{"id":3533,"date":"2021-02-10T16:53:51","date_gmt":"2021-02-10T16:53:51","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/microcosmpublishing.com\/blog\/?p=3533"},"modified":"2021-02-10T16:53:53","modified_gmt":"2021-02-10T16:53:53","slug":"how-to-be-accountable-a-book-review","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/microcosmpublishing.com\/blog\/2021\/02\/how-to-be-accountable-a-book-review\/","title":{"rendered":"How to Be Accountable: a Book Review"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p><em>Microcosm intern Molly Simas wrote this review of our new book, <\/em><a href=\"https:\/\/microcosmpublishing.com\/catalog\/books\/3295\">How to Be Accountable<\/a> <em>by Joe Biel &amp; Dr. Faith Harper.<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<figure class=\"wp-block-image size-large\"><a href=\"https:\/\/microcosmpublishing.com\/catalog\/books\/3295\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"573\" height=\"800\" src=\"https:\/\/microcosmpublishing.com\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/02\/accountable-cov_lg.jpg\" alt=\"\" class=\"wp-image-3534\" srcset=\"https:\/\/microcosmpublishing.com\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/02\/accountable-cov_lg.jpg 573w, https:\/\/microcosmpublishing.com\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/02\/accountable-cov_lg-215x300.jpg 215w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 573px) 100vw, 573px\" \/><\/a><\/figure>\n\n\n\n<p>In January of 2018, Saturday Night Live released a comedy sketch titled \u201cDinner Discussion.\u201d Three straight couples sit around a restaurant table (remember restaurants?), exclaiming over the food\u2019s deliciousness. \u201cEverything here is good,\u201d says one man. \u201cThe New York Times restaurant review <em>raved<\/em> about this place.\u201d&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>\u201cYou know, speaking of the Times,\u201d a woman at the table says. \u201cDid any of you guys read that op-ed piece about\u2026\u201d<br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>\u201cHoney, no,\u201d her husband says, suddenly alarmed.\u00a0<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>\u201cWhat article are you talking about?\u201d their friend inquires.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>\u201cThe one about\u2026 Aziz Ansari?\u201d&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The music surges, and the six are thrown into dramatic lighting as the camera close pans across their distressed, panicking faces. One woman raises her wine glass to her lips with a trembling hand. The shushing husband pulls his turtleneck up to hide his face.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>A quick refresher on the cultural climate of January 2018: news coverage was full steam ahead on all things #MeToo. A waterfall of sexual misconduct revelations was steadily cascading from the upper echelons of Hollywood. Then, an anonymous expos\u00e9 of Aziz Ansari\u2019s alleged misdeeds made a splash and muddied the waters. The article described a hookup in which the woman who Ansari brought home felt unheard and violated. It was clear that harm had been caused and that power dynamics were involved. Yet enough gray area around the details threw the discourse into a purgatory where no one knew how to talk about it or have the \u201cright\u201d opinion.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The SNL skit continues with the dinner guests haltingly offering their thoughts on the subject. \u201cI&#8230;think\u2026\u201d one woman says, while her husband admonishes, \u201cCareful\u2026\u201d&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>\u201cI think that some&#8230;women\u2026\u201d she continues, and her friend interjects, \u201cCareful\u2026\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>\u201cWhile I applaud the movement,\u201d another dinnergoer offers. \u201cWatch it\u2026\u201d cautions his friend.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>They continue to hem and haw their way through the conversation. \u201cPowerful men almost always abuse&#8230;NOPE!\u201d one tries. \u201cConsent\u2026PASS! Damn it!\u201d says another.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>If you were an alive and thinking person at the time, you might have an opinion on the matter\u2013perhaps a very strongly held one\u2013and I\u2019m not here to convince you any which way about it. But that SNL skit stuck with me because it felt so accurate to the grappling conversations I\u2019d had with my own friends that week, and it came to mind again as I worked my way through <em><a href=\"https:\/\/microcosmpublishing.com\/catalog\/books\/3295\">How to Be Accountable<\/a><\/em>, Microcosm\u2019s latest contribution to the cultural toolkit of thinking about repairing harm in our relationships and our lives.\u00a0<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Authors Joe Biel and Dr. Faith G. Harper establish early and often that a new paradigm is needed for conversations about accountability. They explicitly state their hope that people \u201ccultivating personal development rather than sweeping cancelation\u201d are the ones \u201cwho will change perception around this issue and shift the conversation about accountability from one of punishment and ostracism to an understanding that accountability is personal and that everyone makes mistakes from which they can learn and grow.\u201d&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>It\u2019s a difficult, tricky subject, and I appreciate this book\u2019s willingness to wade into the thick of it. Talking about accountability, just like talking about privilege and other systems of power, requires stark honesty and the resilience to push through making mistakes. While these vulnerabilities are necessary for progress, too often they are swiftly punished within the very conversations that require them. This can feel inescapable and exhausting.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>With <a href=\"https:\/\/microcosmpublishing.com\/catalog\/books\/3295\"><em>How to Be Accountable<\/em><\/a>, I was ready to watch someone else step into that arena, and the book did not let me down. I was uncomfortable and questioning my own notions of accountability almost immediately, which I think is the point. When it comes to perpetrators of harm, considering forgiveness can feel like a trap\u2014even the phrase \u201ceveryone makes mistakes\u201d can feel a little too \u201cboys will be boys\u201d in the context of sexual assault\u2014yet blanket cancelation of human beings is clearly not a sustainable or healthy option. How, then, are we to proceed?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>To their credit, Harper and Biel ultimately never boil anything down to a simple takeaway. They frequently acknowledge that every situation is unique, with its own context and nuance, and thus every situation will require unique engagement from all parties. \u201cIn a world of memes and fake news, separating the behavior from the person is more vital than ever,\u201d the authors write. \u201cIn the quest for quick sound bytes we simplify, misconstrue, misinterpret, and vilify people because we are human and sometimes our filters fail us. &#8230;If we are going to create something better than the criminal justice system for righting wrongs, our system has to truly be <strong><em>better<\/em><\/strong>.\u201d&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>But wait. Isn\u2019t this supposed to be a book about <em>personal<\/em> accountability? About fixing our <em>own<\/em> shitty habits? Ostensibly, yes. The book begins with a baseline acknowledgement that our own toxic patterns are often born of coping behaviors we learned in childhood, and that these patterns can be interrogated and shifted.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Accountability doesn\u2019t only exist outside of us, in the court of public opinion. It is a quality we all are responsible for crafting an awareness of and practice around in our own lives. <em><a href=\"https:\/\/microcosmpublishing.com\/catalog\/books\/3295\">How To Be Accountable<\/a><\/em> does a great job of striking this note early on: \u201c&#8230;there is remarkably little written about how to recognize and change patterns in our <em>own<\/em> behavior, which seems to suggest that change is only needed for people whose behavior is unfathomably worse than our own. But the reality is that <em>everyone<\/em> sees maladaptive behaviors in themselves that they\u2019d like to change.