ESSAY: One-World Worlding in Our Movements: A Call and Path for Pluriversal Practice
"One-worlding is not just an abstract idea—it points to a subtle, pervasive,
and persistent habit that seeps into our bodies, beliefs, relationships, and our cultural practices. And yet, there are what Deleuze and Guatari called lines of flight—small fractures, glimpses of something different, something emergent and possible, that offer a way through. We might catch glimpses of these lines of flight when we encounter one another in our mutuality, divinity, and power; when we feel the softening of the grip of a reified sense of who we are
or what we think; when we are met with grace, forgiveness, understanding, curiosity; and when we experience even momentary joy, aliveness, “okayness.”
The question for us then becomes how do we not just find the cracks, or the lines of flight, but also: how do we practice our way out of these patterns of one-worlding?