How to Sustain Radical Possibility in Schools Without Sacrificing Your Well-Being

By

Overview

Creating truly equitable schools requires more than policy changes—it demands a radical reimagining of what education can be. But as many educators, especially Black women in leadership, have discovered, this work often comes at a personal cost. Drawing from my experience as a Voices of Change fellow and director of diversity, equity, inclusion, and belonging (DEI) at a preK-8 Catholic Montessori school, I’ve learned that building radical possibility can be both transformative and draining. This guide offers a structured approach to designing and sustaining DEI initiatives in schools while protecting your mental health, based on the lessons I’ve learned—sometimes the hard way.

How to Sustain Radical Possibility in Schools Without Sacrificing Your Well-Being
Source: www.edsurge.com

Prerequisites

Understanding the Landscape

Before diving into this work, you need a foundational grasp of systemic racism in education. This includes:

Personal Readiness

You’ll need:

Institutional Buy-In

Ideally, your school leadership is already aligned with DEI goals. If not, start by building a coalition of allies among staff, parents, and community members.

Step-by-Step Instructions

Step 1: Name the System You’re Fighting

Before you can transform a system, you must acknowledge its real effects. As I did when I reflected on my family’s educational history—my father leaving school, my mother pushed out, my grandparents’ limited options—identify the specific barriers your students face. Action items:

Step 2: Build a Community of Co-Conspirators

You cannot do this alone. I found strength in coaching and being coached by other Black women educators who shared the same exhaustion and hope. Action items:

Step 3: Develop a Strategic Plan with Clear, Measurable Goals

My fourth essay outlined a DEI strategic plan for a Catholic Montessori school. The key is specificity: vague intentions lead to burnout. Action items:

Step 4: Implement with Radical Joy as a Pillar

Too often, DEI work focuses only on trauma and oppression. Incorporate joy as a form of resistance. In my second essay, I emphasized “emancipatory power of radical Black joy.” Here’s how:

Step 5: Set Unbreakable Boundaries for Self-Care

This is the part I neglected—and nearly broke me. I went three years without a full week off. Non-negotiables:

How to Sustain Radical Possibility in Schools Without Sacrificing Your Well-Being
Source: www.edsurge.com

Step 6: Celebrate Small Wins Publicly and Privately

Institutional change is slow. To sustain motivation, recognize progress.

Step 7: Pivot When the System Resists

Not every initiative will succeed. When discriminatory policies resurface or pushback comes, revisit your strategy without personalizing the failure. I learned to lean on my essays—e.g., the one on discriminatory hair policies—to remind myself why the fight matters.

Common Mistakes

Ignoring Burnout Until It’s Too Late

As I woke up one day unable to even want to get out of bed, I realized I had normalized exhaustion. Danger signs: chronic low energy, cynicism, physical illness, feeling “misaligned.” Don’t wait until you’re in crisis.

Trying to Be the Lone Warrior

I tried to do everything—coach others, write essays, lead DEI—while carrying personal grief. I should have delegated more. Build a team so you don’t collapse.

Focusing Only on Pain Points

My earlier essays covered grief, but I learned joy is equally radical. Balance trauma-informed work with celebration.

Perfectionism

You can’t fix centuries of oppression in a school year. I fell into the trap of expecting immediate transformation. Progress, not perfection.

Neglecting Your Own History

If you don’t reflect on why you’re doing this (e.g., your parents’ schooling experiences, Nas’ father’s advice: “Quit school if you want to save your own life”), you lose emotional fuel. Stay connected to your roots.

Summary

Sustaining radical possibility in schools means balancing fierce advocacy with fierce self-preservation. By naming oppressive systems, building community, setting clear goals, prioritizing joy, and enforcing rest, you can create lasting change without breaking yourself—as I nearly did. The work is long, but your health is non-negotiable.

Tags:

Related Articles

Recommended

Discover More

US Sanctions Power Fades as Iran Conflict Drags OnNVIDIA and Google Cloud Unveil Next-Gen AI Infrastructure for Agentic and Physical AIElectric Ride Deals: ENGWE Anniversary, Lectric Mother's Day, Segway Scooter, and MoreThe FakeWallet Crypto Stealer: Inside the App Store Phishing Campaign16 Years of Go: 10 Milestones That Define Its Evolution