Learning Unlearning: Deja Tu Huella: Youth Art and Unlearning in Colombia

When stepping into another culture, I always challenge myself to contextualize the sociopolitical issues facing the people in that place. Stopping short of inserting my own views on the issues, I strive to listen louder than I speak. Some of the most important growth in my thirty years of life have come from experiences outside the United States. For me, it’s always about context, context, context. I will never fully grasp the issues facing other cultures I am not a part of, but I can certainly try to weave together an appreciation and an empathetic perception. If you really pay attention, listen closely, and dig deeper to place yourself in the context of what is going on, you can expand your capacity to empathize and build an authentic global understanding. This is especially true when viewing local issues through art.

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Learning Unlearning: Unlearning Not Asking Questions

Asking questions can be tough for some people, and I was one of them. I used to think that by asking questions I would be conceived as incapable and lacking knowledge. I don’t know where I picked this notion up. It certainly wasn’t from life at home growing up, where my parents constantly encouraged us to ask questions. Maybe it was daycare? School? Work? Regardless, I had to unlearn my bad habit of not asking questions.

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If I Only Learned it the Right Way

Humans have the capacity for empathy with relevance being one of the main characteristics. Because we crave understanding, a big component of life is finding those who relate with oneself. But another one lies with the notion of legacy. As knowledge is passed through generations it contains a power constructed through mentorship, which is mentioned because learning is just a series of moments where people absorb from each other to reap rewards.

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