Chellis GlendinninG `65
Transcription
Chellis GlendinninG `65
Spring 2009 HB alumna PROFILE Chellis Glendinning ’65 by Susan Faulder “my life has been about cultural crossings — dismantling a life and going into another.” hb 5 0 alumna profile published author of: 7 books, including most recently: “My Name Is Chellis and I’m in Recovery from Western Civilization” 16 Although actual travel outside of the United States is infrequent for her, HB alumna Chellis Glendinning ’65 says, “My life has been about cultural crossings — dismantling a life and going into another.” This incredibly interesting and diverse professional describes herself as “a European-American author of creative nonfiction, licensed psychotherapist and political activist whose participation has spanned the social movements of our times — civil rights and anti-globalization and indigenous rights.” Her clients “are torn apart by substance abuse, childhood violence and neglect, and deal with the issues of immigration,” Glendinning says. Despite this, she maintains a vibrant and positive attitude, insatiable curiosity about life and learning and an engaging sense of humor. Since 1990, Glendinning has lived in the northern New Mexican village of Chimayó, which she describes as economically comparable to a Third World country. Combined with her psychotherapy practice there, Glendinning writes prolifically. She is also a noted pioneer in the field of ecopsychology, which is defined as “weaving together insights from history, psychology, sociology, and culture to illuminate the human/nature relationship.” Given her broad professional experiences, she is in demand as a speaker, having presented at many institutions including the Center for Psychology and Social Change at Harvard, the American Psychological Association and the Association for Humanistic Psychology. chapters in anthologies, book forewards, etc. nearly 175 articles, book reviews, essays, short stories and poems 1 opera: “De Un Lado Al Otro” Early on, Glendinning’s life trajectory was influenced by her mother, Mary H. Daoust Glendinning ’38, who became involved in the civil rights movement in the mid-’50s. This was a unique life pursuit for a woman of that generation. “I grew up in an environment that combined the interaction between civil rights and women’s issues,” says Glendinning. She attended HB during the “cusp years,” when fellow students began to become aware of and involved in societal and civic issues beyond their immediate world. A group of her classmates chartered a bus to take them to Washington, D.C. to participate in a civil rights march past the White House. “We missed only one day of classes,” she remembers, “but I shocked one of my teachers as I described this significant (and unheard of at the HB of the times) adventure.” An HB National Merit Scholar Semifinalist and star athlete, Glendinning is grateful for her HB education, a liberal-arts program that fostered a broad view of the world. “It was a real gift!” She remembers with particular fondness Spanish teacher Mrs. McCormick and English department chair Mrs. McCreary. At a time in life when many might be thinking about slowing their pace toward retirement, Glendinning is in the process of crossing another boundary to a new life. By summer 2009, she will have moved from Chimayó to La Paz, Bolivia. She was introduced to the country, its first democratically elected government in 500 years and a group of citizens who are “fabulous activists” by good friend and former California State Congressman Tom Hayden. “Everyone in Bolivia discusses politics, including 18-yearold taxi drivers,” she enthuses. This new move is surely one of many new chapters Glendinning has left to write. hb 51