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Overcoming Financial Trauma: What's Systemic? What's Personal? What Helps?

This event was recorded live. As some feminist epistemologists (Gilligan, Belenky et al.) have taught us, seeing and seeking connections seems to be women’s ways of knowing. Our economics is lived in real complex communities. Our goal is to model how women can talk together and learn together about traditionally male territory still new to most women. Together we can construct a fuller knowledge and set of values now omitted from the mainstream “free market.” To that end, we're making the webinar—and will make all of them moving forward—available here for viewing forevermore.

Click here to access the event curriculum for further learning.

In an economy that only values what money can buy, your personal money-measure can bring you shame and anxiety whether you have lots of money, or no money at all. Being unemployed or undervalued, losing a business, or not reaching personal financial goals can trigger stress, humiliation, and even debilitating trauma—a Greek word that literally means "wound."

Financial wounds might not bleed, but they can lead to your avoiding the subject, or overspending. Women's pay gap is growing again, US credit card debt just topped $1 trillion, and people of color face special risk. So are people who have suffered generational trauma, sexual trauma, domestic violence, physical illness, addiction, or injury.

The good news: you are definitely not alone! If you avoid thinking about money, overspend, or feel scared when you do, learn why so many feel we're never enough—and what steps can help!—in this Zoom of Our Own conversation.

Meet the Speakers

Riane Eisler founded The Center for Partnership Studies. Her work has transformed organizations, policies, and people worldwide, beginning with her book, The Chalice and the Blade: Our History, Our Future, in over 57 US printings and 30 foreign editions.Her latest book Nurturing Our Humanity: How Domination and Partnership Shape Our Brains, Lives, and Future (co-authored with anthropologist Douglas Fry, Oxford University Press 2019) shows how to construct a more equitable, sustainable, and less violent world based on Partnership Systems rather than Domination Systems.

Shanda Williams organizes Money Matters: Financial Liberation Series for BIPOC families and women, creating accessible programs to learn about racial and generational trauma, financial wellness, budgeting, and building resilience and confidence. She's organizing and hosting a Money Matters: Eco-Feminism and Radical Love Symposium at Goddard College on Oct. 20th.

Andria Barrett is co-founder of The Banker Ladies Council of Canada, supporting ROSCAs, or mutual financial credit systems. She's an active investor supporting women entrepreneurs, and serves on the boards of the Culinary Tourism Alliance, Help A Girl Out and PACE (Project for the Advancement of Childhood Education). She's a member of the Peel Regional Police Anti-Racism Advisory Committee, and for two consecutive years was named as one of the Most Inspiring Women Entrepreneurs & Business Leaders. A consultant with The Diversity Agency, she often speaks about the importance of wellness, self-confidence, and unconscious bias.

Jaqueline Strenio is a health and feminist economist currently researching the economic determinants and consequences of intimate partner violence. She is an Assistant Professor of Economics at Norwich University and specializes in the costs of healthcare and domestic violence.

Rickey Gard Diamond—author of Screwnomics: How Our Economy Works Against Women and Real Ways to Make Lasting Change and founder of AEOO—will facilitate the conversation.

ABOUT THE SERIES:

Our Zoom of Own Series brings women (and men!) together to construct a fuller knowledge and set of values now omitted from the mainstream “free market.” Together, we're flipping the script on a racist, sexist economy. Our economics is lived in real complex communities. Our goal is to model how women can talk together and learn together about traditionally male territory still new to most women.