MyNotes: Cassandra Speaks

Note: This is one of my most cherished MyNotes on a book. It really shifted my perspective on this topic.

Image Credit: Good News Planet

While reading my twitter feed one evening (or was it early morning), I stumbled upon a book reference for Elizabeth Lesser’s _Cassandra Speaks_. I was intrigued by the context and that’s probably what moved me to get the book. After reading it, I knew I was on to something. I found the book engaging and highly recommend you read it. In fact, I’ve recommended it to everyone I’ve spoken to in the last few days.

This blog entry includes some of My Notes that I wrote in my notepad. I put them here so I won’t lose them and hope you will also be intrigued.

MyNotes

  1. Women know something that the world needs now. We know it in our bones. We’ve always known it.
  2. The stories that people have been absorbing for centuries…stories that tell false and destructive narratives about women and men, femininity and masculinity, and the nature and purpose of life.
  3. Eve: “Second in creation, first to sin.”
  4. Cassandra’s story is that of every woman who has been dismissed, gaslighted, or punished for having an opinion of her own.
  5. When the stories that have glued together a culture lose their potency, things begin to fall apart. But new things rise up.
  6. Turmoil and backlash ensue, but so do big leaps forward.
  7. We are living in a time when the stories that have provided meaning and structure for Western customs and institutions are being challenged.
  8. Some of those stories are beautifu, instructive, and worth saving. But many of our foundational narratives that pretend to be about and for all of us were told by only a few of us, and therefore have served a mere slice of humanity.
  9. They have set in store which values and temperments should prevail, what power looks like, and who gets to have it.
  10. Stories for men or patriarchy:
  11. stoicism
  12. warriorship
  13. violence
  14. father
  15. ambition
  16. confidence
  17. authority
  18. Stories for women
  19. home
  20. hearth
  21. empathy
  22. care
  23. mother
  24. caregiver
  25. feelings
  26. communication
  27. “History isn’t what happened, it’s who tells the story.” -Sally Roesch Wagner
  28. Stories endure. They outlive the people who tell them, they jump from one continent to another, they continue to mold cultures for generations.
  29. Becoming famliar with our culture’s origin stories and tracing their influence is an effective way to take stock of our lives and to claim an authentically powerful voice.
  30. Many creation myths from earlier ancestors painted a different picture of the origin of women and men and their worth and roles.
  31. In many of those stories, neithr sex was created to dominate the other. Both men and women shared the responsibility to help the community survive, thrive, and connect with the sacred. These are not the stories most of were raised on.
  32. So many stories impart the same themes:
  33. men are th emorally pure and noble
  34. women are the ones who succumb to evil and tempt the man
  35. To grow up is to admit that life is challenging and that we are responsible for our own behavior and for the well-being of one another
  36. To be human often feels as if we arrived here without an instruction book, longing for direction
  37. We are lost, but can be found. We suffer but can grow wise. We can learn how things really work, and chart a noble path home.
  38. Our tasks is to become like gods–self-aware and responsible for choosing goodness over evil.
  39. “The end of all our exploring will be to arrive where we started and know the place for the first time.” T.S. Eliot
  40. Both Eve and Pandora bring death into the world. This is a curious reversal of the fact that women bring life into the world, but it says something about the meaning of “woman” within a religion dominated by male gods. – Polly Young-Eisendrath
  41. Archaeologists, paleontologists, and anthropologists have been studying prehistoric cultures and peoples. They are trying to piece together, not only stories we have never heard but also the ways in which the scribes of history have rewritten reality to fit into their prevailing worldviews.
  42. Pandora means ‘all-giving’. Elpis is the spirit of hope
  43. It’s time to tell stories where no one is to blame for the human predicament and all of us are responsible for forging a hopeful path forward.
  44. “God has no gender because there is no God.”
  45. Sophia is Wisdom (in Sirach)
  46. “The hardest times for me were not when people challenged what I said, but when my voice was not heard.” -Carol Gilligan
  47. It is a great story, but it is a story about male conflict, male dilemma, male struggle…we have to be prepared to go back through all our books, films…and say, this is written by a male artist, not an artist. – Jude Kelley
  48. “Tell me to what you pay attention and I will tell you who you are.” Jose Ortega y Gassett
  49. Who chose violent conflict as the one human activity to laud over all others? Deny evil the attention it seeks.
  50. Women created most of the oldest known cave art paintings suggests an analysis of ancient handprints – Dean Snow, Penn State archaeologist
