, then you’re taking away your own agency. That’s the thing that I’m going, wait a minute. Because that’s where I think reds can be really strong, you know? Sometimes with a tinge of like blindness to things they ought to be seeing, but they tend to hold the ground a little more on personal agency and responsibility and power. And so I’m afraid that these psychological little twists and turns and loops that we’re building on the blue side are ending up disempowering us when they are intended to empower us.
April:
Fascinating, Moni.
Mónica:
So yeah, and like one more thing, ’cause where I landed on this basically was, and what that means to me is that a lot of blues, sometimes who I think go too far on these things, will will not even recognize the power of conversation that that within the context of a one-to-one conversation in particular where things are contained, trust can be built. And I believe, just this is my personal opinion, that the longer you’re in that trust-building space with another individual the less that whatever power dynamics are out there matter in here. I worry that we are taking away on the blue side our own agency to make this magic happen because because we we believe that there’s always power at play and that therefore everything is harmful and that therefore we are not we have no agency, we have no influence, and so we will only be harmed and we cannot engage.
April:
That’s really, really good and I you’re right there is a sort of because what I hear the red say is like is the thing about like yeah but “you can decide how much that hurts you” right and there’s a degree to which that’s true and degree to which that’s not and it’s all complicated. But I love your point about “let’s at least not take away our own agency.”
Mónica:
Yeah let’s be careful of that. Yeah let’s be careful of what that can do and again I mean this is just thoughts that bubbled up. But but this is my concern this is my concern on behalf of fellow blues who are so good at who are so good at acknowledging pain, and want so much to identify with pain so that we can be compassionate and understanding. That’s so awesome, you know, but “where does it go too far?” is a question I think Blues and Reds should ask about every tendency, not just this one.
April:
Totally.
Mónica:
So, so, April how does this driving question show up in your life? The driving question being “how do you handle being triggered in political disagreement?”
April:
Yeah, well, I’m still sitting here kind of absorbing what you just said, because it’s amazing. It also helps me understand, and I will answer your question,
Mónica:
No, please keep raising my point.
April:
But really, like, there’s this thing about weakness and strength. And like, who’s a victim that like, I think that sometimes on the red side, people say like, “you’re not that weak, stand in your power, like, you’ve got more power than you’re acting like you do.” And I, you’re helping me see the validity in that I confess that, again, with my just personal background in this work, I’m more likely to be like, “well, there’s a power dynamic.” But yeah. Thank you.
Okay, so where’s the show up in my life? I have lots of places is the first answer. It has taken me a long time to learn to notice it. And like, honestly, the most important thing really has been like, can I notice when this is happening? So, and I find that it shows up in places where I have a personal experience that’s relevant to the issue. So for example, when does this happen? And one example is Edward Snowden. And that’s unexpected for people, but I worked in the intelligence world for a while. And I just, boy, so what happens in me when people are like, “Oh, you know, Snowden was a freedom fighter, or like, you know, the government’s out to get us. Intelligence community, whatever,” like, what happens in me. So I’m going to try to do Luis’s thing. I’m going to try to say, “where does this happen?” And like in my like solar plexus and chest, I begin to get tight and I begin to say, “no, no.” And because what it does is it one of the experiences of, when you work in the intelligence world, and you see what’s coming in, I just acquired that experience, [it] made me much more conservative because I acquired a visceral attunement to the fact that there are lots of people in the world who are trying to attack us, and yeah you can try to understand their ideology fine, but like they have it out for us, they want to like, kill your daughters and sons and I don’t mean that in a, forgive the dramatic language, but I that became so clear to me, and so then what that makes me feel is scared for people around me, admiring of the sacrifice and work that people in the intelligence and military communities do to protect us, and then it feels desecrating of them and of the sacrifice that they are making to be callous and cavalier. And my actual feeling about Edward Snowden is that “who is this 26 year old who thinks that like he knows better than?” and that like it’s fine that what he says and reveals because he’s being some hero is like gonna jeopardize literally lives, um here and abroad. And so, sorry. See, you can hear it. You can hear the like—
Mónica:
Luis has that question. Well, Luis has that statement, “you are not responsible for my reactions.” What do you do when you picture Snowden in your head? Do you blame? Do you go, “you need to change in order for me to be okay.”
April:
Boy, you know.
Mónica:
Yeah, tell me.
April:
I have to tell you, I had trouble when Luis said that, because I was like “yeah but some people do bad things.”
Mónica:
Yeah, and they’re accountable.
April:
Yes, we need to hold them accountable. However, he’s right, but like my reaction is mine. So yeah, see it’s funny. I’m like not even facing somebody who’s telling me Edward Snowden is great, and I’m like already, I can feel my body.
