John Matterson
John Matterson is originally from Powell River, BC., and now lives in Tsawwassen, BC. His mother, Kathleen, came to Canada as a teenager from England, and his dad, Dal grew up in the BC communities of Ucluelet and Ladner. John is retired and taking on the challenge of Parkinson's disease which he was diagnosed with in 2015.
John worked in the BC Forest Industry and in Technology companies holding executive roles with several global companies. He has travelled to over 40 countries and has lived and worked in Michigan, California, and Singapore. As a management consultant, he has helped many companies grow profitably.
John is an avid golfer and is back playing soccer at 61. He writes a blog on his experiences with Parkinson’s Disease and on his personal journey of truth and reconciliation: https://shakeitupdotonline.wpcomstaging.com
He Is looking to make a difference in the world by opening his, and other people’s eyes, to his experiences with Parkinson’s and to the unearned privilege he has received as a white man growing up on traditional First Nations Land.
Books (1)
Synopsis:
Now You Know Me tells of a journey of understanding between two old friends who grew up in different worlds in the same small town of Powell River, BC, on traditional Tla’amin land. Joe Gallagher, who is Tla’amin, and John Matterson, who is white, were friends as teenagers but went their separate ways before reconnecting 35 years later and truly getting to know each other.
As John began to listen more deeply to Joe’s history, they journeyed together through the historic events and attitudes that deeply wounded the Tla’amin and their way of life. With each conversation, John’s understanding of Joe’s life and recognition of his own unearned advantages and blind participation in racism became clearer.
In their illuminating dialogue in Now You Know Me, we learn what it took for Joe to straddle two worlds while battling racism, a traumatic childhood, and his father’s warning that he couldn’t succeed in a white world without working twice as hard. Despite ongoing suffering from multigenerational harms, Joe garnered broad respect on his way to becoming CEO of a groundbreaking Indigenous-led health organization, bringing hope and a collaborative spirit to a revolution in health and wellness for BC First Nations.
Today, John is committed to ongoing learning and allyship, while Joe is called on by First Nations leaders as well as senior leaders in health and government as an able navigator of the movement toward Truth and Reconciliation.
Additional Information
304 pages | 5.50" x 8.50" | Paperback





