Let’s Talk About Race (Episode 63)

Let’s Talk About Race (Episode 63)

Talking about race is really F%$*&^g hard. It is. But that doesn’t mean we shouldn’t do it. If we constantly duck and dodge frank conversations about how race affects our daily lives, then we will not resolve the persistent hold racial inequity has on our culture and our sporting lives and loves. This week, spurred by article after article speculating on what happened in the Virginia gubernatorial race, we thought we would talk directly about why we resist talking about race. We, well, mostly white people, skirt the issue of race. We talk about it in veiled ways - crime, education, parenting, work ethic - because we have been taught implicitly and explicitly that to talk about race is itself racist. White people are worried about race discussions in school because we have been fed a steady diet of “colorblindness” throughout our lives. White people’s hyper-sensitivity around race, particularly when it comes to White-Black relations in the U.S. context, is built on a common sense of guilt about the U.S.’s “original sin” -- slavery. Slavery -- via the Middle Passage -- happened here. The enslavement of African (and Asian!) people, the violence enacted against them, the rape and murder of enslaved people by white slaveholders, the fracturing of enslaved people’s families for white profit is real and cannot be denied. Talking about the legacy of this history is not racist towards white people. Racism is a system of racial hierarchy where whiteness is at the top and Blackness is at the bottom. This hierarchy is woven through everything, whether it is housing loans, red-lining, public education, generational wealth, or sport. To deny the effects of racial violence and segregation on our lives today is to willfully ignore this history. It is not racist to recognize the effects of slavery, nor is it a statement that all white people are racist. Racism exists in the fabric of the U.S., and yeah, it sucks to acknowledge that. Teaching upcoming generations about this legacy equips them with the tools the rest of us (white people) weren’t given - the ability to talk about and understand the implications of race and its social construction to maintain white power. In this sense, we will be enabling the next generation of athletes to build systems that are smart and nimble, able to institute practices and policies that resist the effects of this history. We have to be able to talk about this as an endurance sport community -- and, just like in endurance sport -- embrace the suck. Embrace the discomfort as growing a muscle rather than experiencing an injury. It won’t be easy, and it might feel sad or gross or painful. But, burying our collective head in the sand because it is easier hurts us more. Support the podcast and use our sponsor codes! BLACK FRIDAY: InsideTracker Black Friday Sale from November 22nd-29th (insidetracker.com/feisty) Save $200 off the Ultimate Plan + a free InnerAge test with code FEISTYGIFT or get 25% off sitewide InsideTracker: 25% off at insidetracker.com/feistytriathlon Nuun Hydration: 30% off with code StayFeisty at nuunlife.com

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The Problem with Persuasion (Episode 111)

The Problem with Persuasion (Episode 111)

If you have ever been part of the DEI space as a practitioner, there is A LOT of persuading that happens. Trying to persuade clubs, organizations, companies and institutions to believe that DEI work i...

29 Nov 202242min

The 2022 Outspoken Summit Recap (Episode 110)

The 2022 Outspoken Summit Recap (Episode 110)

With the 2022 Outspoken Summit having come and gone, the team here at Feisty Media cannot stop talking about it. The coming together of so many powerful change-making women in the endurance sport indu...

22 Nov 202239min

ESG & DEI (Episode 109)

ESG & DEI (Episode 109)

How do we hold companies and institutions accountable? Through what lens do we hold them accountable? This week, Shaunna and Lisa discuss Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) in relation to Environme...

15 Nov 202239min

Disruptors (Episode 108)

Disruptors (Episode 108)

Recently, NFL Hall of Famer Deion Sanders has been a complete disrupter in terms of all things HBCU sports. Understanding that most athletes are heavily recruited from predominantly white institutions...

8 Nov 202243min

Mental Health and Wellbeing (Episode 107)

Mental Health and Wellbeing (Episode 107)

This past week, the Surgeon General released the "Surgeon General’s Framework for Workplace Mental Health and Well-Being". In this 30-page framework, there is quite a significant understanding of dive...

1 Nov 202249min

Over-Whitening Underfueling (Episode 106)

Over-Whitening Underfueling (Episode 106)

Assumptions surrounding eating disorders, disordered eating, and underfueling are extreme. In the context of sport, we often believe that underfueling is related to the desire to lose weight. However,...

25 Okt 202241min

Toxic Masculinity in Sport (Episode 105)

Toxic Masculinity in Sport (Episode 105)

Why is it such a personal offense to lose to a woman? This week, Shaunna and Lisa discuss gender and sport and the masculine urge to outperform women. Drawing from a recent news article in which a man...

18 Okt 202242min

Triathlonish with Kelly O'Mara (Episode 104)

Triathlonish with Kelly O'Mara (Episode 104)

We are coming to you this week with some very exciting news!! Kelly O'Mara, a mutual friend of Shaunna and Lisa, professional Triathlete, and editor and chief of Triathlon Magazine, has started her ow...

11 Okt 202237min

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