Feel Better. Do Better.: A Guide for People Who Want to Change the World, but Sometimes Have Trouble Making It to Lunch

Martin Luther King, Mother Teresa, Grandmomma Ruth who was always the first one to volunteer for the church coat drive...

They taught you how to give,

How to make an impact, and how to ignore your inner needs until you're on the verge of a literal breakdown.

Here's the thing, it's not that anyone set out to teach you that making a difference means having to fall on your own sword, it's just that there hasn't been much evidence that it was possible for it to look any other way. Until now.

Whether you've been in the fight against oppression for decades, or are new to taking action, now is the moment where you become an example of widespread impact while still managing to live a happy and fully satisfying life, filled with the things and people you love.

Would you like to know how?

In Feel Better. Do Better. author and editor Dr. Deb Shine Valentine and eight colleagues offer a beginners' guide to walking on a path that Deb calls "thriving for equity." It's one that emerged out of her failure to suffer enough to make the world a measurably better place and her desperate need to find a way to enjoy life enough to want to keep waking up in the morning. Along the way she found some amazing fellow travelers who shared a commitment dismantling (or dissolving) the white-supremacist-capitalist-patriarchy using stealth tactics like exercising self-compassion, cultivating pleasure, and learning in community.

Unlike many books in this genre that gloss over the different experiences and challenges that face People of Color and White people on the journey towards joy and justice, Feel Better. Do Better. was written with that messy complexity right at the center.

Each chapter includes:

  • An invitation from Deb (a White, cis-gender life and leadership coach, educator, blogger, and DEIJ consultant) to consider a new way to move forward towards both a more just world and your own delight in the life you're living. Not one or the other.
  • An essay by a BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, Person of Color/Culture) author that further illuminates this path and expands possibilities.
  • Resources for your journey - practices to try, books and podcasts to check out, other ways to find support.

You can feel better and still be a good person. Come with us. We're right here waiting for you.

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Feel Better. Do Better.: A Guide for People Who Want to Change the World, but Sometimes Have Trouble Making It to Lunch

Martin Luther King, Mother Teresa, Grandmomma Ruth who was always the first one to volunteer for the church coat drive...

They taught you how to give,

How to make an impact, and how to ignore your inner needs until you're on the verge of a literal breakdown.

Here's the thing, it's not that anyone set out to teach you that making a difference means having to fall on your own sword, it's just that there hasn't been much evidence that it was possible for it to look any other way. Until now.

Whether you've been in the fight against oppression for decades, or are new to taking action, now is the moment where you become an example of widespread impact while still managing to live a happy and fully satisfying life, filled with the things and people you love.

Would you like to know how?

In Feel Better. Do Better. author and editor Dr. Deb Shine Valentine and eight colleagues offer a beginners' guide to walking on a path that Deb calls "thriving for equity." It's one that emerged out of her failure to suffer enough to make the world a measurably better place and her desperate need to find a way to enjoy life enough to want to keep waking up in the morning. Along the way she found some amazing fellow travelers who shared a commitment dismantling (or dissolving) the white-supremacist-capitalist-patriarchy using stealth tactics like exercising self-compassion, cultivating pleasure, and learning in community.

Unlike many books in this genre that gloss over the different experiences and challenges that face People of Color and White people on the journey towards joy and justice, Feel Better. Do Better. was written with that messy complexity right at the center.

Each chapter includes:

  • An invitation from Deb (a White, cis-gender life and leadership coach, educator, blogger, and DEIJ consultant) to consider a new way to move forward towards both a more just world and your own delight in the life you're living. Not one or the other.
  • An essay by a BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, Person of Color/Culture) author that further illuminates this path and expands possibilities.
  • Resources for your journey - practices to try, books and podcasts to check out, other ways to find support.

You can feel better and still be a good person. Come with us. We're right here waiting for you.

15.95 In Stock
Feel Better. Do Better.: A Guide for People Who Want to Change the World, but Sometimes Have Trouble Making It to Lunch

Feel Better. Do Better.: A Guide for People Who Want to Change the World, but Sometimes Have Trouble Making It to Lunch

by Deb Shine Valentine
Feel Better. Do Better.: A Guide for People Who Want to Change the World, but Sometimes Have Trouble Making It to Lunch

Feel Better. Do Better.: A Guide for People Who Want to Change the World, but Sometimes Have Trouble Making It to Lunch

by Deb Shine Valentine

Paperback

$15.95 
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Overview

Martin Luther King, Mother Teresa, Grandmomma Ruth who was always the first one to volunteer for the church coat drive...

They taught you how to give,

How to make an impact, and how to ignore your inner needs until you're on the verge of a literal breakdown.

Here's the thing, it's not that anyone set out to teach you that making a difference means having to fall on your own sword, it's just that there hasn't been much evidence that it was possible for it to look any other way. Until now.

Whether you've been in the fight against oppression for decades, or are new to taking action, now is the moment where you become an example of widespread impact while still managing to live a happy and fully satisfying life, filled with the things and people you love.

Would you like to know how?

In Feel Better. Do Better. author and editor Dr. Deb Shine Valentine and eight colleagues offer a beginners' guide to walking on a path that Deb calls "thriving for equity." It's one that emerged out of her failure to suffer enough to make the world a measurably better place and her desperate need to find a way to enjoy life enough to want to keep waking up in the morning. Along the way she found some amazing fellow travelers who shared a commitment dismantling (or dissolving) the white-supremacist-capitalist-patriarchy using stealth tactics like exercising self-compassion, cultivating pleasure, and learning in community.

Unlike many books in this genre that gloss over the different experiences and challenges that face People of Color and White people on the journey towards joy and justice, Feel Better. Do Better. was written with that messy complexity right at the center.

Each chapter includes:

  • An invitation from Deb (a White, cis-gender life and leadership coach, educator, blogger, and DEIJ consultant) to consider a new way to move forward towards both a more just world and your own delight in the life you're living. Not one or the other.
  • An essay by a BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, Person of Color/Culture) author that further illuminates this path and expands possibilities.
  • Resources for your journey - practices to try, books and podcasts to check out, other ways to find support.

You can feel better and still be a good person. Come with us. We're right here waiting for you.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9798986691602
Publisher: Thriving for Equity
Publication date: 10/25/2022
Series: Thriving for Equity , #1
Pages: 156
Product dimensions: 5.00(w) x 8.00(h) x 0.36(d)

About the Author

Author and editor Deb Shine Valentine is a White, cis-gender, able-bodied life and leadership coach, educator, blogger, and DEIJ consultant who holds a wide range of credentials - from a Ph.D. in Childhood Studies to certification as a Racial Justice from the Heart Facilitator to a Sex, Love and Relationship coaching certification. Her 30+ years of experience as an educator is just as broad, ranging from early childhood education to college. Still, despite her best efforts, she never could find a way to suffer enough to make the world better, so now she focuses her efforts on thriving for equity and helping others to do the same. In this collaborative book project, she is joined by eight esteemed BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, People of Culture/Color) colleagues - Larissa Parson, Trevia Woods, Marquita Davis, David V. Valentine, Tamara Robinson, Kristen Mun, Jennifer Folayan, and Joyce Washington. Each one brings a powerful voice to the conversation from their rich experiences and areas of expertise in varied industries, from theater to visual arts, and social justice advocacy to higher education. To learn more about each of the contributing authors, visit Deb's website at www.thriving4equity.com/book.
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