Reflecting on WAM! It Yourself

This is the last WAM! Post I promise! The unanticipated presence of what seemed like a million rowdy soccer fans at Hoboken Station this evening lead to a three-hour long commute home (2 hours waiting for a ticket and a train, 1 hour on said train) that left plenty of time to reflect and tie it all together. This is going to be concise and a little more personal, unlike my prolific amount of liveblogging I cranked out today. I even put it in list form to make it easier to get through!

10 Takeaways from WAM! It Yourself NYC

1) Social media is a powerful tool for revolution. It can be used to share stories, call out public figures, disseminate information about actions that people can take… its all about using it effectively by having a strong message and making sure your social media use is only a part of a larger spectrum of activist effort.

2) Community is everywhere. Sometimes I freak out about leaving the comfortable community of my school, where I can walk into the Women’s Center and just know that I am surrounded by “my people” without a doubt. Organizations like WAM and events like this remind me that the feminists and the activists and the cool people don’t just evaporate when I step off campus… they’re out there, we just have to find each other! (Please never hesitate to tweet me @imagine_today or e-mail me or comment here… I love making new feminist friends on and offline!)

3) You are capable of so much more than you give yourself credit for. This was my first trip into NYC alone, with no idea where I was going ahead of time. I got there and back in one piece… before today I would have never guessed that I was capable of this. Similarly, your words (and my words) can do so much if we just say them to the right people… you never know who you might impact just by speaking out. So don’t be afraid to push past your comfort zone to see just how much you can do.

4) YOU control the conversation, you set your limits. If someone is being disingenuous and giving you a hard time it is totally fine to just tell them to “fuck themselves sideways” (this line from Megan Carpentier today is one of my favorites, of course, because I am crass and shameless) and get on with your life. Sometimes the best way to deal with criticism is simply to laugh it off and move on with your life; the more ridiculous the commentary, the better this strategy works.

5) Speak your truth and the rest will follow. This was big today… and there isn’t much to say. Yes, your opinions may change over time but as long as you are always being honest and open and you then you’re going to be okay because, at the end of the day, regardless of the criticisms, if you speak your truth you’ll have nothing to regret.

6) Know what you (and your words) are worth. I skipped out on the session about getting published in order to learn about social media and activism… but judging from the twitter feed and the general buzz of the day this was a big theme. I honestly don’t know how I feel about writing for free vs. being paid because I write for free a lot (like on Persephone and Not Your Average Feminist and here) and I love it: I love the community and the impact my words can have. That said… getting paid to write feels really good and I do believe my words are often powerful enough to warrant it… its a tough line to walk, really, and I’d love (so much) to hear input if anyone has it!

7) As a feminist writer it is important to find a balance between inhabiting and maintaining feminist communities, and slipping feminist dialogue into the main stream media.We need our communities, to stay sane, and to learn, and to push the dialogue forward… but we also need to be getting the things that we learn out there to the general public which often means struggling a bit, and distilling things (like by replacing buzzwords like patriarchy with something more intuitively understood). Both of these things are important in their own ways.

8) As a journalist it is important to keep a balance of what you need to survive and what you need to thrive: meaning, sometimes you will have to write pieces that don’t thrill you, or work a bunch of side jobs, in order to keep food on the table and a roof over your head while you write what actually makes you passionate.

9) Effective media appearances take a ton of research and practice! A handful of solid talking points that tie in hard data, recent news events, and personal stories plus a bunch of role-playing practice are what it takes to be at your best!

10) It takes exactly three and a half chai-lattes to get through a day-long conference on three hours of sleep. Granted, most of the energy derived from that caffeine was used to power my brain as I tried to make sense of how the PATH runs on a weekend so… I’m not exactly sure about that figure, your mileage may vary!

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Check out my coverage of the  conference if you want more: [Social Media for Activism] [Feminist Perspectives in Progressive Media] [Feminist Blogger Roundtable] [Media Training] [The Closing Keynote with Deanna Zandt] Also, check out the official liveblogs from the conference here and here. Plus, the twitter feed is pretty awesome!

Also: if you were there & you feel like it it’d be awesome if you could share your own favorite takeaway lessons in the comments!

Three Conferences in Three Weekends!

So I just finished confirming the arrangements & I have a super-exciting announcement to make…

Starting next weekend two weekends from now I am going to be launching the (almost) Month of Social Justice Conferences! Even better, I plan to take my cute now blue netbook with me so that I can liveblog the whole thing for my fantastic readers!!

The first conference is New York Collective of Radical Educators (NYCoRE!) Women, Action, & The Media: WAM It Yourself NYC Conference on March 26th! I was originally going to attend the NYCoRE Conference on the same day, also in NYC, but I ultimately ended up deciding that this conference was a tiny bit more relevant to my interests.

I am SO excited to meet many of the bloggers from the blogs that I follow obsessively (like Lori Adelman from Feministing and Feministe’s Sally)!

Continue reading

Dear Planned Parenthood,

Crossposted at Persephone!

So  you probably already heard that late Friday afternoon, the House of Representatives voted to cut all funding from Planned Parenthood. On a practical level, this isn’t so very terrifying because we can feel relatively safe in the fact the Senate will most likely shoot this bill down and, even if they don’t, Obama will most likely veto it before damage can really be done.

Still, it is times like these that drive home how crucial it is that we speak up for Reproductive Justice.

