About Me

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I am a cross trained higher education professional and experiential educator. I am interested in these intersections and how they can be utilized to create a world in which more people see success in their lives. I am an individual committed to positive change in the world. + ∞ Δ

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

National Coming Out Day


A lot has changed since I last updated. I have moved across country, and now live back in the southeast again. I have taken a job as the Assistant Director of an office on a university campus! I once again back at a university which I am happy about, despite leaving so many dear people behind at my last place of employment. I miss them much but it was time to move on to new different and bigger challenges. I work in multicultural affairs once again as a diversity and social justice educator, something that is my calling. With my experience as an outdoor experiential educator, I often utilize these sometimes different arenas to create interesting results! Well, I guess that's mostly it.

Today is National Coming Out Day. That's quite exciting. My office had quite a number of events today to support this day, put on by one of the wonderful graduate students that work in my office! They were all done so well! I am so happy and proud to be a part of this office.

This is also a day that is quite important to me. People who identify as LGBTQIA are a group that are often marginalized, and sometimes even marginalized within their own group. I have been a member of this community in one way or another for a long time. For this reason, and others, it's really important for me for folks to support members of the community. If you don't know very much about the community I encourage you to reach out to someone you trust and learn something! I will put myself out there and say you can feel free to contact me and I would love to help you to understand so that you too can help in some regard to support this and other marginalized communities. Being an ally is an amazingly powerful thing.

As an ally you work to support, understand, learn and share. An ally can be an immediate member of the community or culture, or it can be someone who is not a direct member of the culture, but as an ally you can become a supporting member of the culture. It is important to push yourself to learn, and one of the best ways to do this is to put yourself in uncomfortable situations in order to learn from them. Many of my situations of most growth have arisen from these sorts of challenges. Go on. Push yourself!

Be easy folks.

See you soon.

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

In the spirit of Anne Braden...


This entry may offend some. If you are easily offended, I recommend skipping this one. It is also a bit long as it covers quite a few thoughts from my recent experiences. There are a few primary stories/thoughts in this entry and then my musings on them. The first one happened a few months ago.

I was visiting with my mother and my step-father to his childhood home. Also known as my step-grandmother’s house. Is that even a real thing? I don’t know, she’s a lovely lady; very sweet. I was there visiting and many other people were there as well including my step-father, one of his brothers, his nephew, his nephew’s daughter and several others.

It was the last two that the focus of this experience is focused upon. The nephew’s daughter is adorable, just right around two years old; an absolute doll. Her father is also generally a good guy that I have gotten along with in the past. He is a bassist (like myself) in a local band that if I remember correctly, I liked. Despite being in the music “business”, his love doesn’t extend to all other members of the music community.

His daughter had a doll of some sort. It actually may have been a Justin Bieber doll, I’m not quite sure. In any case, she believed it was Mr. Bieber. Now as I sit here writing this, listening to The White Stripes, there is no love lost between Mr. Bieber and myself. Until I saw an episode of Glee a few weeks ago I could not have recognized a single song of his. I am no fan of his by any means, but I am a fan of love and acceptance.

The point of this tale resides herein. As the little girl was playing with the doll her father, and her grandfather I believe (my step-uncle?) were asking her if Bieber was a “homo” and trying to get her to say this. Now I understand getting little kids to say things is often a funny way to amuse yourself; but this was the teaching and indoctrination of hate and in my eyes probably fear as well.

Those of you who know me know that I am rarely at a loss for words. I was stunned. I didn’t know how to respond. I felt morbidly uncomfortable and just did not know how to proceed. As an experiential & social justice professional, I find that it is imperative to reflect of situations that I can learn from. I don’t know that if this were to happen again how I would handle this situation. I have not been back since, which is not strange as I don’t go there often, but in a situation where I already feel awkward and out of place how can I hope to make a point that is respected, heard and understood.

I have for a long time been a proponent of the LGBT community for many reasons. This summer during the day when folks were supposed to wear purple in solidarity of anti-LGBT bullying and in remembrance of those young people who took their own lives due to anti-LGBT bullying I took a stand. I dyed bandanas purple and everyone at my place of work, full-time and adjunct instructors, folks younger than me and folks my father’s age wore these bandanas. I delivered a speech before dinner to a group of more than 100 students and teachers, middle school and high school students alike about the importance of why we were wearing purple and what they can do to make a change. It was quite powerful. There was a young high school student who was out to his peers, and he was very happy that we did this and so were many of the teachers.

In a time when things ARE changing (DADT, DOMA) how can we begin to fight the smaller battles on the home front? It reminds me of the attitude toward the LGBT community in Taiwan (from how it was explained to me when I was there by locals). It’s a concept many folks are familiar with, and it brings remembrance of George Carlin. NIMBY. Not in my back yard.