\u201d\u00a0<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Yet for a lay reader, that note might seem to waver as the chapters proceed to wander through the weeds of cognitive biases, propaganda, trauma histories, and shadow work, with occasional guest appearances by members of the zeitgeist such as Pizzagate, Jordan Peterson, and racist Facebook relatives. At times, it can be hard to see how a given section relates to our own accountability struggles, which might be as mundane as avoiding difficult conversations with loved ones, or continuing to engage in self-sabotaging behavior.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Truthfully, it <em>is<\/em> all related and relevant\u2014it\u2019s just that this shit is complicated and this work is hard. \u201cIf you are still feeling like you haven\u2019t connected all of the dots, don\u2019t beat yourself up,\u201d write Harper and Biel in the book\u2019s conclusion. \u201cWe\u2019d say that doesn\u2019t signal failure, it signals the fact that you are recognizing that this is a complex and long-term process.\u201d\u00a0<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>I didn\u2019t have access to the forthcoming companion title <em><a href=\"https:\/\/microcosmpublishing.com\/catalog\/books\/14443\">How to Be Accountable Workbook<\/a><\/em> during the writing of this review, but I\u2019m going to go out on a limb and recommend that, if you\u2019re serious about getting into your own shit, that you obtain both and work through the two in tandem. Microcosm has a fun trend of publishing workbooks alongside self help titles, and managing editor\/co-owner Elly Blue has said on <a href=\"https:\/\/microcosmpublishing.com\/blog\/2016\/01\/business-of-publishing\/\">Microcosm\u2019s podcast<\/a> that most book\/workbook combinations can be treated as \u201cone or the other\u201d situations, not necessarily a requisite package deal. However, while <em><a href=\"https:\/\/microcosmpublishing.com\/catalog\/books\/3295\">How to Be Accountable<\/a><\/em> does contain several reflective questions and journaling exercises in-text, I think the companion structure of a workbook would be extremely helpful in keeping a reader grounded in the deep understanding of self (values, needs, patterns, history) that is required of their own accountability work, as they consider larger concepts that may or may not affect their own situations to varying degrees.\u00a0<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The truth is, no book will give a reader a hard-and-fast answer when it comes to tough questions of justice, forgiveness, and healing from harm, because the idea of such a solution is a myth. For most situations, there isn\u2019t a peel-and-stick universally \u201ccorrect\u201d answer, which is what leaves so many of us stammering at the edge of a conversational precipice, cutting people out of our lives for lack of a better option, or staring at ourselves in the mirror with a sick feeling in the pit of our stomach that we will never be freed of our own pain.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>However, in lieu of this magical sticker, there <em>are<\/em> people seriously engaging with the difficult work of growth and accountability, in numerous formats, from storytelling to social work. It is increasingly recognized that our institutional systems of accountability are deeply flawed, that their harmful notions of punishment have trickled down into our most precious relationships, and that a new way forward is needed to make us all safer and more whole. Ultimately, <em><a href=\"http:\/\/In January of 2018, Saturday Night Live released a comedy sketch titled \u201cDinner Discussion.\u201d Three straight couples sit around a restaurant table (remember restaurants?), exclaiming over the food\u2019s deliciousness. \u201cEverything here is good,\u201d says one man. \u201cThe New York Times restaurant review raved about this place.\u201d   \u201cYou know, speaking of the Times,\u201d a woman at the table says. \u201cDid any of you guys read that op-ed piece about\u2026\u201d  \u201cHoney, no,\u201d her husband says, suddenly alarmed.   \u201cWhat article are you talking about?\u201d their friend inquires.   \u201cThe one about\u2026 Aziz Ansari?\u201d   The music surges, and the six are thrown into dramatic lighting as the camera close pans across their distressed, panicking faces. One woman raises her wine glass to her lips with a trembling hand. The shushing husband pulls his turtleneck up to hide his face.   A quick refresher on the cultural climate of January 2018: news coverage was full steam ahead on all things #MeToo. A waterfall of sexual misconduct revelations was steadily cascading from the upper echelons of Hollywood. Then, an anonymous expos\u00e9 of Aziz Ansari\u2019s alleged misdeeds made a splash and muddied the waters. The article described a hookup in which the woman who Ansari brought home felt unheard and violated. It was clear that harm had been caused and that power dynamics were involved. Yet enough gray area around the details threw the discourse into a purgatory where no one knew how to talk about it or have the \u201cright\u201d opinion.   The SNL skit continues with the dinner guests haltingly offering their thoughts on the subject. \u201cI...think\u2026\u201d one woman says, while her husband admonishes, \u201cCareful\u2026\u201d   \u201cI think that some...women\u2026\u201d she continues, and her friend interjects, \u201cCareful\u2026\u201d  \u201cWhile I applaud the movement,\u201d another dinnergoer offers. \u201cWatch it\u2026\u201d cautions his friend.   They continue to hem and haw their way through the conversation. \u201cPowerful men almost always abuse...NOPE!\u201d one tries. \u201cConsent\u2026PASS! Damn it!\u201d says another.   If you were an alive and thinking person at the time, you might have an opinion on the matter\u2013perhaps a very strongly held one\u2013and I\u2019m not here to convince you any which way about it. But that SNL skit stuck with me because it felt so accurate to the grappling conversations I\u2019d had with my own friends that week, and it came to mind again as I worked my way through \u201cHow to Be Accountable,\u201d Microcosm\u2019s latest contribution to the cultural toolkit of thinking about repairing harm in our relationships and our lives.   Authors Joe Biel and Dr. Faith G. Harper establish early and often that a new paradigm is needed for conversations about accountability. They explicitly state their hope that people \u201ccultivating personal development rather than sweeping cancelation\u201d are the ones \u201cwho will change perception around this issue and shift the conversation about accountability from one of punishment and ostracism to an understanding that accountability is personal and that everyone makes mistakes from which they can learn and grow.\u201d   It\u2019s a difficult, tricky subject, and I appreciate this book\u2019s willingness to wade into the thick of it. Talking about accountability, just like talking about privilege and other systems of power, requires stark honesty and the resilience to push through making mistakes. While these vulnerabilities are necessary for progress, too often they are swiftly punished within the very conversations that require them. This can feel inescapable and exhausting.   With \u201cHow to be Accountable,\u201d I was ready to watch someone else step into that arena, and the book did not let me down. I was uncomfortable and questioning my own notions of accountability almost immediately, which I think is the point. When it comes to perpetrators of harm, considering forgiveness can feel like a trap \u2013 even the phrase \u201ceveryone makes mistakes\u201d can feel a little too \u201cboys will be boys\u201d in the context of sexual assault \u2013 yet blanket cancelation of human beings is clearly not a sustainable or healthy option. How, then, are we to proceed?  To their credit, Harper and Biel ultimately never boil anything down to a simple takeaway. They frequently acknowledge that every situation is unique, with its own context and nuance, and thus every situation will require unique engagement from all parties. \u201cIn a world of memes and fake news, separating the behavior from the person is more vital than ever,\u201d the authors write. \u201cIn the quest for quick sound bytes we simplify, misconstrue, misinterpret, and vilify people because we are human and sometimes our filters fail us. ...If we are going to create something better than the criminal justice system for righting wrongs, our system has to truly be better.