Reproductive health access and rights in the United States are far from perfect, but we’re doing much better right now than ever before. Abortion is legal (for now) and most states have at least one provider, if not more.

Even though the Hyde Amendment ensures that no federal funding can go to abortion (which also means that many insurance providers won’t cover it and many lower-income women cannot afford to pay for an abortion or the travel costs when there is only one clinic in their state), we have it much better than women who lived before Roe v. Wade. Because of this, it can be pretty easy to get complacent.

If we stop using our voices to fight for more funding for reproductive health-care (including abortions), if we stop reminding people of the awesome services that Planned Parenthood offers (HIV and other STI testing, gynecological exams, education programs, options counseling, birth control, abortion, cancer screening … the list goes on and on), if we stop pushing for more funding and more freedom and more acceptance … then, we’re in trouble because when we stop fighting, we start to lose ground.

Planned Parenthood is probably safe, for now, but if we don’t cry out as loud as we can this time, then the next time they come after our reproductive rights (and they will), the ground that we stand on will be just a little bit shakier … keep that up long enough and we could end up losing a lot of the hard-fought battles that currently rest behind us.

So take a few minutes and throw your voice in to help protect Planned Parenthood and reproductive rights in general for you and for the generations of women yet to come.

  • Officially stand with Planned Parenthood by signing the petition.
  • Post to Dear Planned Parenthood, the tumblr that my awesome friend Zaneta and I started for people to share their stories (anonymously or not) about Planned Parenthood to help paint a real, holistic picture of all the good that this wonderful organization does.
  • Blog or Tweet about Reproductive Justice, Planned Parenthood, etc.
  • Attend a Rally for Planned Parenthood (or organize one if there isn’t one near you!)
  • Donate to Planned Parenthood if you have any cash to spare!
  • Organize a Planned Parenthood Fundraiser in your community! (We’re in the midst of planning one at Ramapo – once we’ve made more progress I can share some ideas here!)

Have any more ideas? What have you done? Share your projects in the comments!

SAY NO to the “No Taxpayer Funding for Abortion Act”

I haven’t written about this yet because I am just so f*cking angry that I see red every time I try to even think, let alone write or speak, about the GOP’s attempt to redefine rape.

I am speaking of the No Taxpayer Funding for Abortion Act. A bill that, “seeks to revamp the current allowances for victims of rape or incest to use government funds to pay for abortions. Instead, the bill aims to limit the rape exemption to cases of “forcible rape.” Also, the bill would make it so that federal funds would only cover abortions in cases of incest if the woman is younger than 18-years-old.”

This act is terrifying because it leaves out women who are coerced into drinking too much and losing control, or blackmailed into having sex, or tricked, or are just too paralyzed by fear to even speak let alone put up a fight… but it is also terrifying because many times even rape achieved through plain old brute force does not qualify as forcible rape in our legal system. Sometimes, even if a woman says no and the rapist acknowledges on the stand that he heard her say no… well, that’s still not rape because she didn’t fight back hard enough (maybe because she was afraid of being beaten on top of being raped, or because she is paralyzed by fear? Just sayin.) The Republican party would have us believe that this woman hadn’t been raped, even though she was forced to have sex that she didn’t want to have and had to go through the same emotional responses and struggle that any other rape survivor has to deal with… how is this okay? Its not. It wasn’t when the Pennsylvania Supreme Court levied this decision in 1994, and its no more okay today in 2011.

There’s only one thing to say: we can’t let them do this.

When I think about this bill I don’t think about it in the abstract. When I think about this bill I think about the multitudes of wonderful, strong women who I have connected with through the Rape Crisis Center, both on the phone and in person. Women who have been violated by people with no respect for them, their independence, or their autonomy. When I think about this bill I see a reflection of that same disrespect that rapists have for their targets,  because it is a bill that seeks to take bodily autonomy away from the women who need it the most.

When I speak to someone who has been sexually assaulted in any way my main goal is simply facilitating them in taking back control over their lives. Part of that control for a rape survivor could very easily mean aborting a fetus that was produced as a result of their assault. To pass legislation that would make it even harder for a rape victim to regain that control, when she is already struggling with so much uncertainty and pain inside of herself, is absolutely reprehensible.

Please, please join me in writing and calling your representative to beg them not to do this. Say what’s in your heart but please, do what you can to make it personal because if we can just get them to understand that these are lives that they are dealing with, lives of people who deserve a break not to be broken down even further… if they realize these are lives that they are playing with, there is no way this bill can pass.

Some information to help us all fight back…

Democratic Representatives Who Support the Bill:

Dan Boren [D-OK2]
Jerry Costello [D-IL12]
Mark Critz [D-PA12]
Joe Donnelly [D-IN2]
Daniel Lipinski [D-IL3]
Collin Peterson [D-MN7]
Nick Rahall [D-WV3]
Mike Ross [D-AR4]
Heath Shuler [D-NC11]

A sample letter written by a blogger, use it to help you write one of your own! If you live in a district represented by one of the Senators listed above, or if you are represented by a  Republican (who is most likely supporting this bill out of party loyalty, if not personal investment) then please, please take the time to call or e-mail them to share your story and let them know that your support for them is riding on them voting against this terrible bill.

Sign the petition!

Join in the #DearJohn twitter campaign directed at Speaker Bahner.

Make your voice heard however you can because we cannot let injustice like this pass.