"We are each other's harvests, we are each other's business, we are each other's magnitude and bond." - Gwendolen Brooks
"We are each other's harvests, we are each other's business, we are each other's magnitude and bond." - Gwendolen Brooks
On Sessions:
Gwendolen Brooks’ 1983 poem "Paul Robeson” offers stirring words that echo amongst community. Attributed to Robeson’s booming baritone, “we are each other’s harvests, we are each other’s business, we are each other’s magnitude and bond” is a sentiment at the core of what a session can be.
An Act of Reverence rooted in sharing
This moment can be an opportunity to meet an experiment, to work shit out, witnessed in unfolding iterations. If someone wants to contribute, they should feel fully free to do so. These spaces are for exploration both seeding new connections and bearing the fruit of collaboration.
Sessions can move us towards worlds where we will be Free
A time-honored idiom, jams can be spaces that value and support contributors. Sessions are places that foster self-expression and different folks coming together.
