Gather the Circle: The Quiet Power of Civic Salons in Troubled Times
When democracy feels out of reach, gathering in our own living rooms can reignite connection, courage, and purpose.
Lately, it feels as if we are being quietly, methodically checkmated.
Each new move—barely visible to the untrained eye—tightens the grid.
Rights unraveled. Moral nihilism crushing compassion. Innocents criminalized. Truth bent into spectacle.
And beneath it all, a rising tide of helplessness.
Fear that coils in the chest. Rage that cannot find its outlet.
Grief that has nowhere to go.
I’ve been feeling it. Perhaps you have, too.
Many of us are also feeling a quiet discomfort when it comes to engaging others in conversations about current events. Some of us may have lost or injured friendships with political speak that surprisingly clashed. We aren’t sure how to talk about what we feel or how to get involved in creating the change we want. We don’t always know where to find trustworthy news that isn’t drowned in loud opinions. We aren’t sure who to follow, which organizations to support, or even who we can trust.
Not everyone is wired to rush into the streets. Not everyone feels safe—or even able—to join large activist coalitions, attend town halls, or sign up for relentless calls to action.
Some of us are sensitive. Discerning. Spirit-led. We long to stay awake and engaged, but not at the cost of our nervous systems or souls.
So where do we go with our questions, our conscience, our care?
We gather the Circle.
The Civic Salon: An Ancient Act of Resistance
In my own life, one of the most meaningful forms of civic engagement hasn’t involved banners or bullhorns. It has happened with friends encircled in my family room or outdoor deck, with our eyes soft with presence as a talking stick is passed around to each with a voice ready to share.
These are not ordinary chats. They are intentional gatherings—small, sacred, structured—where no more than six to eight souls come together to reflect on what is happening in the world and within us. We call ours "The Soul Salon." Generically, I call them "Civic Salons."
Each person is invited to speak from the heart. To listen deeply. To bring their presence and their purpose—not as a performance, but as a practice of connection.
There are no scripts. No panels. No “experts” needed.
Just people—sensitive, sovereign, luminous—willing to face the world together.
We share our stories of what has been challenging. We lament and complain.
We co-create new perspectives and ideas that provide even clearer mindsets and a centeredness and calm that fuel our resilience.
We explore deeply spiritual and philosophical principles for better grounding to cope.
We reach for humor to laugh ourselves back to life.
And sometimes we light a candle, real or imaginary, in the middle of the room and remember that we are not powerless just because we are not loud.
Together.
When the System Is Breaking, We Build Sanctuary
These intimate salons are especially vital now, as we witness a cascade of actions, decisions, invasions, and legislative moves designed to remove all checks and balances, engender fear and helplessness, widen the gap between the privileged and the working class and poor, and annihilate our personal freedom and rights as citizens. These moves are not only political; they are psychic. Designed to drain our hope. Numb our empathy. Fracture our connection.
A Civic Salon can gently create the connection we crave. By sharing what we do know, and acknowledging what we don’t know—and what we struggle with and what we yearn for —we can begin to simplify what feels so tangled and complicated. We can emerge out of the tight web of frustration with a sense of clarity and higher understanding.
When we gather—intentionally, soulfully—we create microclimates of remembrance.
We remember that the human spirit is not easily erased.
That democracy begins in dialogue.
That kinship is a revolutionary act.
And we start to feel, even just a little, that we are not alone.
Civic Salons offer us a place to name the weight we carry. To speak aloud what makes it hard just to get through the day under the pressure of nonstop crisis and noise.
A Civic Salon offers a pause from social media and invites us to simply be with others who feel what we feel—or who just long to be together, with no pressure to fix anything.
A Civic Salon lets us explore: what moves me? What rings true for me? What sources speak to my soul? From there, we engage more deeply and thoughtfully.
We are no longer prone to hibernate as though waiting for the storm to be over. We become present to it, together.
A Space for the Not-Quite-Activist
Civic Salons are also made for those of us who don’t always fit in traditional out-going and active civic molds. The shy and introverts. The super-sensitives and empaths. Intellectuals. Artists and other creatives. Spiritual Seekers. Wise Elders. But there are also the busy moms. Earners with little or no time to even think. “Tired” retirees who may have already marched in the 60’s and 70’s. Book club members. Home-bodies. And all the small friend and interest groups we already belong to.
But there are elements that bond us.
We crave meaning.
We crave depth.
We crave a kind of belonging that doesn’t flatten us into roles but draws out our truth.
In these small circles, we are not asked to do more—we are invited to be more present.
No pressure. No performances. Just presence, inquiry, and nourishment—for the body and for the soul.
Sometimes all it takes is one voice speaking vulnerably to unlock a ripple of insight.
One conversation to pull someone back from despair. One evening of shared food, fierce honesty, and soft chairs to make the world feel livable again.
How to Begin
If you feel called to host a Civic Salon, you don’t need credentials or a perfect living room. Just a heart that cares and a willingness to open your door. Invite a few trusted souls—at least three and no more than six to eight, for starters. Provide light refreshments. Light a candle. Offer a centering question to explore together.
Questions might include:
What are you feeling most deeply about our world right now?
What have you found helpful or grounding in recent weeks?
What questions are keeping you up at night?
What do you wish you had more courage to say or do?
Create space for each person to speak without interruption. Pass a talking stick to emphasize spaciousness to share and deeply listen. Let silence be welcome. Let laughter be medicine. Let emotion be honored. Welcome vulnerability and make it sacred to honor and protect. Create a guided or silent meditation to start and end the circle.
Let the circle hold you.
Simply holding space with intention is itself an act of power. It is energy. When we shine a light of conscious connection, caring, and awareness with others, something begins to shift. That light is naturally contagious. We carry this light into everything we do, and everyone we encounter. We are more awake and engaged. We feel better, stronger, more empowered and courageous when we feel connected to one another. When we are seen and heard, we rise.
These kinds of gatherings can also ignite "the next thing" we can do together. As we listen and share, ideas naturally surface—perhaps attending a rally, writing letters, sharing trusted news sources, or informing one another about local events and meaningful actions. The circle becomes not only a space for reflection but also a spark for action, tailored to the group’s evolving sense of mission and caring.
As for my circle, we are doing more together, learning and activating more together (including connecting to other civic groups who educate and inspire). We have rallied together and ensured we really knew who our candidates were in the upcoming primary. Lively communications are flowing across our chats between meet-ups and there is a new energy of empowerment and even discernible joy as we share and honor what we’ve co-created.
Because when we sit in a circle, we remember:
We are the ones we’ve been waiting for.
And we were never meant to do this alone.
*Photos licensed from Unsplash










Thank you, Angelique!
As always, you are always right on time and on point. I appreciate your thoughtfulness and sharing an example as a reminder, that there is a place in the protest for quiet souls like me. I especially appreciated reading "We reach for humor to laugh ourselves back to life...and remember that we are not powerless just because we are not loud."
Thank you for being a trusted soul!
GS
This is what we need; just to listen and share. Thanks, Angelique.