Now, these are good people, my step-family. Ann Braden, a civil rights activist from the south that began to be active in the 60’s is my inspiration in this case. There is a fabulous song about this woman by the alternative hip-hop band the Flobots. Check the lyrics and the song itself. It’s wonderful (as is the band). An excerpt of the lyrics that reminds me of this situation is below:

Imagine the world that you’re standing within
All of you neighbors and family friends
How would you cope facing the fact that the flesh on their hands was tainted with sin
She faced this everyday
People she saw on a regular basis
People she loved in several cases
People she knew were incredibly racist
It was painful but she never stopped loving them
and never stopped calling their names
And she never stopped being a southern woman
and she never stopped fighting for change
She saw that her struggle was in the tradition of ancestors never aware of her
and continues today the soul of a southerner born of the “Other America”


Check out the Flobots preforming the song live here.

It seems that many of us who fight for change and work and live as social justice allies have family and friends, people we love in several cases, that are incredibly phobic of folks that are different. Does this affect your work, and how? How do you recover from this potentially energy-draining and difficult situation?

Me? I left. I haven’t really spoken about this situation to anyone save for a few friends. My mother, whom I was sitting near knew I was very upset. She generally tries to calm me down when at my grandfather’s (her father) house when phobic epitaphs are being spewed. This time was no different. I am personally very good at challenging students that I work with and my peers and colleagues on their thoughts related to social justice and acceptance (notice I didn’t say that unhealthy t word, tolerance) but I am very bad at it with my family, perhaps the place I should start. Can an old dog learn new tricks? What are your thoughts?

Friday, January 21, 2011

A Call for Help!

Hey my faithful and perhaps new readers. I have a question. Recently at work I took up the task of looking at this old activity that we all agree is some sort of challenge course initiative. All that we know about it is that it was donated to our organization sometime in the early part of the last decade. It has been here longer than anyone has been here and additionally there are no related literature on the things. I tinkered around with the parts for a good part of the day yesterday and was able to come up with around fourteen or so activities that could be done with these parts. That being said, I don't feel that any of these activities are the one activity that this is meant for. My only thought that I think may hold ground is that this is a sort of portable challenge course that you can build many things with. I have attached a bunch of pictures so that you can look for yourself at the pictures. Additionally, the numbers of the different pieces are:

10 2x4 4 feet long with no holes
16 2x3 4 feet long with 3 holes, ends and middle
54 2x3 2~ feet long with 2 holes, at the ends
44 dowl rods
2 little raiser structures

There are a few pictures to guide your thoughts and perhaps suggestions and probably questions. I tried to take a variety of pictures to help everyone adequately see the items as well as a few of the things I built with them so you can get an idea what I was doing and what may be perhaps possible.

The activities I was able to build:

TP Shuffle (Line Up Log)
Muse (Potentially)
Longest Line/Structure
A Crossing Type Activity
"Build Something"
CEO Design Project that focuses of creativity and design
Circle the Shape
Ring Toss
Whale Watch balance type activity
Operation (get bull rings off dowls and back on with no touch)
Wild Woozy
All Aboard
Rhythym Sticks
Carnival game where you push the ball up and down and up a wave thing. Though I could rig a ball with a string through it and have participants do that without bringing it off the element and in cohesion.
And finally, the activity, that in someways I am doing with you all:

"What is This?"

Let's see how this goes, perhaps we'll even debrief and talk transference at the end! Enjoy friends!

From Blogger Pictures

From Blogger Pictures

From Blogger Pictures

From Blogger Pictures

From Blogger Pictures

From Blogger Pictures

From Blogger Pictures

From Blogger Pictures

From Blogger Pictures

From Blogger Pictures

From Blogger Pictures

From Blogger Pictures

From Blogger Pictures

From Blogger Pictures


If these pictures aren't clear enough or large enough, the Picasa album can be found here: http://picasaweb.google.com/stephen.weiser/BloggerPictures?feat=directlink

Sunday, August 29, 2010

Disjointed Update

Sorry I haven't updated in quite some time. This summer has been incredible busy. With groups coming and going I never have time to sit down and breathe it seems, let alone write.

I am really loving my new job. I feel that I am really getting back into the groove of facilitating on a regular basis. I am able to fully engage all of my students most of the time, which is an accomplishment, while I too am having a good time! It's like a win-win! I am desperately missing my friends back in Columbia, which is compounded by all the fabulous Twitter updates and texts from 3Crown! Which isn't to say I don't appreciate them whole-heartedly, but makes me wish I had stayed another year.