Mónica:
You’ve created it yourself.
April:
Acting out, yeah.
Mónica:
Right, because he talks about reminded, reminded of past, you know, will put you, your body right back in there.
April:
Yeah, so what do I think about I when I picture Edward Snowden? I think oh gosh that sentence is tough, Moni. “You are not responsible for my reactions.” That’s true. But I guess, I just feel intensely motivated to control the outcome. Like I want to make sure that Snowden and his ilk do not get the power because I’m afraid of what they’ll do with it.
Mónica:
And you’re sharing, I mean, I think part of part of these skills we’re talking about today is about noticing a physical reaction, right? Understanding that it is connected inextricably to beliefs you have. Because it’s all words. “It’s just words. Just words somebody said. Right? Meaningless.”
April:
Right, right…
Mónica:
No, it’s because of the beliefs you hold your body is listening to those beliefs and is monitoring. You hear something, and you go
April:
Thank you for for receiving it that way. So how about you?
Mónica:
Right. So, you know about this thing that happened some weeks ago at one of my talks. So, you know, I travel a lot and meet a lot of amazing people and hear really candid stories. So recently there, I was doing a workshop and a person in the room was clearly very critical of it. And I know this because she sort of called me over during one of the exercises and kind of, you know, was somewhat, you know, pretty upset, I suppose. You know, said that, “hey, you know, this is, this is, I don’t think this is right.” And I remember in that moment, when she told me that, like, in fact, I am feeling the feeling again.
April:
Mm -hmm, mm -hmm.
Mónica:
In the back of my, this is so weird to say this out loud, right? But like, I’m kind of pointing to like the center of my chest, but in the back, toward my spine. There’s this, you know how you pull a straw? You pull it off and you kind of like push the paper down, down, down, so it gets to this little, this little like crumped up thing. My spine does that. It starts to curl into itself and crunch up. And that’s, I can feel it again. And I came up to the podium and I said, “Okay, Mónica, like you’re feeling this, you’re feeling this. What are you gonna do?” And I thought, “I’ve done this workshop many times. I know that she’s upset, but I do not believe objectively that this is an emergency or anything needs to change.” But my body was like, my body wanted me to fawn. There was a little fantasy playing in my head of like, I need to make this woman okay with what’s going on. And so I need to fawn, I need to perform. But I told myself, you know that you’re okay. You know this workshop is okay. And that this feedback is valid, but chill, right? Then after the workshop was over, I was very motivated internally to, for flight, right? There’s fight, flight, fawns, freeze. I was like, I saw her and I was very curious. I wanna know what she meant. but another part of me was like, “no, you don’t, you’re not gonna, no, we’re gonna go straight the other direction because we don’t want this in our lives right now.”
April:
Totally.
Mónica:
Just, just a feeling of, so I’m, I’m walking behind her out of the room and I just, I’m like breathing faster and I’m, you know, trying to slow it down. I go up to her and I ask her to lunch. So we have lunch, I did.
April:
Oh my gosh, Moni.
Mónica:
So we talked for like the whole hour and a half of lunch and she delivered really stinging critiques and I say stinging because that’s also a physical reaction. You know, some of the things she said, including, I will just say this one and this one is, you know, like it sticks in my mind, like “you’re upholding white supremacy with this work.” So, okay, like the feeling I get when I hear that and, and again at the table, I had this temptation to fawn, to fawn, to fawn, but I said, “there’s a reason you’re doing what you’re doing and you know that there’s something really important about it and so can you stay grounded in that?” And, and it was a physical thing because even at the table, I, I felt myself wanting to shrink and I made myself not shrink. I just, I just made myself like stay steady and I listened as well as I could and I saw her gestures and she, you know, I, I added a slide to one of my talks, like after this conversation, I learned a lot from her. But I, but I experienced all the temptations to fawn, absolutely, to freeze, because I’m reminded of past trauma. I’m reminded of people who think that they’re right and they’re totally wrong. People who think they’re doing good in the world and they’re actually harming everyone. I don’t want to be those people. I’m terrified. I’m reminded of being canceled, which is something that’s never happened to me, but I keep reading about it and so I’ve internalized and identified those other experiences. What if it happens to me? I’m terrified about that. I’m terrified about all of it, right? And all these, so I’m thinking of past and I’m thinking of future. But what I need to be thinking about is this moment right now with this woman and this conversation. But we ended thanking each other, and I’m still thinking about it, right?
April:
I’m going to ask how you’re doing now?
Mónica:
Yeah, no, it was, I mean, I’m back. I’m back to feeling afraid, right now as I tell you this. I can feel all of that coming back into my body, and the feeling of threat and now a little feeling of vulnerability. I’ve just talked about this.