\u201d   But wait. Isn\u2019t this supposed to be a book about personal accountability? About fixing our own shitty habits? Ostensibly, yes. The book begins with a baseline acknowledgement that our own toxic patterns are often born of coping behaviors we learned in childhood, and that these patterns can be interrogated and shifted.   Accountability doesn\u2019t only exist outside of us, in the court of public opinion. It is a quality we all are responsible for crafting an awareness of and practice around in our own lives. \u201cHow To Be Accountable\u201d does a great job of striking this note early on: \u201c...there is remarkably little written about how to recognize and change patterns in our own behavior, which seems to suggest that change is only needed for people whose behavior is unfathomably worse than our own. But the reality is that everyone sees maladaptive behaviors in themselves that they\u2019d like to change.\u201d   Yet for a lay reader, that note might seem to waver as the chapters proceed to wander through the weeds of cognitive biases, propaganda, trauma histories, and shadow work, with occasional guest appearances by members of the zeitgeist such as Pizzagate, Jordan Peterson, and racist Facebook relatives. At times, it can be hard to see how a given section relates to our own accountability struggles, which might be as mundane as avoiding difficult conversations with loved ones, or continuing to engage in self-sabotaging behavior.  Truthfully, it is all related and relevant \u2013 it\u2019s just that this shit is complicated and this work is hard. \u201cIf you are still feeling like you haven\u2019t connected all of the dots, don\u2019t beat yourself up,\u201d write Harper and Biel in the book\u2019s conclusion. \u201cWe\u2019d say that doesn\u2019t signal failure, it signals the fact that you are recognizing that this is a complex and long-term process.\u201d   I didn\u2019t have access to the forthcoming companion title \u201cHow to be Accountable Workbook\u201d during the writing of this review, but I\u2019m going to go out on a limb and recommend that, if you\u2019re serious about getting into your own shit, that you obtain both and work through the two in tandem. Microcosm has a fun trend of publishing workbooks alongside self help titles, and managing editor\/co-owner Elly Blue has said on Microcosm\u2019s podcast that most book\/workbook combinations can be treated as \u201cone or the other\u201d situations, not necessarily a requisite package deal. However, while \u201cHow to be Accountable\u201d does contain several reflective questions and journaling exercises in-text, I think the companion structure of a workbook would be extremely helpful in keeping a reader grounded in the deep understanding of self (values, needs, patterns, history) that is required of their own accountability work, as they consider larger concepts that may or may not affect their own situations to varying degrees.   The truth is, no book will give a reader a hard-and-fast answer when it comes to tough questions of justice, forgiveness, and healing from harm, because the idea of such a solution is a myth. For most situations, there isn\u2019t a peel-and-stick universally \u201ccorrect\u201d answer, which is what leaves so many of us stammering at the edge of a conversational precipice, cutting people out of our lives for lack of a better option, or staring at ourselves in the mirror with a sick feeling in the pit of our stomach that we will never be freed of our own pain.   However, in lieu of this magical sticker, there are people seriously engaging with the difficult work of growth and accountability, in numerous formats, from storytelling to social work. It is increasingly recognized that our institutional systems of accountability are deeply flawed, that their harmful notions of punishment have trickled down into our most precious relationships, and that a new way forward is needed to make us all safer and more whole. Ultimately, \u201cHow to be Accountable\u201d is a valuable contribution to the ever-growing library on this subject.                          **INCLUDE JOE AND FAITH\u2019S CREDENTIALS SOMEWHERE NEAR THEIR INTRODUCTION**  People are brought to the brink of accountability work through the consequences of their own actions, which were, themselves, largely driven by maladaptive coping behaviors learned in childhood.   This book posits itself as the proverbial hard look in the mirror, starting from a strong baseline acknowledgement that everyone has patterns of behavior that could handle a tuneup.     Our institutions of accountability, namely the criminal justice system, are deeply flawed.  Accountability as a positive action: finally creating what you truly want and need.   \u201cAccountability...is about understanding that we make our own choices, create our own lives, and recognize the consequences of our actions.\u201d   Accountability can mean so many different things. It can come up in the wake of shitty or harmful actions, or when you privately fail to keep your own promises to yourself.   The dots the book gives us to connect are things like childhood trauma, survival-oriented behavior patterns,\">How to be Accountable<\/a><\/em> is a valuable contribution to the ever-growing library on this subject.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Microcosm intern Molly Simas wrote this review of our new book, How to Be Accountable by Joe Biel &amp; Dr. Faith Harper. In January of 2018, Saturday Night Live released a comedy sketch titled \u201cDinner Discussion.\u201d Three straight couples sit around a restaurant table (remember restaurants?), exclaiming over the food\u2019s deliciousness. \u201cEverything here is good,\u201d&#8230;  <a class=\"excerpt-read-more\" href=\"https:\/\/microcosmpublishing.com\/blog\/2021\/02\/how-to-be-accountable-a-book-review\/\" title=\"Read How to Be Accountable: a Book Review\">Read more &raquo;<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":3,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[3],"tags":[171,21,176,200,109],"class_list":["post-3533","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-blogifesto","tag-book-review","tag-book-reviews","tag-intern-book-review","tag-review","tag-reviews"],"my_excerpt":"<!-- wp:paragraph -->\n<p><em>Microcosm intern Molly Simas wrote this review of our new book, <\/em><a href=\"https:\/\/microcosmpublishing.com\/catalog\/books\/3295\">How to Be Accountable<\/a> <em>by Joe Biel &amp; Dr. Faith Harper.<\/em><\/p>\n<!-- \/wp:paragraph -->\n\n<!-- wp:image {\"id\":3534,\"sizeSlug\":\"large\",\"linkDestination\":\"none\"} -->\n<figure class=\"wp-block-image size-large\"><a href=\"https:\/\/microcosmpublishing.com\/catalog\/books\/3295\"><img src=\"https:\/\/microcosmpublishing.com\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/02\/accountable-cov_lg.jpg\" alt=\"\" class=\"wp-image-3534\"\/><\/a><\/figure>\n<!-- \/wp:image -->\n\n<!-- wp:paragraph -->\n<p>In January of 2018, Saturday Night Live released a comedy sketch titled \u201cDinner Discussion.\u201d Three straight couples sit around a restaurant table (remember restaurants?), exclaiming over the food\u2019s deliciousness. \u201cEverything here is good,\u201d says one man. \u201cThe New York Times restaurant review <em>raved<\/em> about this place.\u201d&nbsp;<\/p>\n<!-- \/wp:paragraph -->\n\n<!-- wp:paragraph -->\n<p>\u201cYou know, speaking of the Times,\u201d a woman at the table says. \u201cDid any of you guys read that op-ed piece about\u2026\u201d<br><\/p>\n<!-- \/wp:paragraph -->\n\n<!-- wp:paragraph -->\n<p>\u201cHoney, no,\u201d her husband says, suddenly alarmed.\u00a0<\/p>\n<!-- \/wp:paragraph -->\n\n<!-- wp:paragraph -->\n<p>\u201cWhat article are you talking about?\u201d their friend inquires.&nbsp;<\/p>\n<!-- \/wp:paragraph -->\n\n<!-- wp:paragraph -->\n<p>\u201cThe one about\u2026 Aziz Ansari?\u201d&nbsp;<\/p>\n<!-- \/wp:paragraph -->\n\n<!-- wp:paragraph -->\n<p>The music surges, and the six are thrown into dramatic lighting as the camera close pans across their distressed, panicking faces. One woman raises her wine glass to her lips with a trembling hand. The shushing husband pulls his turtleneck up to hide his face.&nbsp;<\/p>\n<!-- \/wp:paragraph -->\n\n<!