Developing Together Social Work  Teaching Partnership

Protect your peace : staying safe in hostile times

On 13 November, we had 21 attendees attend “Protect your peace: staying safe in hostile times” presented by Maureen Mguni and Sarah Wilkins, senior lecturers at Kingston University. This presentation spoke about reframing self-care from an individual practice to an act of social justice, resistance, and collective healing within a climate that is challenging and has been making individuals question their sense of belonging and safety.

The Ubuntu philosophy “I am because we are” suggested that individual well-being is fundamentally linked to the well-being and support of the community. In a high-pressure professional environment, this balance often shifts, requiring greater support from the collective (community, workplace, or systemic policy) to maintain individual capacity.

This topic was very emotive to the group but Maureen, Sarah and attendees allowed themselves to be vulnerable. Despite navigating a difficult and personal conversation, a positive tone was present in conversation. 

Our attendees went into breakout rooms to discuss the following questions:

  1. How do I currently practice self-care, and to what extent are these practices shaped by individual responsibility versus community support?
  2. What would it look like to engage in self-care as a collective, relational practice that supports both my well-being and the support of others in my community /profession?

The themes from these breakout rooms were as follows:

1. Systemic and Structural Challenges

2. Community, Support, and Safe Spaces

3. Individual practice and discipline

4. The digital environment

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