I had the “notorious
shirt” with me for my travels from my home base in Atlanta to London to Boston
to Durham, New Hampshire. I work as an
independent consultant and a trainer, so I travel about half the time for work,
mainly around the United States and Canada.
I was excited to take the shirt with me on one of my more exciting work
trips. Unfortunately, my shirt photos after these first few were lost in an
iPhone dropping incident, so I’ll have to focus on photos that I had uploaded
to social media from my travels.
Before I leave
for a long trip I make sure to both spend some time with myself and time with people
who restore me. I made sure to spend extra time with my favorite self-care
activities: dance breaks, coloring, meditation, and watching zombie movies. I
also had lunch with my former colleague Willie , a substance abuse prevention counselor
who always makes me feel more grounded. I also spent a lot of time with my
partner John who is my biggest support system but who I miss a lot when I’m
gone. When I’m not traveling, I work out of my home office (often in yoga
pants) and spend a lot of time on the phone in my backyard. Home has become
even more important to me now that I spend more time away from it. I work on my research, connect with colleagues who work to end violence on campuses around the country, write curricula, and prepare for training.
My first
trip with the shirt was to London. This was my first trip to Europe! I was
presenting with my colleague Jill on our national study of campus gender-based
violence advocacy and prevention programs at the international sexual violence
conference at Middlesex University in Hendon. We were really excited to present
our research for the first time! I also attended sessions on sexual harassment
in public spaces, prevalence and incidence of sexual violence on college
campuses around the world, and perpetration. It was fascinating to learn from
researchers and practitioners around the world and intriguing to hear what
others had heard about efforts in the United States to address gender-based violence
on campus. Thinking outside of the United States context helped me expand my
thinking and learn some new approaches. Connecting with passionate activists
recharged me despite the jet lag. I also had amazing breakfast and tea and had
some time for a whirlwind tour of the sites.
I then
traveled to Boston and spent one night with my friend Meera who works at
Harvard on their sexual assault prevention efforts. Time with her, no matter
how brief, always inspires me and reminds me to think creatively and
expansively. I then drove to Durham to
the University of New Hampshire to visit my colleagues at Prevention
Innovations Research Center (PIRC). PIRC works to end sexual and relationship
violence through the power of effective practitioner and researcher
partnerships focusing on prevention strategies, evidence-based measures, and
comprehensive community tools. I’m often traveling to facilitate regional
train-the-trainers for PIRC’s Bringing in the Bystander® program, a researched and evaluated
curriculum focused on campuses that uses a community of responsibility of
approach.
I enjoy having
the opportunity to travel and to attend both a graduate program and work for an
organization in cities in which I don’t live, but it can get lonely sometimes.
Spending a few days with colleagues discussing the next stages of our work was
inspiring. I love working for PIRC because they value connecting research directly
to practice, and we discussed opportunities to ensure that practitioners on
college campuses have a direct pipeline to research and new developments. I will
be managing our new member list which will allow people to connect beyond the training
sessions and to receive research and practice information in real time. I hope
to continue to address gender-based violence through connecting research and
practice and building community capacity.
The shirt and I
then returned back home to Atlanta, where I got back to my routine of working
from home on curriculum development and preparing for training events; my
research; and facilitating the Campus Advocates and Prevention Professionals
Association (CAPPA). Now, the shirt is off to Kathleen, GA to visit Nicole!
Throughout my
travels over the past year, the Notorious PGV has been a constant that has made
me think, made me laugh, and helped me remember to think beyond my work to the
bigger picture of our movement to end gender-based violence and advance social
justice. The shirt was a tangible symbol of how I always feel like my cohort is with me on the road. Because of the hybrid nature of this program, I have been able to
spend the past year getting a broader perspective while still doing research
projects, engaging in classroom discussions, and building my skillset. Whether I’m
chatting from 40,000 feet, an Amtrak station, a hotel room, or a coffee shop,
the PGV continues to transform me as the landscape around me changes. It is
because of such a supportive group of colleagues that I feel empowered to do my
work every day and to work toward my next step of getting a PhD.
The work is challenging no matter what we’re
doing, and my cohort is a big part of what sustains me. Through this collective,
I continue to grow, change, and expand my thinking. Traveling, like the PGV, both challenges me and gives me peace. Even though we are
all doing different work in different places we share a common vision: to end
gender-based violence. I have hope in achieving this vision if we are in it
together.
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