-- wp:paragraph -->\n<p>A quick refresher on the cultural climate of January 2018: news coverage was full steam ahead on all things #MeToo. A waterfall of sexual misconduct revelations was steadily cascading from the upper echelons of Hollywood. Then, an anonymous expos\u00e9 of Aziz Ansari\u2019s alleged misdeeds made a splash and muddied the waters. The article described a hookup in which the woman who Ansari brought home felt unheard and violated. It was clear that harm had been caused and that power dynamics were involved. Yet enough gray area around the details threw the discourse into a purgatory where no one knew how to talk about it or have the \u201cright\u201d opinion.&nbsp;<\/p>\n<!-- \/wp:paragraph -->\n\n<!-- wp:paragraph -->\n<p>The SNL skit continues with the dinner guests haltingly offering their thoughts on the subject. \u201cI...think\u2026\u201d one woman says, while her husband admonishes, \u201cCareful\u2026\u201d&nbsp;<\/p>\n<!-- \/wp:paragraph -->\n\n<!-- wp:paragraph -->\n<p>\u201cI think that some...women\u2026\u201d she continues, and her friend interjects, \u201cCareful\u2026\u201d<\/p>\n<!-- \/wp:paragraph -->\n\n<!-- wp:paragraph -->\n<p>\u201cWhile I applaud the movement,\u201d another dinnergoer offers. \u201cWatch it\u2026\u201d cautions his friend.&nbsp;<\/p>\n<!-- \/wp:paragraph -->\n\n<!-- wp:paragraph -->\n<p>They continue to hem and haw their way through the conversation. \u201cPowerful men almost always abuse...NOPE!\u201d one tries. \u201cConsent\u2026PASS! Damn it!\u201d says another.&nbsp;<\/p>\n<!-- \/wp:paragraph -->\n\n<!-- wp:paragraph -->\n<p>If you were an alive and thinking person at the time, you might have an opinion on the matter\u2013perhaps a very strongly held one\u2013and I\u2019m not here to convince you any which way about it. But that SNL skit stuck with me because it felt so accurate to the grappling conversations I\u2019d had with my own friends that week, and it came to mind again as I worked my way through <em><a href=\"https:\/\/microcosmpublishing.com\/catalog\/books\/3295\">How to Be Accountable<\/a><\/em>, Microcosm\u2019s latest contribution to the cultural toolkit of thinking about repairing harm in our relationships and our lives.\u00a0<\/p>\n<!-- \/wp:paragraph -->\n\n<!-- wp:paragraph -->\n<p>Authors Joe Biel and Dr. Faith G. Harper establish early and often that a new paradigm is needed for conversations about accountability. They explicitly state their hope that people \u201ccultivating personal development rather than sweeping cancelation\u201d are the ones \u201cwho will change perception around this issue and shift the conversation about accountability from one of punishment and ostracism to an understanding that accountability is personal and that everyone makes mistakes from which they can learn and grow.\u201d&nbsp;<\/p>\n<!-- \/wp:paragraph -->\n\n<!-- wp:paragraph -->\n<p>It\u2019s a difficult, tricky subject, and I appreciate this book\u2019s willingness to wade into the thick of it. Talking about accountability, just like talking about privilege and other systems of power, requires stark honesty and the resilience to push through making mistakes. While these vulnerabilities are necessary for progress, too often they are swiftly punished within the very conversations that require them. This can feel inescapable and exhausting.&nbsp;<\/p>\n<!-- \/wp:paragraph -->\n\n<!-- wp:paragraph -->\n<p>With <a href=\"https:\/\/microcosmpublishing.com\/catalog\/books\/3295\"><em>How to Be Accountable<\/em><\/a>, I was ready to watch someone else step into that arena, and the book did not let me down. I was uncomfortable and questioning my own notions of accountability almost immediately, which I think is the point. When it comes to perpetrators of harm, considering forgiveness can feel like a trap\u2014even the phrase \u201ceveryone makes mistakes\u201d can feel a little too \u201cboys will be boys\u201d in the context of sexual assault\u2014yet blanket cancelation of human beings is clearly not a sustainable or healthy option. How, then, are we to proceed?<\/p>\n<!-- \/wp:paragraph -->\n\n<!-- wp:paragraph -->\n<p>To their credit, Harper and Biel ultimately never boil anything down to a simple takeaway. They frequently acknowledge that every situation is unique, with its own context and nuance, and thus every situation will require unique engagement from all parties. \u201cIn a world of memes and fake news, separating the behavior from the person is more vital than ever,\u201d the authors write. \u201cIn the quest for quick sound bytes we simplify, misconstrue, misinterpret, and vilify people because we are human and sometimes our filters fail us. ...If we are going to create something better than the criminal justice system for righting wrongs, our system has to truly be <strong><em>better<\/em><\/strong>.\u201d&nbsp;<\/p>\n<!-- \/wp:paragraph -->\n\n<!-- wp:paragraph -->\n<p>But wait. Isn\u2019t this supposed to be a book about <em>personal<\/em> accountability? About fixing our <em>own<\/em> shitty habits? Ostensibly, yes. The book begins with a baseline acknowledgement that our own toxic patterns are often born of coping behaviors we learned in childhood, and that these patterns can be interrogated and shifted.&nbsp;<\/p>\n<!-- \/wp:paragraph -->\n\n<!-- wp:paragraph -->\n<p>Accountability doesn\u2019t only exist outside of us, in the court of public opinion. It is a quality we all are responsible for crafting an awareness of and practice around in our own lives. <em><a href=\"https:\/\/microcosmpublishing.com\/catalog\/books\/3295\">How To Be Accountable<\/a><\/em> does a great job of striking this note early on: \u201c...there is remarkably little written about how to recognize and change patterns in our <em>own<\/em> behavior, which seems to suggest that change is only needed for people whose behavior is unfathomably worse than our own. But the reality is that <em>everyone<\/em> sees maladaptive behaviors in themselves that they\u2019d like to change.\u201d\u00a0<\/p>\n<!-- \/wp:paragraph -->\n\n<!-- wp:paragraph -->\n<p>Yet for a lay reader, that note might seem to waver as the chapters proceed to wander through the weeds of cognitive biases, propaganda, trauma histories, and shadow work, with occasional guest appearances by members of the zeitgeist such as Pizzagate, Jordan Peterson, and racist Facebook relatives. At times, it can be hard to see how a given section relates to our own accountability struggles, which might be as mundane as avoiding difficult conversations with loved ones, or continuing to engage in self-sabotaging behavior.<\/p>\n<!-- \/wp:paragraph -->\n\n<!-- wp:paragraph -->\n<p>Truthfully, it <em>is<\/em> all related and relevant\u2014it\u2019s just that this shit is complicated and this work is hard. \u201cIf you are still feeling like you haven\u2019t connected all of the dots, don\u2019t beat yourself up,\u201d write Harper and Biel in the book\u2019s conclusion. \u201cWe\u2019d say that doesn\u2019t signal failure, it signals the fact that you are recognizing that this is a complex and long-term process.\u201d\u00a0<\/p>\n<!-- \/wp:paragraph -->\n\n<!-- wp:paragraph -->\n<p>I didn\u2019t have access to the forthcoming companion title <em><a href=\"https:\/\/microcosmpublishing.com\/catalog\/books\/14443\">How to Be Accountable Workbook<\/a><\/em> during the writing of this review, but I\u2019m going to go out on a limb and recommend that, if you\u2019re serious about getting into your own shit, that you obtain both and work through the two in tandem. Microcosm has a fun trend of publishing workbooks alongside self help titles, and managing editor\/co-owner Elly Blue has said on <a href=\"https:\/\/microcosmpublishing.com\/blog\/2016\/01\/business-of-publishing\/\">Microcosm\u2019s podcast<\/a> that most book\/workbook combinations can be treated as \u201cone or the other\u201d situations, not necessarily a requisite package deal. However, while <em><a href=\"https:\/\/microcosmpublishing.com\/catalog\/books\/3295\">How to Be Accountable<\/a><\/em> does contain several reflective questions and journaling exercises in-text, I think the companion structure of a workbook would be extremely helpful in keeping a reader grounded in the deep understanding of self (values, needs, patterns, history) that is required of their own accountability work, as they consider larger concepts that may or may not affect their own situations to varying degrees.\u00a0<\/p>\n<!-- \/wp:paragraph -->\n\n<!-- wp:paragraph -->\n<p>The truth is, no book will give a reader a hard-and-fast answer when it comes to tough questions of justice, forgiveness, and healing from harm, because the idea of such a solution is a myth. For most situations, there isn\u2019t a peel-and-stick universally \u201ccorrect\u201d answer, which is what leaves so many of us stammering at the edge of a conversational precipice, cutting people out of our lives for lack of a better option, or staring at ourselves in the mirror with a sick feeling in the pit of our stomach that we will never be freed of our own pain.