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Troubling the Water: The Urgent Work of Radical Belonging

by Ben McBride

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1961,150,924 (4.75)None
In this immersive book, Rev. Ben McBride asks what it would take to truly belong to each other. Radical belonging requires looking at our implicit biases, at our faulty understandings of power, and at how we "other" or "same" people. It may even mean troubling the waters to stir up truth and save our humanity.… (more)
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This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
The work of change is a journey of inches, sometimes, and McBride's message is accessible, meaningful, and available to everyone who is unhappy with the way things are in the world today.

McBride's perspective as a Black, Christian man who has been involved in community and advocacy work for decades is informed and informative. He is candid about his experiences and there is profound depth of humanity in his words. This isn't preaching- it's a true call to action, with recognition of where we've come from and hope for the world to come.

This is truly for all of us. Bridging our differences and becoming the world we want to see is the message, with practical steps considering many different lenses. ( )
  amaryann21 | Mar 6, 2024 |
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
McBride's book, Troubling The Water is a timely and thoughtful reminder of the necessity of continuing the work exemplified by the Civil Rights Movement in the US, particularly, by its commitment with non-violence. While McBride is no blind to the facts - and consequences - of a sociopolitical system that advances the few at the expense of the many, he is equally aware of the necessity, when thinking and implementing solutions, to include everybody as potential beneficiary. In other words, a solution predicated on exclusionary practices is no solution at all. And that means that radical belonging is not a catchphrase but a necessary condition. This fact does not exclude or ignore the anger that present conditions create. On the contrary, it assumes anger as a requirement (along the lines of Audre Lorde's The Uses of Anger), a tool with which the pain and the damage done have a chance to recover, heal, in order to be able to contribute to the creation of a just world. While the book does not have all the answers, it has plenty of the questions required to interrogate today's social issues and their actors, as well as to create a space in which all are invited to dialogue.
  MariaLuisaLacroix | Mar 2, 2024 |
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
Ben McBride's main focus and experience with radical belonging applies to racial tensions in the USA. With that said I feel that the principles shared in this book can be applied to so many other tensions. His powerful explanation of "Quadrants to illustrate what othering looks like in our everyday lives" (p18) serves as a blueprint on healing for so many other -isms in our world. Understanding where we stand in the context as the Powerful, the Privileged, the Persecuted and the Prevented is such a powerful realization.

This is a highly spiritual book. Honestly I found myself wanting to share so many quotes from it with my spiritual community. I would love to see these practices in the context of a workshop. How can radical belonging show up in different communities? I would love to read more examples of this work out in the wild.

Thank you Ben McBride for sharing this work with all of us. I will definitely be recommending it to everyone. ( )
  paolasp | Dec 1, 2023 |
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
One word. Fantastic
  samanthab29 | Nov 15, 2023 |
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
GREAT READ!!!
  tackerman1 | Nov 15, 2023 |
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There he was again. After a long and exhausting day of peacemaking and anti-violence work in Oakland, I arrived home to see him there, again. He, the brother, casually sitting on the front steps of my house, was uninvited and ready to verbally scuffle with me over whether he belonged there.
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I need you to understand the urgency of now. If we don't commit to manifesting a world of radical belonging—starting now—our world, as we know it, will continue to come undone right before our eyes.
Those of us who are othered, marginalized, and subordinated can organize, we can protest, we can get all up in people's faces, and we can demand policy changes. And we should do those things. But those of you who have proximity to the levers of change need to be courageous, conscious, and committed disrupters as well.
People sometimes think of belonging as the feeling of comfort when we are accepted, the sense of fitting in. But when belonging means simply acclimating to the status quo of the cultural majority, it stops being true belonging. Belonging cannot be held ransom to assimilation. Radical belonging means co-creating with the “perceived other” to widen the circle of human concern.
You might be asking, “What do I need to do to create a world where all can belong?” But I believe that's the wrong question. Each of us should be asking ourselves: “Who do I need to become?”
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In this immersive book, Rev. Ben McBride asks what it would take to truly belong to each other. Radical belonging requires looking at our implicit biases, at our faulty understandings of power, and at how we "other" or "same" people. It may even mean troubling the waters to stir up truth and save our humanity.

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Ben McBride's book Troubling the Water: The Urgent Work of Radical Belonging was available from LibraryThing Early Reviewers.

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