Building cultures of care

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This page was created to support activists in building towards cultures of care in their groups. Activist burnout continues to be a major problem in movement spaces, leading to increased internal conflict, decreased retention and ineffective efforts, among other issues. This page is a work in progress that will be added to over time. The information included comes from existing organizer databases and resources by movement thinkers, plus thoughts from participants in our care 101 workshop. This page also includes thoughts shared during our self and community care learning circle, and navigating turnover in student groups learning circle. Included are _______________

Identifying and advocating needs

Understanding your own care needs is important for your wellbeing, health and to limit distress. However, this is hard if you've suppressed, downplayed or ignored your needs! The following steps to identifying and advocating needs come from "The Neurodivergent-Friendly Workbook of DBT skills" by Sonny Jane Wise, @livedexperienceeducator

Suggestion: do this 3 step activity as a team! It's a great way to proactively surface needs, where support can come from, and what support looks like.


1. Brainstorm your regular (daily to once a month) needs

There are 4 main categories to start with (add your own as you see fit!)

a) Physical (taking medication, getting enough sleep, having breaks, drinking enough water, stretching)

b) Emotional (therapy, expressing boundaries, words of affirmation, engaging in interests)

c) Social (time with friends, time alone, boundaries)

d) Sensory (sensory breaks, avoiding busy places, sunglasses/headphones, stimming)

It's important to get curious, and build an understanding of which needs:

  • you can accommodate yourself
  • you're working on developing skills to address yourself
  • fluctuate, and
  • require external and/or community support


Step 2 can help begin these reflections.

2. Use a support and accommodations wheel to identify where support is needed/can be given

It's one thing to list our needs. It's another to understand where we can support ourselves vs where we need support. This wheel can be used to identify the areas of your life where you can provide support, and the areas where you need to receive it.

The categories in the wheel are:

a) Sleep (falling asleep, staying asleep, sleep schedules)

b) Work/study (due dates, flexibility, instructions)

c) Communication (phone calls, appointments, non-verbal)

d) Daily living (cleaning, organization, hygiene)

e) Sensory (home, noise, light, clothing)

f) Finances (cost of aids, debt, impulsivity)

g) Eating/cooking (sensory/dietary, executive function, shopping)

h) Relationships (social norms, stigma/oppression, boundaries, communication)


Here is an example of a completed wheel:


Draw a small circle, and surround it with 5 larger circles. Divide this into 4 'pie slices', and fill in each category based on where you need the most support.

  • 1/5 filled in = need skills/support (I have trouble with this area of life)
  • 5/5 filled in = nailing this area of life


Categories that scored lower (i.e. 1-2) are areas that you need regular support. *Typically the lower the score, the more likely it is that these needs cannot be met yourself.

Categories that scored in the middle (i.e. 2-4) are areas that you need occasional support.

Categories that scored higher (4-5) are areas that you can provide support.

Suggestions on how to use these reflections:

  • Have each team member share back at least 1 area that they scored lower in (you don't need to disclose scores if you don't want to), and 1 they scored higher in.
  • Brainstorm as a team what resources/support can be made available. The team doesn't need to cover all needs, but it helps to identify where support can be most appropriately found and given.
  • Identifying strengths and support areas is a stepping stone for building a 'care web.' E.g. "I'm really good at cleaning, and I struggle with eating enough. I can take on cleaning up the meeting space when we're all done. Can someone else take on bringing snacks?"


3. Advocating needs

The following are prompts for advocating your needs proactively (or in the moment, if applicable). *Note: not all needs are appropriately met by teammates. Consider who else in your circle is best to respond (e.g. a friend, partner, caregiver, family member, professional etc).

a) "I need your help when" E.g. "a protest gets really packed. It's distressing for me." E.g. "I forget my fidget tool at home."

b) "I will ask for help by" E.g. "seeking you out as my safe person. I may go non-verbal from the overwhelm. You can ask me to type out instructions." E.g. "Asking at the top of the meeting, so I can focus better throughout."

c) "You can help me by" E.g. "linking arms with me and moving to a less packed spot to engage in the action. When overwhelmed it can be hard to do this myself." "Providing me with a pen, or something to fidget with."

d) "I would like to hear" E.g. "an affirmation that your proud and thankful I sought your support. I feel guilty about this sometimes." E.g. "from others who would benefit from a pen or something to help focus. It makes me feel less alone!"

Knowledge from the HUB's care 101 workshop

Participants in our care 101 workshop were asked "Have you ever left, or thought about leaving, the climate movement for a period of time? Why?" They shared the following...

Disconnection from other systems of oppression
  • Other struggles take priority (e.g. job loss, family emergencies, caretaking with limited support and capacity, etc).
  • Other injustice takes priority and isn't addressed through climate involvement (e.g. police violence, poverty etc).
  • Climate movement can feel depoliticized/disconnected from other social struggles
Poor or lack of conflict engagement
  • Lack of conflict resolution processes/engagement
Anti-oppressive structures/practices not in place
  • More privileged perspectives holding more/all space
  • Whiteness of climate spaces
  • Lack of COVID precautions and/or care for meeting accessibility needs
Not enough rest/joy in organizing
  • A never-ending sense of urgency = limited experiences of rest/care/free time
  • Burnout
  • Feeling disconnected socially from team members
Feelings of hopelessness and ineffectiveness
  • Lack of clarity on what focus/tactics to take
  • Hopelessness
Lack of appreciation
  • Imposter syndrome/efforts not acknowledged or appreciated

Slowing down to make space for reflection, checking in and meeting needs creates space that can be used to surface, and help address, many of the challenges listed above.


Workshop participants shared thoughts on...

Why we should prioritize care?