&nbsp;<\/p>\n<!-- \/wp:paragraph -->\n\n<!-- wp:paragraph -->\n<p>However, in lieu of this magical sticker, there <em>are<\/em> people seriously engaging with the difficult work of growth and accountability, in numerous formats, from storytelling to social work. It is increasingly recognized that our institutional systems of accountability are deeply flawed, that their harmful notions of punishment have trickled down into our most precious relationships, and that a new way forward is needed to make us all safer and more whole. Ultimately, <em><a href=\"http:\/\/In January of 2018, Saturday Night Live released a comedy sketch titled \u201cDinner Discussion.\u201d Three straight couples sit around a restaurant table (remember restaurants?), exclaiming over the food\u2019s deliciousness. \u201cEverything here is good,\u201d says one man. \u201cThe New York Times restaurant review raved about this place.\u201d   \u201cYou know, speaking of the Times,\u201d a woman at the table says. \u201cDid any of you guys read that op-ed piece about\u2026\u201d  \u201cHoney, no,\u201d her husband says, suddenly alarmed.   \u201cWhat article are you talking about?\u201d their friend inquires.   \u201cThe one about\u2026 Aziz Ansari?\u201d   The music surges, and the six are thrown into dramatic lighting as the camera close pans across their distressed, panicking faces. One woman raises her wine glass to her lips with a trembling hand. The shushing husband pulls his turtleneck up to hide his face.   A quick refresher on the cultural climate of January 2018: news coverage was full steam ahead on all things #MeToo. A waterfall of sexual misconduct revelations was steadily cascading from the upper echelons of Hollywood. Then, an anonymous expos\u00e9 of Aziz Ansari\u2019s alleged misdeeds made a splash and muddied the waters. The article described a hookup in which the woman who Ansari brought home felt unheard and violated. It was clear that harm had been caused and that power dynamics were involved. Yet enough gray area around the details threw the discourse into a purgatory where no one knew how to talk about it or have the \u201cright\u201d opinion.   The SNL skit continues with the dinner guests haltingly offering their thoughts on the subject. \u201cI...think\u2026\u201d one woman says, while her husband admonishes, \u201cCareful\u2026\u201d   \u201cI think that some...women\u2026\u201d she continues, and her friend interjects, \u201cCareful\u2026\u201d  \u201cWhile I applaud the movement,\u201d another dinnergoer offers. \u201cWatch it\u2026\u201d cautions his friend.   They continue to hem and haw their way through the conversation. \u201cPowerful men almost always abuse...NOPE!\u201d one tries. \u201cConsent\u2026PASS! Damn it!\u201d says another.   If you were an alive and thinking person at the time, you might have an opinion on the matter\u2013perhaps a very strongly held one\u2013and I\u2019m not here to convince you any which way about it. But that SNL skit stuck with me because it felt so accurate to the grappling conversations I\u2019d had with my own friends that week, and it came to mind again as I worked my way through \u201cHow to Be Accountable,\u201d Microcosm\u2019s latest contribution to the cultural toolkit of thinking about repairing harm in our relationships and our lives.   Authors Joe Biel and Dr. Faith G. Harper establish early and often that a new paradigm is needed for conversations about accountability. They explicitly state their hope that people \u201ccultivating personal development rather than sweeping cancelation\u201d are the ones \u201cwho will change perception around this issue and shift the conversation about accountability from one of punishment and ostracism to an understanding that accountability is personal and that everyone makes mistakes from which they can learn and grow.\u201d   It\u2019s a difficult, tricky subject, and I appreciate this book\u2019s willingness to wade into the thick of it. Talking about accountability, just like talking about privilege and other systems of power, requires stark honesty and the resilience to push through making mistakes. While these vulnerabilities are necessary for progress, too often they are swiftly punished within the very conversations that require them. This can feel inescapable and exhausting.   With \u201cHow to be Accountable,\u201d I was ready to watch someone else step into that arena, and the book did not let me down. I was uncomfortable and questioning my own notions of accountability almost immediately, which I think is the point. When it comes to perpetrators of harm, considering forgiveness can feel like a trap \u2013 even the phrase \u201ceveryone makes mistakes\u201d can feel a little too \u201cboys will be boys\u201d in the context of sexual assault \u2013 yet blanket cancelation of human beings is clearly not a sustainable or healthy option. How, then, are we to proceed?  To their credit, Harper and Biel ultimately never boil anything down to a simple takeaway. They frequently acknowledge that every situation is unique, with its own context and nuance, and thus every situation will require unique engagement from all parties. \u201cIn a world of memes and fake news, separating the behavior from the person is more vital than ever,\u201d the authors write. \u201cIn the quest for quick sound bytes we simplify, misconstrue, misinterpret, and vilify people because we are human and sometimes our filters fail us. ...If we are going to create something better than the criminal justice system for righting wrongs, our system has to truly be better.\u201d   But wait. Isn\u2019t this supposed to be a book about personal accountability? About fixing our own shitty habits? Ostensibly, yes. The book begins with a baseline acknowledgement that our own toxic patterns are often born of coping behaviors we learned in childhood, and that these patterns can be interrogated and shifted.   Accountability doesn\u2019t only exist outside of us, in the court of public opinion. It is a quality we all are responsible for crafting an awareness of and practice around in our own lives. \u201cHow To Be Accountable\u201d does a great job of striking this note early on: \u201c...there is remarkably little written about how to recognize and change patterns in our own behavior, which seems to suggest that change is only needed for people whose behavior is unfathomably worse than our own. But the reality is that everyone sees maladaptive behaviors in themselves that they\u2019d like to change.\u201d   Yet for a lay reader, that note might seem to waver as the chapters proceed to wander through the weeds of cognitive biases, propaganda, trauma histories, and shadow work, with occasional guest appearances by members of the zeitgeist such as Pizzagate, Jordan Peterson, and racist Facebook relatives. At times, it can be hard to see how a given section relates to our own accountability struggles, which might be as mundane as avoiding difficult conversations with loved ones, or continuing to engage in self-sabotaging behavior.  Truthfully, it is all related and relevant \u2013 it\u2019s just that this shit is complicated and this work is hard. \u201cIf you are still feeling like you haven\u2019t connected all of the dots, don\u2019t beat yourself up,\u201d write Harper and Biel in the book\u2019s conclusion. \u201cWe\u2019d say that doesn\u2019t signal failure, it signals the fact that you are recognizing that this is a complex and long-term process.\u201d   I didn\u2019t have access to the forthcoming companion title \u201cHow to be Accountable Workbook\u201d during the writing of this review, but I\u2019m going to go out on a limb and recommend that, if you\u2019re serious about getting into your own shit, that you obtain both and work through the two in tandem. Microcosm has a fun trend of publishing workbooks alongside self help titles, and managing editor\/co-owner Elly Blue has said on Microcosm\u2019s podcast that most book\/workbook combinations can be treated as \u201cone or the other\u201d situations, not necessarily a requisite package deal. However, while \u201cHow to be Accountable\u201d does contain several reflective questions and journaling exercises in-text, I think the companion structure of a workbook would be extremely helpful in keeping a reader grounded in the deep understanding of self (values, needs, patterns, history) that is required of their own accountability work, as they consider larger concepts that may or may not affect their own situations to varying degrees.   