Parker Palmer

If we are to survive and thrive, we must hold its divisions and contradictions with compassion, lest we lose our democracy.

I discovered a book that helped me understand how heartbreak and depression – two of the most isolating and disabling experiences I know – can expand one’s sense of connectedness and evoke the heart’s capacity to employ tension in the service of life. Lincoln’s Melancholy, by Joshua Shenk, is a probling examination of our sixteenth

If we are to survive and thrive, we must hold its divisions and contradictions with compassion, lest we lose our democracy. Read More »

When was the last time you solved a problem by talking about people who weren’t in the room?

Think about everyday experiences outside of politics – in your family, neighborhood, workplace, or the voluntary associations to which you belong. In settings of that sort, when was the last time you solved a problem by talking about people who weren’t in the room? Almost certainly the answer is “Never.” That kind of talk is

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“Them”

As I listen in on private and public conversations about the problems of American democracy, I’m struck time and again by how often our political talk is about people who aren’t in the room. We almost always talk about them – “those people” in Washington, D.C., or in our state capitols – the people we

“Them” Read More »