Workshop participants shared the following:

Care is central to climate justice


We are impacted by, and/or concerned for, the violence being inflicted on people/the planet. Centring care in a society that centres violence is transformative.

A better world is possible and it will be built on interdependence.

To strengthen our communities

Caring for ourselves helps us show up to care for our community.

To exhibit the values we’re striving for and challenge oppressive ideas on care

Those of us who grew up in a western, Eurocentric, neoliberal culture have become averse to forms of care and have to re-learn to care for ourselves and each other, while we learn to live how other cultures have always known and are trying to sprout anew in the cracks of the current system.

Important to note that care is seen as something women do in colonial, patriarchal culture so is devalued

Care work needs to be decolonized.

To foster generative conflict, reflection and problem solving

Having a code of ethics, and practices including a conflict resolution strategy can sometimes be a helpful reference to guide through conflict/wobbly stuff.  Introducing this can be helpful in itself because it recognizes that conflict/differences can happen and it's okay, it can be worked through.

Consider: Do we demand a certain amount of time and labour from marginalized voices? Do we slow down to address things and make sure everyone who wants to move with us can?

To surface and utilize our emotions effectively

To move towards a culture of using our rage to hold power accountable and responsible for their behaviours without blaming and dehumanizing, which sets us as the victims who are ultimately justified in violence against the "other", when we need to move forward in non violence to see a world healed from trauma.


If you're not moving at the pace of your 'slowest' members, it can burn out your movement. While you don't need to address everyone's every concern, there needs to be general collective alignment and a sense that effort is made to meet everyone's basic needs. Members should feel they can participate equally and that they are valued.


The co-option of care:

Care work is devalued

As someone who is providing care on a daily basis, I honestly dread when people ask me what I “do”

Connection to the land

Disconnection from the land and sky and water is how colonialism weakens us. When we return to a relationship with the land, we can heal more easily. Parks and large trees and grassy boulevards are usually part of privilege and wealth in our society. Yet, access to nature and wild places is integral to a life of collective care.

When I think of community care, I also think of caring for animals, trees, rivers, lands, etc. and being cared by them.

Individual care keeps us separate 

Care being commodified and professionalized. This separates individuals from each other.

Spiritual and religious teachings

I think this also includes the cooptation of spiritual and cultural practices that come from Indigenous nations. They're marketed under capitalism.


Teachings about forgiveness and kindness have been co-opted into narratives of obedience and silence. 

Intervention ideas to further these discussions in groups:


  • "I started a book club at the ENGO where I work with “Care Work: Dreaming Disability Justice” by Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha so folks could do some unlearning/relearning on their own and come together to brainstorm how we can integrate it collectively in our workplace."
  • "If anybody’s interested, Shake Up The Establishment also just launched a Climate Dreaming Journal/book based on the importance of rest, recovery and resistance. I see a lot of parallels between this workshop and the book, which you can learn more here: https://www.shakeuptheestab.org/journal"
  • "People's hub has some great offerings."

TO FORMAT:


Joyful ideas:

If you can have a fire outside that's a great winter activity 

A friend and I routinely go to the ocean after meetings - the sound, smell is soothing and we have the most generative conversations sitting by the ocean

A comrade of Haitian origin called the current system of work, complicated on purpose and fragmenting our humanity. This is something to keep in mind when interacting with it and, on the other side, try to embrace the complexity of being human and in relation with the planet.

I’ve appreciated this care Revolution group: https://care-revolution.org/english/

Drum and sing and make music together!

we've been doing board game nights every 1-2 months, so that theres time to just hang out and build friendships with each other outside of actions

"do nothing" together.

Sharing food! Potlucks are the best 😄

Seasonally appropriate hangs: - park hang - tobogganing in winter - hikes  -etc

Going for food together after actions, and showing up to cheer on individual members’ personal projects (eg: if they perform somewhere, sharing about it and going to see their performance)
 -for less high risk groups I should specify

Karaoke or dance out

There’s online board games website my friends and I used during lockdown, they might prove nice for organizing groups as well


Thoughts on leaving enough time to process and care rather than pushing to follow the agenda, while also not making really long demands on people's time?

I think in the context of a closed group you can check with members what duration they would prefer - respecting scheduled time seems more important to me than being short or being long.

I think a culture of urgency often leads to agendas that have too much on them.


A good example is in rallies, of we don't bring the folks who have disabilities to the front, they will be stuck at the back trying to catch up, feeling very disengaged.

Disengaged or even endangered because they become easier targets for arrests by police.


Needs wheel: https://dnainsight.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/Needs-Wheel.jpg

Knowledge from learning circles

Self and community care learning circle

Navigating turnover learning circle

When asked about incorporating more social and fun activities to build relationships, students who participated in learning circle suggested…

Social events

As someone who started a group during the pandemic, in my experience it was important to designate someone or a group to organizing social events. When people stopped coming to online social events, we included social time in the online meetings. People were demotivated from the online time, so we had to include it in the meetings

  • Have a different theme for each meeting (hat, pijamas...)
  • Use interactive online tools to share thoughts

Check ins

Extended time for check-ins and check-outs with fun questions like “what plant do you feel like?” 

Thoughtful of time

Not exceeding meeting times so as not to exhaust people

Holding space for emotions

Connect through discussing emotions like shared frustrations and joys

Holding 'easy' actions

Holding actions without the pressure of going bigger, larger. Hold small actions and focus on the relationships that actions deepen.


For example, an easy activity to organize is a banner drop with picture taking. The point is to gather people.

Escalation of relationship building tactics

Escalation of relationship building tactics: start by planning things like an email campaign or phone zap (no relationship building), then something like an open letter campaign, distributed and signed (opportunity to build relationships), and then organize a demonstration.


If you have any suggested revisions or additional resources to share related to the above content, please email them to kenzie@lehub.ca.

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.


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