• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Heart - Head - Hands logo

  • Home
  • About
    • Beth Godbee
    • Commitments
    • Publications
  • Blog
    • Contemplative Practices
    • Emotional Literacies
    • Everyday Feminism
    • Higher Education
    • Interviews
    • Racial Justice
    • Recipes
    • Why Vegan?
  • Work with Me
    • Coaching
    • Courses, Retreats, Workshops
    • Career Discernment
    • Pathways Through Burnout
    • Writing Groups
  • Subscribe
  • Contact
  • Navigation Menu: Social Icons

    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • LinkedIn

Toward Public Outcry: Why I’ll Keep Repeating #AbolishICE and #CloseTheCamps

Filed Under: Emotional Literacies, Everyday Feminism, Racial Justice By Beth Godbee July 2, 2019 Leave a Comment

Outcry: a strong expression of public anger and disapproval

This week I dreamed about being detained when traveling, taken aside in an airport and made to wait and wait and wait … It became clear that I was being monitored and considered dangerous and essentially arrested.

What started in the airport turned into a full detention / internment / concentration camp experience. The dream’s details are sketchy, but I remember feeling powerless. I couldn’t call for help. I couldn’t change my circumstances. I couldn’t get free.

I woke crying out, chilled, and deeply shaken—and also relatively shielded by my lived experience within whiteness and U.S. citizenship: both of which are connected to today’s camps and their connection with white supremacy. Within this context of everyday and systemic oppression, my body was alerting me that it’s holding intense pain, reckoning with how people are living out this horror and how there’s urgent intervention needed. Needed now.

Awake from my dream and surrounded by dark silence, I thought about actions I’ve taken: from sharing articles, signing petitions, and posting “take action” lists to donating to legal support groups like RAICES and the ACLU.

These actions are far too small, too incomplete, too insignificant, and too impersonal. Still, these actions and so many more are needed.

I thought, too, about the need for everyday resistance, which exceeds any election day or national crisis. For the need for a collective outcry. For repeated “strong expression of public anger and disapproval.”

I want to be part of sustained, strong, collective, and LOUD outcry—an outcry that’s represented in hashtags like #AbolishICE and #CloseTheCamps and the related #AbolishCBP, #AbolishPrisons, #EndPrivatePrisons, and #EndMassIncarceration.

This image shares the quote “What’s clear is the need to repeat and repeat and repeat—strongly—anger and disapproval at detaining and imprisoning people,” against a dark blue background representing the night sky.

So, what’s clear to me is the need to repeat and repeat and repeat—strongly, as public outcry—anger and disapproval at detaining and imprisoning people.

Though speaking up is undoubtedly too small, too incomplete, too insignificant, and too impersonal, it’s also non-negotiable.

So, I’m repeating—to myself and publicly—and will continue repeating:

This black-and-white image shows the following hashtags framed within a computer monitor: #AbolishICE, #CloseTheCamps, #AbolishCBP, #AbolishPrisons, #EndPrivatePrisons, and #EndMassIncarceration.

Speak up. Write up. Stand up. SHOUT! Repeat.

Feel. Think. Do. With the voice shaking. Imperfectly. Consistently. Repeat.

Cry out. Wail. Lament. Grieve. Ache. Rage. Repeat.

Look squarely at complicity. Feel the contours of it. Know the depth of it. Repeat.

Stoke the fire. Keep it burning. Use it to act. Repeat.

Try, try again. And again. And again. Repeat.

Exclaim. Express. Roar. At night. In the day. Personally. Publicly. “This isn’t right!”

Repeat.

—
This post is written by Beth Godbee, Ph.D. for Heart-Head-Hands.com. For more posts like this one, you might try “For White Friends Using Social Media and Not Responding to Charlottesville” and “Speaking Up by Speaking Aloud Embodied Responses.”

To invest in ongoing self-work and deep-diving into conditioned ways of living, being, and intervening in the world, you might also consider the self-paced e-course, “40 Questions for 40 Walks: Toward Everyday Living for Justice.”

If you appreciate this site, if you connect with the storytelling, or if you use any of the recipes or resources, consider making a one-time or sustaining donation. Please also consider subscribing to posts and liking this blog on FB. Thanks!

Share this:

  • Click to print (Opens in new window) Print
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
  • Click to share on Pocket (Opens in new window) Pocket

Tagged with: activism, antiracism, commitments, community care, countering perfectionism, courage, embodiment, emotional literacies, habits, mantras, power, racial justice, resistance, shadow, social justice, social media, storytelling, systemic oppression, understanding injustice, writing

Support the Work

Previous Post: « How Small and Sustained Actions Turn Resolutions into Habits
Next Post: Self-Inquiry and Social Justice: What’s Walking Got to Do with It? »

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

About This Site

Embodied knowledge matters. So do commitments. And especially acting on commitments as part of everyday life, BIG and small. This website—a mix of blog posts and research writing, courses and offerings—shares ongoing efforts toward everyday living (feeling, thinking, and doing) for justice.

Subscription Options

Six subscription options are available, offering a range of support ~ from participation in writing retreats and workshops to one-with-one coaching.

This image shows six subscription options through Momence, beginning at $5+ per month. Six subscription options are available, offering a range of support ~ from participation in writing retreats and workshops to one-with-one coaching.