April:
Well, thank you.
Mónica:
Yeah, these things happen. And I, you know, and there were things, there are things I’m wrong about, and that that part is the deepest terror of all, right? What if, what if this person convinces me I’m wrong? I can’t even be here for that. It’s like, yes, you can and you must.
April:
Well, and actually, I think that that’s a really important thing because what if, what if you are harming, right? Right? What if you’re part of the– and somebody very wise said to me once that like, “until we can hold,” there’s that language again, but “until we can like, just be like, handle,” but that’s a neutral word , “handle the fact that we might be harming someone.”
Mónica:
Exactly.
April:
We will never get anywhere, because we get so wrapped up in like, ‘I am not a harmer. I am not that kind of person’ that we can’t stay focused on the thing that is happening. And this is again, I promise I will not harp on this every episode, but this is why I think the concept of “sin” is so helpful because we need a way to universalize the fact that we all harm people. Like we actually do.
Mónica:
Oh, what a what a great way to tie back to that point.
April:
And that means we have to that’s a part of us. And if we can if we can just be okay with that in a in a not that we don’t try to change it, but like, I think that’ll help.
Mónica:
Yeah. Oh, chills. Yeah. Chills on that point. Yes, Yes, as a non -religious person, I totally see that. Wow. Okay, well, whew. And after this, I’m gonna take a few breaths. I’m gonna take a few breaths. I’m literally thinking like, yes, I’m gonna stretch. I’m gonna just, yeah, feel that. Yeah, big thank you to Luis, because I think he’s really good. I used to think this stuff was really hokey. Then I really experienced it and I said, no, this is real, this is really helpful. This is a really helpful way to be responsible and find our power.
Mónica:
Now, let me take a moment to tell you about another one of our Supporting Partners, Rehumanize International.
Rehumanize International is a nonprofit human rights organization dedicated to creating a culture of peace and life. They seek an end to all aggressive violence against humans through education, discourse, and action.
Their advocacy is based on the Consistent Life Ethic, a moral philosophy centered on the principle that each and every human being has inherent dignity from the womb to the tomb.
Their organization is non-sectarian and non-partisan, and promotes collaboration amongst many organizations and movements in an effort to achieve their goal that each and every human being’s life is respected, valued, and protected.
You can learn more at rehumanizeintl.org
Thank you to Rehumanize International for being a supporting partner of A Braver Way -and just like Allsides – a member of Braver Network.
To learn more about Braver Network and how your organization can join the movement for civic renewal, go to braverangels.org/abraverway.
Mónica:
Politics seems so high stakes these days, it’s no surprise that just hearing some ideas can feel like a threat.
How we react to that feeling is as varied as our politics. But left, right, or center, a sense of danger is going to make us look for safety with people who agree with us.
Sometimes, though, that group of people, as good as it feels, isn’t where we end up wanting to be.
That’s what a man named Rich Logis found out when he started listening to his own reactions, and hearing what once seemed like awful, threatening ideas very differently…
Rich Logis:
I’m Rich Logis. I’m in Delray Beach, Florida. I’m formerly a New Yorker, will always be a New Yorker to some extent, but I’ve been in Florida for a little over a decade. I’m 46 years old and the first election, presidential election I voted in, I could have voted in ’96, but didn’t. But in 2000, I voted for Ralph Nader. And the reason I was actually, I gravitated toward his campaign, part of it was policy, not to say I agree with all the policy then, but part of it also, a significant part, was that I noticed that both major parties didn’t like him. And I found that really quite appealing. And my political journey in my adult life started and continued for many, many years as an anti-two-party system guy. I’ve always considered myself a very political person, but for many, many years, up until just a few years ago, I would qualify that I was political, but also quite ignorant. So as I was this very political, but ignorant person, very anti-two-party, once the 2016 election came around, of course, everyone knew Trump by name for all of his various entertainment and business dealings. But I noticed something about his campaign that I thought was similar to Nader’s, which was that both parties didn’t like him. So I thought, hmm, maybe there’s something there that I wanna pay attention to. So it didn’t take a lot for me to become enamored with his campaign. That’s where I believe my trauma, my political trauma really started. It was in that late 2015, all throughout 2016 is that when, when that election was happening, I was one of the Trump voters of the belief that the election of Hillary Clinton was the end of America. I was very, very deep in the Republican MAGA partisan world. While I didn’t buy into all of the theories and conspiracies and the mythologies, I believed a lot of them in the MAGA Trump world. I was, I had a community. I was part of a community. I was, I felt validated. Those were those with whom I broke bread congregated. I felt that there was a legitimacy to what