Weeks 5–6

The Middle Ground — Follow-Through

From noticing to naming.

The first month was about building a practice. This month is about going deeper — naming the structural patterns you have been seeing, and starting to act on them in ways that outlast any single conversation.

5 6

Which corner are you?

Week 5 — Name the structure, not just the moment

You have been noticing moments. This week: name the pattern behind the moments. One specific structural thing in your organisation that creates the cost you have been tracking.

Corner One

This week's focus: write the cost down

This week, document — for yourself, in writing — one structural thing your organisation does that creates unpaid cultural labour for you or people like you. Not a complaint. A clear, specific description: what happens, how often, who benefits, who pays. You do not need to share it yet. Just write it. That document is the beginning of your evidence.

Structure for your document
"The pattern: [what happens]. The frequency: [how often]. Who benefits from it: [who]. Who pays the cost: [who]. What it costs in time/energy/recognition: [be specific]."
Reflection prompt

What did it feel like to document it? What surprised you about writing it down?

Corner Two

This week's focus: find the structural gap

Look at your organisation's equity or inclusion policies this week. Find one gap — one place where the intention is good but the structure doesn't support it. Write one specific suggestion for what would close that gap. You don't need to submit it anywhere yet — just write it. This is the difference between feeling anxious and being useful.

Framing your suggestion
"The current policy says [X]. The gap I can see is [Y]. A specific change that would close it is [Z]. This would cost approximately [effort/resource]."
Reflection prompt

What did you find when you looked? What did the gap tell you about where the organisation's attention has been?

Corner Three

This week's focus: follow the decision trail

Pick one policy, practice, or structural norm in your organisation that affects equity. Trace it back: when was it decided? Who was in the room? Was anyone from a marginalised group part of the decision? You are not looking for wrongdoing — you are learning to see the architecture. That seeing is the foundation of everything else.

Questions to ask or research this week
"When was [policy/practice] established? Who was consulted? Is there data on how it affects different groups differently? Has it been reviewed since?"
Reflection prompt

What did you find? What did the decision trail reveal about who has historically had power in this organisation?

Corner Four

This week's focus: map your navigation cost

This week, track every time you shift how you present yourself depending on which group you are with. Not judgment — data. By the end of the week, you will have a picture of how much energy goes into navigating between worlds. That energy has a cost. This week you are naming the size of it.

The tracking question
"Right now, which version of myself am I presenting? What am I holding back? What is that costing me today?"
Reflection prompt

How many times did you shift this week? Which shift cost the most? Which felt most natural?