The truth is, no book will give a reader a hard-and-fast answer when it comes to tough questions of justice, forgiveness, and healing from harm, because the idea of such a solution is a myth. For most situations, there isn\u2019t a peel-and-stick universally \u201ccorrect\u201d answer, which is what leaves so many of us stammering at the edge of a conversational precipice, cutting people out of our lives for lack of a better option, or staring at ourselves in the mirror with a sick feeling in the pit of our stomach that we will never be freed of our own pain.   However, in lieu of this magical sticker, there are people seriously engaging with the difficult work of growth and accountability, in numerous formats, from storytelling to social work. It is increasingly recognized that our institutional systems of accountability are deeply flawed, that their harmful notions of punishment have trickled down into our most precious relationships, and that a new way forward is needed to make us all safer and more whole. Ultimately, \u201cHow to be Accountable\u201d is a valuable contribution to the ever-growing library on this subject.                          **INCLUDE JOE AND FAITH\u2019S CREDENTIALS SOMEWHERE NEAR THEIR INTRODUCTION**  People are brought to the brink of accountability work through the consequences of their own actions, which were, themselves, largely driven by maladaptive coping behaviors learned in childhood.   This book posits itself as the proverbial hard look in the mirror, starting from a strong baseline acknowledgement that everyone has patterns of behavior that could handle a tuneup.     Our institutions of accountability, namely the criminal justice system, are deeply flawed.  Accountability as a positive action: finally creating what you truly want and need.   \u201cAccountability...is about understanding that we make our own choices, create our own lives, and recognize the consequences of our actions.\u201d   Accountability can mean so many different things. It can come up in the wake of shitty or harmful actions, or when you privately fail to keep your own promises to yourself.   The dots the book gives us to connect are things like childhood trauma, survival-oriented behavior patterns,\">How to be Accountable<\/a><\/em> is a valuable contribution to the ever-growing library on this subject.<\/p>\n<!-- \/wp:paragraph -->","my_excerpt_rendered":"\n<p><em>Microcosm intern Molly Simas wrote this review of our new book, <\/em><a href=\"https:\/\/microcosmpublishing.com\/catalog\/books\/3295\">How to Be Accountable<\/a> <em>by Joe Biel &amp; Dr. Faith Harper.<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<figure class=\"wp-block-image size-large\"><a href=\"https:\/\/microcosmpublishing.com\/catalog\/books\/3295\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"573\" height=\"800\" src=\"https:\/\/microcosmpublishing.com\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/02\/accountable-cov_lg.jpg\" alt=\"\" class=\"wp-image-3534\" srcset=\"https:\/\/microcosmpublishing.com\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/02\/accountable-cov_lg.jpg 573w, https:\/\/microcosmpublishing.com\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/02\/accountable-cov_lg-215x300.jpg 215w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 573px) 100vw, 573px\" \/><\/a><\/figure>\n\n\n\n<p>In January of 2018, Saturday Night Live released a comedy sketch titled \u201cDinner Discussion.\u201d Three straight couples sit around a restaurant table (remember restaurants?), exclaiming over the food\u2019s deliciousness. \u201cEverything here is good,\u201d says one man. \u201cThe New York Times restaurant review <em>raved<\/em> about this place.\u201d&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>\u201cYou know, speaking of the Times,\u201d a woman at the table says. \u201cDid any of you guys read that op-ed piece about\u2026\u201d<br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>\u201cHoney, no,\u201d her husband says, suddenly alarmed.\u00a0<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>\u201cWhat article are you talking about?\u201d their friend inquires.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>\u201cThe one about\u2026 Aziz Ansari?\u201d&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The music surges, and the six are thrown into dramatic lighting as the camera close pans across their distressed, panicking faces. One woman raises her wine glass to her lips with a trembling hand. The shushing husband pulls his turtleneck up to hide his face.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>A quick refresher on the cultural climate of January 2018: news coverage was full steam ahead on all things #MeToo. A waterfall of sexual misconduct revelations was steadily cascading from the upper echelons of Hollywood. Then, an anonymous expos\u00e9 of Aziz Ansari\u2019s alleged misdeeds made a splash and muddied the waters. The article described a hookup in which the woman who Ansari brought home felt unheard and violated. It was clear that harm had been caused and that power dynamics were involved. Yet enough gray area around the details threw the discourse into a purgatory where no one knew how to talk about it or have the \u201cright\u201d opinion.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The SNL skit continues with the dinner guests haltingly offering their thoughts on the subject. \u201cI&#8230;think\u2026\u201d one woman says, while her husband admonishes, \u201cCareful\u2026\u201d&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>\u201cI think that some&#8230;women\u2026\u201d she continues, and her friend interjects, \u201cCareful\u2026\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>\u201cWhile I applaud the movement,\u201d another dinnergoer offers. \u201cWatch it\u2026\u201d cautions his friend.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>They continue to hem and haw their way through the conversation. \u201cPowerful men almost always abuse&#8230;NOPE!\u201d one tries. \u201cConsent\u2026PASS! Damn it!\u201d says another.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>If you were an alive and thinking person at the time, you might have an opinion on the matter\u2013perhaps a very strongly held one\u2013and I\u2019m not here to convince you any which way about it. But that SNL skit stuck with me because it felt so accurate to the grappling conversations I\u2019d had with my own friends that week, and it came to mind again as I worked my way through <em><a href=\"https:\/\/microcosmpublishing.com\/catalog\/books\/3295\">How to Be Accountable<\/a><\/em>, Microcosm\u2019s latest contribution to the cultural toolkit of thinking about repairing harm in our relationships and our lives.\u00a0<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Authors Joe Biel and Dr. Faith G. Harper establish early and often that a new paradigm is needed for conversations about accountability. They explicitly state their hope that people \u201ccultivating personal development rather than sweeping cancelation\u201d are the ones \u201cwho will change perception around this issue and shift the conversation about accountability from one of punishment and ostracism to an understanding that accountability is personal and that everyone makes mistakes from which they can learn and grow.\u201d&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>It\u2019s a difficult, tricky subject, and I appreciate this book\u2019s willingness to wade into the thick of it. Talking about accountability, just like talking about privilege and other systems of power, requires stark honesty and the resilience to push through making mistakes. While these vulnerabilities are necessary for progress, too often they are swiftly punished within the very conversations that require them. This can feel inescapable and exhausting.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>With <a href=\"https:\/\/microcosmpublishing.com\/catalog\/books\/3295\"><em>How to Be Accountable<\/em><\/a>, I was ready to watch someone else step into that arena, and the book did not let me down. I was uncomfortable and questioning my own notions of accountability almost immediately, which I think is the point. When it comes to perpetrators of harm, considering forgiveness can feel like a trap\u2014even the phrase \u201ceveryone makes mistakes\u201d can feel a little too \u201cboys will be boys\u201d in the context of sexual assault\u2014yet blanket cancelation of human beings is clearly not a sustainable or healthy option. How, then, are we to proceed?