I have also discovered how much of that E in ENFP I truly am. I have come to really not like my days off here as I don't really do anything with anyone. I forgot how much I have not having a large group of folks in my general age range to be social with. It was a problem when I was in Chicago and it is here as well. I must figure out how to over-come this negative aspect of my situation. I completely love everything else, but the lack of other people around here is difficult for me.

I am very much looking forward to the AEE conference in Vegas in November, where I will be presenting. It's also kind of cool that 2 other people affiliated with my organization will also be presenting which is pretty cool!

Even more than that I am looking forward to a very special wedding in Jackson in October. It will really cool to get away for a weekend and see some beautiful faces.

I am also trying to find a time, maybe for a football game to return to Carolina. This would be the last year I really know anyone there, so if I am ever going to go back this would be the time. Any suggestions?

Sorry for this disjoined updated. They will get back on schedule from this point and much more coherent. Sorry for keeping you all holding your breath for no valid reason!

Sunday, June 27, 2010

Trouble in Paradise

So this is an entry that is probably more personal than many I have posted thus far. This is something that happened to me last week. I was watching an episode with a summer staff member last week when this individual semi-accidentally disclosed to me that they were planning on drinking that night in their cabin, and that this was not the first time that they were going to drink on property, something explicitly against protocol regardless of age during the summer.

I knew that this was something that I could not stand idly by. I also knew that I was not going to report due to policy and the fact that my job could have been on the line, but more so to do with the fact that the students with which we work come from backgrounds that are less than ideal, perhaps often to do with drugs and alcohol. How can we create a safe space for them to grow and learn if these activities are going on in the very same space.

I of course went and spoke with my supervisor immediately. The next day we all got together, the staff living on property for the summer and had a conversation. All the summer staff were very upset to say the least, save for one or two. Additionally, it seemed one of the summer staff at one point had spoken up to the group but had been ignored and I felt as if they were going to start blaming this individual for “narking”. Finally I spoke up and told the group that it was me who said something.

They were not exactly happy with me. One individual actually spoke up and said that they didn’t know if they would be able to trust me. And then an additional person spoke up to say the same thing. This was probably the single most hurtful thing that has ever happened to me that has been an blow that happened verbally.

I take trust very seriously and believe that I have never given anyone a reason to doubt me, to not trust me, certainly not anyone from this group. I don’t believe I betrayed anyone’s trust, so this blow hurt me greatly.

Since then, it has been rather awkward with the summer staff. Most of them no longer like me, which is difficult to work with, but it has improved in the past few days, especially since we had a program the last few days last week, which was amazing and the subject of another post.

Thanks for listening! Talk with you all soon!

g

Thursday, June 10, 2010

A new take on an old activity.

Many of you are familiar with the challenge course initiative pipeline, I found a really cool blog today with a variation of this that I thought I might share here. The post is by michael cardus and can be found here:

http://create-learning.com/blog/team-building-activity/team-building-activity-coriolis-affect

It is called the Coriolis Affect and I can't wait to try it out! What is your favourite activity that you have recently learned?

Wednesday, June 9, 2010

DMB, Snakes & Training

So this past weekend I went to upstate New York with two of my roommates for a spontaneous weekend trip to see Dave Matthews Band. It was a blast. I had such a great time. The show was a bit different than the one I went to last year in terms of energy and types of songs he played, but in all it was a good time.

Since I have gotten back we have been prepping for the summer staff to arrive. It is kind of weird as I am watching all of my friends be the summer staff while I am getting ready to train/ be trained with the summer staff here. Some of them came this evening and we got to have dinner with them. In all they seem like a pretty cool group. I am very excited to meet with more of them and learn more about them.

Additionally, I got to go kayaking this Sunday with two of my roommates on the Delaware River. It's pretty much like a big ole lake, which for my whitewater boat, kind of sucks. I have to paddle extra hard to keep it straight as opposed to them who had a leisurely paddle. At one point, we kept seeing all these fish and it was really cool and exciting. I got a bit ahead of them and thought that I saw a really BIG fish. So I sped up to see it and it was moving really fast. I got a bit closer and saw that it was REALLY BIG, like 5 feet big. Them I realized that this fish had no fins. Then I realized based on how it was swimming with it's head above water that it was a water snake! Now, as some of you may know I had a pet snake for a while, so snakes don't generally freak me out that much, but water snakes freak me the hell out. I immediately turned right around and paddled my happy ass out of there. It was crazy!

Luckily, they do not have poisonous water snakes here, so I need not to be freaked out that badly, just mildly! :-)

Well, training started tomorrow and it's going to be hella intense.I am excited. I shall update you on it as we go!

Thanks friends!!