I was doing being around others. And that is a very underestimated part of why for some people, they become very, very immersed in what they’re not realizing is actually very politically traumatizing surroundings and relationships. Because I think with trauma, with political trauma, especially another point that I like to bring up in my work is that the more traumatized we are, the more that we are actually abusing ourselves. So after the 2020 election, of course, we had the January 6 insurrection. And for even up to that point, I was still on board with Trump. I was of the original thinking of, well, January 6, yeah, it was bad, but it’s made into a bigger deal than it really was. And then I started to examine closely some of the forces that led to that day. And I came to realize that it was actually much more serious and the factors that fueled it much more nefarious than I had originally thought. And combined with the constant undermining of the will of the people of our democratic institutions and norms with the constant stolen election, which again, I use this word a lot, but it was and is a traumatizing mythology that our former president continues to espouse. So I started to see more and more that those were mythologies that I did not at all believe and then they actually explained a lot of what might’ve happened that day. As I look now back on that life that I had, how I thought, the answer I have is really so simple. And I’m actually happy that it’s simple because I feel like it can be easily applied. I diversified my news and information sources. And as I did that, I could account for the fact that all of these important issues are not quite as black and white as I actually once maybe wanted to believe that they were. I came to realize that I was chipping away at what I considered my own inner morality, my own inner intellect that I now have embraced more. Why? Because I’ve gone through that period of liberation. So I went, I had that community and that is really powerful and immensely influential when it comes to our political dealings. Once we start to see that there’s actually a whole other world outside of what we may think, we start to be able to piece together and heal. Yes, on one hand, I left behind a community, but I also was able to find another. And I believe that my footing in this community more and better reflects and represents who I am than my prior community.
Mónica:
Does your political community reflect who you are and what you aspire to for this country? Or does it just reflect the people you — at this moment — feel most comfortable around? What a question.
It makes me want to listen to myself. Watch my own reactions. Stay curious.
And speaking of curiosity, we want to know what questions this episode — or any episode — has sparked in you. Because later on, we’re doing an “Ask Me Anything” session! I know there are a ton of thorny issues that come up around bridging these divides we’re talking about — some of you might be skeptical of the whole concept — and this can’t just be a one way street. So please, throw your toughest questions at me! We are here for this! And later this season I’m going to gather a few of my bridge-building friends together – both Reds and Blues — to offer some responses.
Just email your question to us at abraverway@braverangels.org, and thanks to everyone who’s already reached out.
With that, I’m ready to send you brave souls back to your worlds with a song. It’s called “The Quiet Voice” by Alex Wong and Elise Hayes, and it was one of the honorees in the 2020 Braver Angels Songwriting Contest. Take a listen…
Song, “The Quiet Voice” by Alex Wong and Elise Hayes
“Darlin, darlin, you’re not okay.
I can see that you’re hurtin’.
The look in your eyes shows me the pain.
I feel the anger burnin’.
Words hit you like hand grenades.
Throw ‘em back, you can make them pay.
But maybe there’s another way, hidin’ in the silence.”
And that’s our show!
Thank you for joining us on this fifth episode of A Braver Way.
A Braver Way is a production of Braver Angels.
We get financial support from the M.J. Murdock Charitable Trust and Reclaim Curiosity.
Our Senior Producer and Editor is David Albright.
Our Producer is Jessica Jones.
Our theme music that you hear in the intro each episode— and in some other spots —is by the fantastic #1 Billboard bluegrass-charting hip-hop band, Gangstagrass.
A special thank you to Mike Casentini, Ben Caron, and Michelle Schroer — and to our contributor, April Lawson.
I’m your host and guide across the divide, Mónica Guzmán.
If you like what you’ve heard, hit subscribe, give us a 5 star review, and share this episode with anyone you know who’s ever reacted to things said from across the divide over the holidays or anytime at all. Spoiler alert: that’s everybody. 🙂
Questions? Comments? Surprises?
As always you can reach us at abraverway@braverangels.org.
Take heart, everyone. ‘Til next time.
“But the storm won’t go away, until you climb inside it.
Let the quiet voice drown out all the noise.
Even when they’re screaming out, I know that your love is louder.
Let the battle cry fade away this time.
Darlin, we still have a choice.
Listen to the quiet voice.
Yeah, just cuz they shout it, doesn’t make it true.
Cuz everyone gets the loudest when they’re about to lose.
Let the quiet voice drown out all the noise.
Even when they’re screaming out, I know that your love is louder.
Let the battle cry fade away this time.
Darlin’, we still have a choice.
Listen to the quiet voice.
Listen to the quiet voice.”