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>To their credit, Harper and Biel ultimately never boil anything down to a simple takeaway. They frequently acknowledge that every situation is unique, with its own context and nuance, and thus every situation will require unique engagement from all parties. \u201cIn a world of memes and fake news, separating the behavior from the person is more vital than ever,\u201d the authors write. \u201cIn the quest for quick sound bytes we simplify, misconstrue, misinterpret, and vilify people because we are human and sometimes our filters fail us. &#8230;If we are going to create something better than the criminal justice system for righting wrongs, our system has to truly be <strong><em>better<\/em><\/strong>.\u201d&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>But wait. Isn\u2019t this supposed to be a book about <em>personal<\/em> accountability? About fixing our <em>own<\/em> shitty habits? Ostensibly, yes. The book begins with a baseline acknowledgement that our own toxic patterns are often born of coping behaviors we learned in childhood, and that these patterns can be interrogated and shifted.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Accountability doesn\u2019t only exist outside of us, in the court of public opinion. It is a quality we all are responsible for crafting an awareness of and practice around in our own lives. <em><a href=\"https:\/\/microcosmpublishing.com\/catalog\/books\/3295\">How To Be Accountable<\/a><\/em> does a great job of striking this note early on: \u201c&#8230;there is remarkably little written about how to recognize and change patterns in our <em>own<\/em> behavior, which seems to suggest that change is only needed for people whose behavior is unfathomably worse than our own. But the reality is that <em>everyone<\/em> sees maladaptive behaviors in themselves that they\u2019d like to change.\u201d\u00a0<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Yet for a lay reader, that note might seem to waver as the chapters proceed to wander through the weeds of cognitive biases, propaganda, trauma histories, and shadow work, with occasional guest appearances by members of the zeitgeist such as Pizzagate, Jordan Peterson, and racist Facebook relatives. At times, it can be hard to see how a given section relates to our own accountability struggles, which might be as mundane as avoiding difficult conversations with loved ones, or continuing to engage in self-sabotaging behavior.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Truthfully, it <em>is<\/em> all related and relevant\u2014it\u2019s just that this shit is complicated and this work is hard. \u201cIf you are still feeling like you haven\u2019t connected all of the dots, don\u2019t beat yourself up,\u201d write Harper and Biel in the book\u2019s conclusion. \u201cWe\u2019d say that doesn\u2019t signal failure, it signals the fact that you are recognizing that this is a complex and long-term process.\u201d\u00a0<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>I didn\u2019t have access to the forthcoming companion title <em><a href=\"https:\/\/microcosmpublishing.com\/catalog\/books\/14443\">How to Be Accountable Workbook<\/a><\/em> during the writing of this review, but I\u2019m going to go out on a limb and recommend that, if you\u2019re serious about getting into your own shit, that you obtain both and work through the two in tandem. Microcosm has a fun trend of publishing workbooks alongside self help titles, and managing editor\/co-owner Elly Blue has said on <a href=\"https:\/\/microcosmpublishing.com\/blog\/2016\/01\/business-of-publishing\/\">Microcosm\u2019s podcast<\/a> that most book\/workbook combinations can be treated as \u201cone or the other\u201d situations, not necessarily a requisite package deal. However, while <em><a href=\"https:\/\/microcosmpublishing.com\/catalog\/books\/3295\">How to Be Accountable<\/a><\/em> does contain several reflective questions and journaling exercises in-text, I think the companion structure of a workbook would be extremely helpful in keeping a reader grounded in the deep understanding of self (values, needs, patterns, history) that is required of their own accountability work, as they consider larger concepts that may or may not affect their own situations to varying degrees.\u00a0<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The truth is, no book will give a reader a hard-and-fast answer when it comes to tough questions of justice, forgiveness, and healing from harm, because the idea of such a solution is a myth. For most situations, there isn\u2019t a peel-and-stick universally \u201ccorrect\u201d answer, which is what leaves so many of us stammering at the edge of a conversational precipice, cutting people out of our lives for lack of a better option, or staring at ourselves in the mirror with a sick feeling in the pit of our stomach that we will never be freed of our own pain.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>However, in lieu of this magical sticker, there <em>are<\/em> people seriously engaging with the difficult work of growth and accountability, in numerous formats, from storytelling to social work. It is increasingly recognized that our institutional systems of accountability are deeply flawed, that their harmful notions of punishment have trickled down into our most precious relationships, and that a new way forward is needed to make us all safer and more whole. Ultimately, <em><a href=\"http:\/\/In January of 2018, Saturday Night Live released a comedy sketch titled \u201cDinner Discussion.\u201d Three straight couples sit around a restaurant table (remember restaurants?), exclaiming over the food\u2019s deliciousness. \u201cEverything here is good,\u201d says one man. \u201cThe New York Times restaurant review raved about this place.\u201d   \u201cYou know, speaking of the Times,\u201d a woman at the table says. \u201cDid any of you guys read that op-ed piece about\u2026\u201d  \u201cHoney, no,\u201d her husband says, suddenly alarmed.   \u201cWhat article are you talking about?\u201d their friend inquires.   \u201cThe one about\u2026 Aziz Ansari?\u201d   The music surges, and the six are thrown into dramatic lighting as the camera close pans across their distressed, panicking faces. One woman raises her wine glass to her lips with a trembling hand. The shushing husband pulls his turtleneck up to hide his face.   A quick refresher on the cultural climate of January 2018: news coverage was full steam ahead on all things #MeToo. A waterfall of sexual misconduct revelations was steadily cascading from the upper echelons of Hollywood. Then, an anonymous expos\u00e9 of Aziz Ansari\u2019s alleged misdeeds made a splash and muddied the waters. The article described a hookup in which the woman who Ansari brought home felt unheard and violated. It was clear that harm had been caused and that power dynamics were involved. Yet enough gray area around the details threw the discourse into a purgatory where no one knew how to talk about it or have the \u201cright\u201d opinion.   The SNL skit continues with the dinner guests haltingly offering their thoughts on the subject. \u201cI...think\u2026\u201d one woman says, while her husband admonishes, \u201cCareful\u2026\u201d   \u201cI think that some...women\u2026\u201d she continues, and her friend interjects, \u201cCareful\u2026\u201d  \u201cWhile I applaud the movement,\u201d another dinnergoer offers. \u201cWatch it\u2026\u201d cautions his friend.   They continue to hem and haw their way through the conversation. \u201cPowerful men almost always abuse...NOPE!\u201d one tries. \u201cConsent\u2026PASS! Damn it!\u201d says another.   If you were an alive and thinking person at the time, you might have an opinion on the matter\u2013perhaps a very strongly held one\u2013and I\u2019m not here to convince you any which way about it. But that SNL skit stuck with me because it felt so accurate to the grappling conversations I\u2019d had with my own friends that week, and it came to mind again as I worked my way through \u201cHow to Be Accountable,\u201d Microcosm\u2019s latest contribution to the cultural toolkit of thinking about repairing harm in our relationships and our lives.   Authors Joe Biel and Dr. Faith G. Harper establish early and often that a new paradigm is needed for conversations about accountability. They explicitly state their hope that people \u201ccultivating personal development rather than sweeping cancelation\u201d are the ones \u201cwho will change perception around this issue and shift the conversation about accountability from one of punishment and ostracism to an understanding that accountability is personal and that everyone makes mistakes from which they can learn and grow.