Creator and nonviolence practitioner Kazu Haga explores why fierce vulnerability is a crucial follow for internal and outer transformation.
Learn an excerpt of Kazu’s e-book, Fierce Vulnerability, and buy your personal copy HERE.
This time on Mindrolling, Raghu and Kazu Haga chat about:
- Kazu’s troublesome upbringing and the way assembly Japanese Buddhist monastics remodeled his life
- Combining social motion and spirituality
- The legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and addressing each internal violence of the spirit and outer systemic violence
- How an “us vs. them” worldview fuels division, struggling, and ecological destruction
- Therapeutic childhood trauma and collective trauma by integrating the fractured elements of ourselves
- How getting susceptible opens up our capability to heal
- The Seven Fires Prophecies from the Anishinaabe individuals
- Rebuilding the world by non secular follow relatively than materials accumulation
- Remembering that private therapeutic is inseparable from collective therapeutic in an interdependent world
- Listening deeply and being snug with uncertainty
“The work that I do for me to be wholesome, grounded, and to have the ability to combine my particular person traumas is just in order that I might be in a greater place to contribute to collective therapeutic” –Kazu Haga
Try the e-book Hospicing Modernity for extra highly effective insights on social motion
About Kazu Haga:
Kazu Haga is a coach and practitioner of nonviolence and restorative justice, a core member of the Ahimsa Collective and the Fierce Vulnerability Community. He’s a Jam facilitator and creator of Therapeutic Resistance: A Radically Totally different Response to Hurt and Fierce Vulnerability: Therapeutic from Trauma, Rising from Collapse. He works with incarcerated individuals, youth, and activists from across the nation. He has over 25 years of expertise in nonviolence and social change work. He’s a resident of the Canticle Farm group on Lisjan Ohlone land, Oakland, CA, the place he lives together with his household. Yow will discover out extra about his work at www.kazuhaga.com.
“The work of nonviolence has to start out by wanting on the methods by which we maintain inner violence of the spirit, that unhealed anger, hatred, resentment, delusion, in addition to our unhealed traumas, and understanding how all of that’s the supply of exterior violence on the planet. Sure we want the social actions, but when we’re not grounded in some form of internal work and introspection plenty of the violence we need to change on the market will get replicated in our personal work, in our personal communities.” –Kazu Haga