  51. History is often a distorted window into the past, the perspective of those with the power to tell it.
  52. “If women are not perceived to be fully within the structures of power, surely, it is power that we need to redefine rather than women” -Mary Beard
  53. Basic assumptions about power that women must question:
  54. Domination and violence are necessary to maintain order
  55. Men are divinely or biologically predetermined to lead
  56. The strong/silent warrior is to be revered while the emotional communicative caretaker is second rate
  57. Women must become protagonists in the stories that shape the world
  58. The single story of power–the excess of one value system and the exclusion of others–has left humanity in a bind.
  59. Women have internalized patriarchy and created unhealthy coping mechanisms to survive and prosper.
  60. “Whoever fights monsters, should see to it that in the process, he does not become a monster.” Friedrich Nietsche
  61. Activism: Love made visible
  62. Innervism: love of oneself
  63. Bring the hidden parts of the self into the light, to understand them, to own them, to admit them, and to transform them
  64. “I see the repression of the feminine principle as the biggest problem on the planet, and since the planet has become a global village, power alone just isn’t going to work anymore. We will destroy ourselves.” -Marion Woodman
  65. Doing Power differently
  66. Partnership model
  67. interactive (not authoritarian)
  68. Collaborate connectively
  69. Values relationship, empathy, communication
  70. Generous with praise and encouragement
  71. Transparent about mistakes/vulnerability
  72. Listens, processes, includes
  73. Love is the energy that cherishes
  74. First first responder: saving lives before they need to be saved
  75. Teach emotional intelligence, skills, self-awareness, empathy, impulse control
  76. Model how to ask for help, how to take responsibility and admit wrongdoing, how to value yourself so that you can love others
  77. Strong and silent vs Brave and open
  78. “Speech has power. Words do not fade. What starts out as sound, ends in a deed.” -Abraham Joshua Heschel
  79. “What will the writing of history be like when the definition is shared equally by men and women? Will we devalue the past, overthrow the categories, supplant order with chaos? No. We will simply step out uner the free sky.” -Gerda Lerner
  80. “Nothing discloses real character like the use of power. Most people can bear adversity. but if you want to know what a man really is, give him power. This is the supreme test.” Robert Ingersoll
  81. When we deny our stories they define us. When we own our stories, we gt to write a brave new ending. – Brene Brown
  82. Oprah Winfrey says:”Over the years, I’ve interviewed thousands of people…and I would say that the root of every dysfunction, every problem I’ve encountered, has been some sense of a lacking of self-value or self-worth.”
  83. New stories and more authentic values are inside of us, in the depths of who we really are, beneath the usual brain chatter, under the conditioning or confusion or fear that holds us back.
  84. “You are the sky. Everything else–it’s just the weather.” Pema Chodron
  85. All too often our so-called strength comes from fear, not love.
  86. “Clear is kind, unclear is unkind.” -Brene Brown
  87. “To make deeper connections with each other, we need to be willing to be disturbed.” -Meg Wheatley
  88. We live in a society conditioned to privilege only some kinds of people.
  89. “Out beyond ideas of wrongdoing and rightdoing, there is a field. I’ll meet you there.” Rumi
  90. “You can safely assume you’ve created God in your own image when it turns out that God hates all the same people you do.” -Anne Lamott
  91. “One person plus one typewriter constitutes a movement.” Pauli Murray
  92. “The poorest and most backward societies are always those that put women down.” Isabel Allende
  93. “There is no need for temples, no need for complicated philosophies. My brain and my heart are my temples, my philosophy is kindness. Be kind whenever possible. It is always possible.” Dalai Lama
  94. Beware of “schadenfreude:” taking joy in the failures of others
  95. “Our role in life is to bring the light of our own souls to the dim places around us.” Sister Joan Chittiser
  96. “You can’t be what you can’t see,” -Marian Wright Edelman
  97. A student asked, “What’s the difference between knowledge and enlightenment?””When you have knowledge, you light a torch to find the way. When you have enlightenment, you become a torch to show the way.” – Sister Joan Chittiser

What an inspiring book to read, full of quotes like the ones above. What the author, Elizabeth Lesser, does with each quote is expand upon it, often using it as the grain of sand to build a pearl of life experiences and insights around it. I highly recommend the book, not only because it’s eye-opening, illusion-banishing in a way that’s the same but distinct from Greg Epstein’s book, and because it offers a different path forward.


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