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I recently read an inspiring and profound article in AQAL Journal (Winter 2006, vol 1, No.4): Reviving Our Interiors: Serving the Mentally Ill Living On Our Streets, by Annie McQuade. It is a brilliant example of using an integral framework as a map to meaningfully address a pressing social issue. There are many things I love about this article, and I'd like to share an overview and some excerpts from it. After giving a very brief overview of the AQAL framework, she states her intention: ~~~~~ The intent of this article is quite simple: I will share my subjective experience of temporarily living on the streets as a spiritual practice and the experiences that ultimately drew me to work with the homeless. I will then offer insights that I have gleaned from studying the crisis and serving the homeless in various capacities over the last three years, all the while situating my experiences within an AQAL framework. I imagine that others who are attempting to manifest service from a space of deeper developmental awareness will resonate with the article. I hope that you will connect with my interior, creating a “We,” and that our connection will nourish us both and help us feel less frustrated and less isolated in this fragmented world. Replenished, may we return to the impossible task of relieving suffering. (pp. 117-118) ~~~~~ Here's an elaboration on her practice: ~~~~~ To become familiar with the experience of the people I serve, I spend a week every spring with fellow practitioners living on the streets of Denver with nothing. Each year we meet at the bus station with our sleeping bags. We do not shower for the preceeding week. We take no money other than our bus fare (we beg for our return fare): no cell phones, no toothbrush, and no food. (p. 118) footnote to above: I've spoken with many people who feel that I can never understand the experience of living on the streets because I am not homeless and I know that I will go home. This is a valid point. I am only trying to move closer to this experience and gain some insight to help me become more effective and compassionate in my service. However, this is an injunction (a practice), and before you jump to quick conclusions about the superficiality of the experiment, I suggest you try it. I think you would be astonished at the outcome. (p. 147) ~~~~~ She goes on to give a number of snapshots of her subjective experience on the streets. Here is one of them: ~~~~~ I'm standing in the middle of the St. Francis Day Shelter. There are some 150 homeless people around me. Some talk, some play cards, some stare off into space or sleep against the walls. Some just wait. It's loud and smells of unwashed bodies. I see Daryl. I hardly recognize him as his hair has gone completely white. Two years ago when I was on the streets, I talked with Daryl for three hours one night. He could barely finish a sentence. His thoughts were so disorganized, almost as if he were speaking in tongues. Now he is sitting not ten feet from me, wearing headphones, looking down at his legs, and making eye contact with no one. He is only 37. I feel a sharp and unexpected pain in my chest. I have no words, no thoughts, only this unnamable, direct pain. Unprepared, I cry. I cry and cannot recollect myself. Some time must have passed when another homeless man places his hand on my shoulder, quietly passes me a cup of coffee, and sits beside me silently and respectfully. Since that time, my experience of Daryl's suffering has not left my side. When a friend calls to tell me she loves me, I wonder, who calls Daryl? When I take a bath, I wonder: can he clean himself? When I buy groceries, I see him alone, white-haired and discarded. (pp. 118-119) ~~~~~ Another subjective snapshot: ~~~~~ Three months after my last time on the streets, I am walking downtown and see a homeless man begging. I turn and walk in a different direction to avoid him. My heart quickens. The image of Daryl rocking all by himself in that big room flashes before me. My chest aches. I remember peeing behind a dumpster, praying to God that no one would see me. I cry. I don't want to feel, and I am feeling anyway. Soon there is so much pain and affection mixed with so much resistance that it feels like something is tearing inside me - something gets in or gets out - something heartbreaking, and I feel not just for my self, not just for Daryl, but for everyone. I feel love and it's devastating. (p. 123) ~~~~~ McQuade goes on to discuss characteristics of the interiors of many living on the streets, and how many people - even those who work with the homeless - avoid deep contact because of the great pain involved. But, she asks, “how can I serve well without a willingness to at least connect to their plight, without building an intersubjective bridge, a 'we' that discloses our experiences to each other?” (p. 123) She notes, “On the streets I was angered by the suffering that I witnessed but decided to direct my anger. Instead of immediately looking for someone to blame (society, the government, the individual, the current administration, etc.) and formulating ill-informed strategies to 'fix' the problem, I decided to simply relate to the phenomena and use my anger as motivation to understand this mess.” (P. 124) She proceeds to detail how emerging worldviews (e.g. postmodernism) have affected the situation of those living on the streets, often in unexpected ways. Following this, she gives a brief overview of Spiral Dynamics, and then uses that lens to demonstrate the strengths and limitations of people with various “first-tier” SD worldviews (chiefly blue, orange and green) in dealing with the homeless, and the need to meet them where they are: ~~~~~ In serving the homeless, I seek to understand the worldview of the person I am serving in hopes of acting in accordance with it (skillful means). I do not force my worldview upon them (because it simply does not work). Entering another's worldview is a process that few service workers seem willing to undertake. Usually the service worker's own level of developoment (most likely First-Tier) renders them incapable of truly empathizing with multiple perspectives and levels, as they are convinced of the righteousness of their own. This section, therefore, emphasizes how little intersubjective space we share when serving the homeless. (p. 129 - emphasis in original) ~~~~~ In this section she notes, for example, how necessary rules are in various contexts, and how people holding Blue values and those holding Green err in opposite ways: Blue imposing too many rules too rigidly, Green too few too loosely. She talks about the necessary strengths of both value systems as well - I was impressed by the degree to which, thoughout the article, she holds a balanced and comprehensive integral perspective. Also in this section, she gives an awesome example of firmly setting a boundary while treating somebody with respect: “Once a male client told me he was undressing me with his eyes. I dropped my awareness into my solar plexus, stood up, moved close to him, looked him straight in the eyes, and in an even, no-nonsense voice said, 'I understand you have needs, but you will never speak to me that way again.' I never had any problems with that man again. So we can have power without annihilating another's basic goodness.” (p. 131, emphasis in original) Annie ends this section thus: ~~~~~ The main point I want to reiterate is that individuals embedded in First-Tier value structures (e.g. Blue, Orange, or Green) often fail to reflect on their own level of development and fail to understand the level of development of their client. For example, most service workers at First Tier never translate their message or their intention into the language of their clients. They do not create programs and outreach that interiorly motivate their client's level of development, so their clients never fully buy in. Therefore, there is no “We” and thus no shared understanding. Granted, there are some clients who will not buy in no matter the approach. Most forms of psychosis, sociopathic personalities, and antisocial personalities are resistant to most forms of “We.” In these cases, society is faced with the more difficult ethical dilemmas involved with caring for the person or protecting the communes from this person. (p. 135) ~~~~~ Following more discussion of her own subjective thoughts and practices in working with the homeless, addressing the interiors of the homeless themselves, and how those two factors intermesh, she concludes by taking us through a day of her social work - detailing the external circumstances of several client encounters and her interior experience of them - in a beautiful section titled ”I-Thou: Twenty-Four Hour Lament.” In a future post I might quote one of those poignant encounters. I hope you found this overview enjoyable and/or useful, and I recommend seeking out the full article. :) spiral out, arthur ______________ added August 13, 2007:
Annie McQuade has graciously agreed to make her article available to facilitate this discussion - please send me Z-mail/PM if you would like a copy of it; include your email address and I'll send it to you right away. (Of course, anyone with a sponsor or above membership with Integral Institute can access it through the Winter 2006, vol 1, No.4 issue of the AQAL journal.)
Annie will be able to take part in the conversation herself as it unfolds, so please think of anything you'd like to ask or say to her and share it here. :)
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