More about this training:
This training is for you if:
You’ve learned the language of equity, but aren’t sure your actions consistently align with it
You worry about “getting it wrong,” so you default to silence, by-passing, over-explaining, or performance
You’ve been called in or out—and didn’t know how to respond in a grounded way
You want to stop relying on intention as a shield and understand your actual impact You notice defensiveness, guilt, or shutdown when challenged—and want to respond differently
You are ready to examine how harm is upheld in subtle, normalized, and often invisible ways
You will leave with:
A clearer understanding of how performative allyship shows up in real time
The ability to stay present when discomfort, shame, or defensiveness arise (instead of retreating or reacting)
Practical tools for self-reflection, self-regulation, and self-compassion without bypassing accountability
A grounded approach to repairing harm beyond apology or intention Increased capacity to hold perspectives, experiences, and truths that challenge your worldview
A deeper understanding of what it means to take responsibility within systems—not just critique them
Core areas of practice:
Self-awareness (recognizing your patterns in real time)
Self-regulation (staying present when challenged)
Self-reflection (examining impact beyond intention)
Self-compassion (engaging accountability without collapse or avoidance)
Relational capacity (holding difference, tension, and opposing views)
What to expect:
Interactive, discussion-based sessions
Real-world examples and applied practice
Space for reflection, discomfort, and integration
A focus on lived accountability—not abstract theory
This space will ask you to:
Move beyond performance into honest self-examination
Stay engaged when discomfort arises
Take responsibility without relying on defensiveness or withdrawal
This space will ask you to:
Move beyond performance into honest self-examination
Stay engaged when discomfort arises
Take responsibility without relying on defensiveness or withdrawal