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11.26.24 – Yapping in Difficult Holiday Conversations by Marnelli Canosa

Happy Holidays Kababayan! 

The later part of the year has always been my favorite. I’m a Sagittarius so it’s my solar return season, sunsets and Christmas light attractions are more vibrant, and there are plenty of holiday breaks, so I get to spend time with family.

But after hearing the results of the election this past November 5th, I’m trying to shape how my conversations will look with my immediate and extended family members. For the past year, I’ve led canvassing and phone-banking efforts to educate and empower voters. I also researched local measures and took stances on California’s statewide propositions. Door knocking and phone banking with LEAD Filipino allowed me to yap with a purpose.

With my personal circles, I’ve studied, analyzed, and discussed specific candidates at the national level and down the ballot. I formed opinions and positions based on my values and ethics. I took my yapping skills into my personal circles and continued to “canvass” with my homies. We know that all learning is social, so sharing my learnings, experiences, and insights with my close friends means a lot during this historic time.

I’ll be honest, the upcoming administration is not what I imagined. The message, platform, and figures do not align with most of my values, but I’m willing to learn for myself, educate others, and discuss, even with people who have turned in a different ballot than mine. This includes my family members. 

How we grow

Before my current role with LEAD Filipino, I was afraid to talk about politics, social justice, racial equity, or current events. Growing up as the eldest daughter of immigrant parents, we don’t always see eye to eye on personal values, much less local and national politics. We would get into shouting matches that resulted in hurt feelings, frustration, and a tense home atmosphere (I’d like to thank therapy for helping me diffuse, process, and follow up again so my parents and I can both be heard in these conversations). This is a common narrative of other first-generation (perhaps, eldest child) friends in my circles and communities

I’ve also realized that the world I imagine and want to build with my community requires me to be politically literate and civilly engaged. Politics affects everything around us and there’s too much at stake to not discuss issues that affect you, me, and our community because we are all a part of it.

So when my tita or tito who posts partisan, and most times offensive, memes into our Facebook family chat and then asks me who I voted for, I’m using a game plan. The goal is not to shut them down, but to approach them with curiosity and dive a bit deeper into why they think and process news in a specific way. I’m also equipped with an exit strategy in case either of us get emotionally riled up. 

So as an Ate, I want to share some of my tips for surviving family gathering small (or big) talk when you’re conversing with a family member who may have different political views than you – AKA, how to yap safely when you may not feel safe.

Goals

Strategies

Questions to Guide the Conversation

Exit Strategy (How to De-Escalate)

Post-Conversation (Personal Processing and Self Care)

Conversations can get pretty spicy if you don’t have the proper boundaries in place. However, everyone does deserve to have their voices heard and I’m giving y’all tools to yap safely. In a way, this is your own form of deep canvassing, as you can discuss issues you care about. If you have resources and verified data on hand, you can lead them to easy actions to take after, such as researching on their own or talking to another family member about it. 

People won’t remember what you said, but how you made them feel. While we may not change minds, the conversation will help to expand minds. I’m mesmerized by people who know how to talk about their passions and issues they care about. Consequently, I end up doing more research on my own because I’m left thinking “ What were they really talking about that made them feel that way while talking?” And the hope is, these strategies can help you navigate those hard conversations if you do choose to engage in them. 

It always just starts with a conversation.

Extra Resources

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