\u201d   It\u2019s a difficult, tricky subject, and I appreciate this book\u2019s willingness to wade into the thick of it. Talking about accountability, just like talking about privilege and other systems of power, requires stark honesty and the resilience to push through making mistakes. While these vulnerabilities are necessary for progress, too often they are swiftly punished within the very conversations that require them. This can feel inescapable and exhausting.   With \u201cHow to be Accountable,\u201d I was ready to watch someone else step into that arena, and the book did not let me down. I was uncomfortable and questioning my own notions of accountability almost immediately, which I think is the point. When it comes to perpetrators of harm, considering forgiveness can feel like a trap \u2013 even the phrase \u201ceveryone makes mistakes\u201d can feel a little too \u201cboys will be boys\u201d in the context of sexual assault \u2013 yet blanket cancelation of human beings is clearly not a sustainable or healthy option. How, then, are we to proceed?  To their credit, Harper and Biel ultimately never boil anything down to a simple takeaway. They frequently acknowledge that every situation is unique, with its own context and nuance, and thus every situation will require unique engagement from all parties. \u201cIn a world of memes and fake news, separating the behavior from the person is more vital than ever,\u201d the authors write. \u201cIn the quest for quick sound bytes we simplify, misconstrue, misinterpret, and vilify people because we are human and sometimes our filters fail us. ...If we are going to create something better than the criminal justice system for righting wrongs, our system has to truly be better.\u201d   But wait. Isn\u2019t this supposed to be a book about personal accountability? About fixing our own shitty habits? Ostensibly, yes. The book begins with a baseline acknowledgement that our own toxic patterns are often born of coping behaviors we learned in childhood, and that these patterns can be interrogated and shifted.   Accountability doesn\u2019t only exist outside of us, in the court of public opinion. It is a quality we all are responsible for crafting an awareness of and practice around in our own lives. \u201cHow To Be Accountable\u201d does a great job of striking this note early on: \u201c...there is remarkably little written about how to recognize and change patterns in our own behavior, which seems to suggest that change is only needed for people whose behavior is unfathomably worse than our own. But the reality is that everyone sees maladaptive behaviors in themselves that they\u2019d like to change.\u201d   Yet for a lay reader, that note might seem to waver as the chapters proceed to wander through the weeds of cognitive biases, propaganda, trauma histories, and shadow work, with occasional guest appearances by members of the zeitgeist such as Pizzagate, Jordan Peterson, and racist Facebook relatives. At times, it can be hard to see how a given section relates to our own accountability struggles, which might be as mundane as avoiding difficult conversations with loved ones, or continuing to engage in self-sabotaging behavior.  Truthfully, it is all related and relevant \u2013 it\u2019s just that this shit is complicated and this work is hard. \u201cIf you are still feeling like you haven\u2019t connected all of the dots, don\u2019t beat yourself up,\u201d write Harper and Biel in the book\u2019s conclusion. \u201cWe\u2019d say that doesn\u2019t signal failure, it signals the fact that you are recognizing that this is a complex and long-term process.\u201d   I didn\u2019t have access to the forthcoming companion title \u201cHow to be Accountable Workbook\u201d during the writing of this review, but I\u2019m going to go out on a limb and recommend that, if you\u2019re serious about getting into your own shit, that you obtain both and work through the two in tandem. Microcosm has a fun trend of publishing workbooks alongside self help titles, and managing editor\/co-owner Elly Blue has said on Microcosm\u2019s podcast that most book\/workbook combinations can be treated as \u201cone or the other\u201d situations, not necessarily a requisite package deal. However, while \u201cHow to be Accountable\u201d does contain several reflective questions and journaling exercises in-text, I think the companion structure of a workbook would be extremely helpful in keeping a reader grounded in the deep understanding of self (values, needs, patterns, history) that is required of their own accountability work, as they consider larger concepts that may or may not affect their own situations to varying degrees.   The truth is, no book will give a reader a hard-and-fast answer when it comes to tough questions of justice, forgiveness, and healing from harm, because the idea of such a solution is a myth. For most situations, there isn\u2019t a peel-and-stick universally \u201ccorrect\u201d answer, which is what leaves so many of us stammering at the edge of a conversational precipice, cutting people out of our lives for lack of a better option, or staring at ourselves in the mirror with a sick feeling in the pit of our stomach that we will never be freed of our own pain.   However, in lieu of this magical sticker, there are people seriously engaging with the difficult work of growth and accountability, in numerous formats, from storytelling to social work. It is increasingly recognized that our institutional systems of accountability are deeply flawed, that their harmful notions of punishment have trickled down into our most precious relationships, and that a new way forward is needed to make us all safer and more whole. Ultimately, \u201cHow to be Accountable\u201d is a valuable contribution to the ever-growing library on this subject.                          **INCLUDE JOE AND FAITH\u2019S CREDENTIALS SOMEWHERE NEAR THEIR INTRODUCTION**  People are brought to the brink of accountability work through the consequences of their own actions, which were, themselves, largely driven by maladaptive coping behaviors learned in childhood.   This book posits itself as the proverbial hard look in the mirror, starting from a strong baseline acknowledgement that everyone has patterns of behavior that could handle a tuneup.     Our institutions of accountability, namely the criminal justice system, are deeply flawed.  Accountability as a positive action: finally creating what you truly want and need.   \u201cAccountability...is about understanding that we make our own choices, create our own lives, and recognize the consequences of our actions.\u201d   Accountability can mean so many different things. It can come up in the wake of shitty or harmful actions, or when you privately fail to keep your own promises to yourself.   The dots the book gives us to connect are things like childhood trauma, survival-oriented behavior patterns,\">How to be Accountable<\/a><\/em> is a valuable contribution to the ever-growing library on this subject.<\/p>\n","_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/microcosmpublishing.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/3533","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/microcosmpublishing.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/microcosmpublishing.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/microcosmpublishing.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/3"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/microcosmpublishing.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=3533"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/microcosmpublishing.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/3533\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":3535,"href":"https:\/\/microcosmpublishing.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/3533\/revisions\/3535"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/microcosmpublishing.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=3533"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/microcosmpublishing.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=3533"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/microcosmpublishing.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=3533"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}