Featured Offerings

This e-course announcement shows a yellow sunflower and blue sky. It includes a textbox with the following information: “E-COURSE AVAILABLE NOW! Career Discernment for Academics: Aligning Career with Commitments. Self-paced study, exercises, coaching, and more ...”

This ad reads: “Time to write! Writing Retreats. Learn more @ Heart-Head-Hands.com.” A white coffee mug and table appear in the foreground, with golden chairs and walls in the background.

This image shows a writing scene (coffee, flowers, blank page, and pen against wooden planks) and shares information: “Weekly writing groups. Write in community. New groups open seasonally. Many registration options: Heart-Head-Hands.com.”

This image shows a blazing campfire in a mountain setting at dusk. It shares workshop information: “Practices for Navigating Burnout. Interactive Small-Group Workshops. Offered by Beth Godbee, Ph.D. & Candace Epps-Robertson, Ph.D.”

This image shows a scene of wrapped packages, a pine cone, and evergreen branches. A white text box shares the circular logo for Heart-Head-Hands: Everyday Living for Justice, and another text box reads: “gift cards available.”

Categories

  • Contemplative Practices (74)
  • Emotional Literacies (99)
  • Everyday Feminism (132)
  • Higher Education (63)
  • Interviews (13)
  • Racial Justice (72)
  • Recipes (22)
  • Why Vegan? (12)

Subscribe to Newsletter

Footer

This summer, caregiving and family responsibilitie This summer, caregiving and family responsibilities have taken me through the Appalachian Mountains ~ from North Carolina to Tennessee and through Virginia, West Virginia, and Pennsylvania. In some moments, I’ve felt so unmoored, unsure of where and when I am. But in others, I’ve felt the mountains holding me and reminding me that home is all around.

So, here’s photographic evidence that I grew up in the Appalachian Mountains and even learned to clog at a young age. I found this photo during a family conversation about learning to dance. Yes, I still love to dance. Though, like crocheting stitches, most of the clogging steps are long forgotten—maybe to be remembered?

(And here are a few accompanying recent photos from the mountains.)
It's a wonderful thing to return home to affirming It's a wonderful thing to return home to affirming emails. Here's one about a job offer aligned with commitments! 

From email, shared with permission: 
"I just wanted to send you a quick note to say that I accepted a job offer as _____ at _____! This was one of the roles we looked at in one of our sessions, and I'm very excited that I was able to get a position at a company I feel a strong sense of alignment with. Thank you for your coaching! You were a big part of the process that led to me getting this job!"

It is an incredible honor to be involved in career transitions. And it is incredibly rewarding to witness movement toward more supportive and aligned everyday conditions. 

When so much in the world is hard, coaching still feels like a strong yes. <3

#coaching #careercoach #careercoaching #careerdiscernment #commitments #livingoutcommitments #goodnews #strongyes
There’s so much I want to say about my love for There’s so much I want to say about my love for DC and my anger over this move toward federal control. Please support local organizing and follow calls for how to show up in solidarity in the days to come. 💛

#Repost @freedcproject with @use.repost
・・・
For our friends across the country asking how you can help, this one’s for you.

What’s happening in DC right now is not the first time this administration and its allies have attacked our communities. In March, Congress froze $1.1 billion of DC’s local budget. In addition to the current police escalation, Congress is also trying to overturn several critical local laws.

We want your members of Congress to do everything in their power to stand down federal forces DC, and stop attacks on DC communities for good. Send a letter to your Senators and Representative telling them to stop to it: freedcproject.org/allies (link in bio)
There’s so much I want to say about my love for There’s so much I want to say about my love for DC and my anger over this move toward federal control. Please support local organizing and follow calls for how to show up in solidarity in the days to come. 💛

#Repost @mvmnt4blklives with @use.repost
・・・
Earlier today Donald Trump announced that he is placing MPD under federal control and plans to deploy the National Guard to DC.

This is a dangerous escalation for our communities. But our people have been through things like this before.

Here are three ways everyone can help DC weather what’s ahead, starting tonight.

Repost via @freedcproject
This summer, amid many pulls away from writing, I This summer, amid many pulls away from writing, I was able to create a new writing portfolio.

Because my SelectedWorks page was sunsetted this summer, I needed a new way to share publications. The portfolio highlights some, while linking to a fuller list (what I’d share as part of an academic CV). I start with academic publications and then share pieces from public and community writing. And I include a final section of meaningful writing that doesn’t always (or even often) make its way into writing portfolios.

Certainly, publications are part of my writing story. But they aren’t the full story. I reflect on that here: https://heart-head-hands.com/meaningful-writing-in-writing-portfolios/

And share the portfolio here: https://heart-head-hands.com/writing-portfolio/ 

May we tell fuller stories about our writing and ourselves as writers—toward well-lived writing lives. <3

<Image shows the start of my portfolio page with a mix of academic and public publications.>
One thing about my partner Jonathan’s dad is tha One thing about my partner Jonathan’s dad is that he loved Pittsburgh. Here are some photos of the city he loved — with gratitude for walks to help navigate the emotions and many to-dos following his passing. <3
Follow on Instagram

About Beth Godbee

I'm an educator and former writing studies professor who believes our fully embodied selves matter in the world. We can’t just think our way out of the incredible injustices, dehumanization, violence, and wrongdoing that characterize everyday life. We must feel and act, too. [Pronouns: she/her.] Read more ...

This image shows books alongside the words: courses, coaching, consulting. learning + unlearning.

Copyright © 2025