“At some point the press needs to stop adopting right-wing framing that this is a 'DEI purge' and call it what it is — white supremacist violence against our collective past.”
- A.J. Bauer, an expert in right-wing politics and journalism
- Huffpost
“At some point the press needs to stop adopting right-wing framing that this is a 'DEI purge' and call it what it is — white supremacist violence against our collective past.”
- A.J. Bauer, an expert in right-wing politics and journalism
- Huffpost
Today, I am unsettled. Itchy. Twitchy. Looking for things I can organize. Order I can create with a little effort. Exerting a little petty control over my immediate physical environment, as my old roommate used to say, nodding knowingly, as he came home to a whole new living room arrangement.
On my way to church today (dragging myself away from shelves un-organized and cords still tangled and not tacked down), I found myself doing the math of how many years it's been since college. Since high school. As though nailing down the math will anchor me in this place now.
Even those who avoid political discussions are asking me and each other - what does this mean? what will he do? how far will he go?
As far and as fast as we let him.
And the voice of my wise friend Jimmy echoes a reminder: Don't let Trump be your spiritual center. He will expand to fill any space given over to him. He loves to be the center. A Moloch to whom we sacrifice our transgender and immigrant children.
But what do we do instead?
If we cannot demonize, because doing so is feeding the beast, then we must strengthen our muscles to love, to be of service, to smother hate with love, to bridge difference with compassion. The opposite of monomaniacal devouring is liberal multiculturalism - the affirmation of many truths, many values, many with worth of many kinds.
And even as I write this, I think about how weak "And" can be. How small a dyke for such impossibly large waves of animosity headed our way. Aren't Democrats weak precisely when they try to be the most nuanced, which looks a lot like disorganization and disagreement to those who are used to the black and white certainty of a would-be dictator?
But I want to fight for the world I want to live in, and I want a world of many ands. Many sources of truth and meaning and values. And so I seek for the common ground with people who are acting and motivated by the wrong things right now. But still people who love. People who nurture their families. Who believe in working hard.
And yes, I remember that ultimately, fighting for that world can mean taking up arms. And the winner gets to teach the lesson.
And I fear. And gather my loved ones close. And organize another shelf.
(Title taken from the first line from Leonard Cohen’s song, Anthem)
once a snowflake fell
on my brow and i loved
it so much and i kissed
it and it was happy and called its cousins
and brothers and a web
of snow engulfed me then
i reached to love them all
and i squeezed them and they became
a spring rain and i stood perfectly
still and was a flower
Modified from:
"Just Like Me Compassion Practice"
Become aware that there is a person in front of you... A fellow human being just like you.
This person has a body and a mind, just like me.
This person has thoughts and feelings, just like me.
This person experiences pain, just like me.
This person has been disappointed in life, just like me.
This person has been hurt by others, just like me.
This person sometimes feels unworthy or inadequate, just like me.
This person worries, just like me.
This person will die, just like me.
This person is someone's friend, just like me.
This person is learning about life, just like me.
This person is trying to be kind to others, just like me.
This person wants to be content with what they have in life, just like me.
This person wishes to be safe, strong, and healthy, just like me.
This person wishes to be loved, just like me.
I wish that you have the strength, resources, and support to live with ease.
May you be free from pain and suffering.
May you be peaceful and happy.
May you love and be loved.
We are in the middle of a house renovation to make our master bedroom and bathroom bigger and add a sunroom (read: yoga space!).
That's the good news. The bad news is that we've been sleeping in our living room for 6 months. It's ... fine but starting to grate on us.
All the living room furniture is in a pod out in front of our house, along with bedroom detritus that we didn't need at first, but eventually... you need your stuff! (First world problems, yes, it's true...)
I'm trying to stay grateful for what we DO have - another den where we can still hang together as a family, fun family bed conversations and kids wrestling on the new king size bed, a robot vacuum cleaning the floors while I do a puzzle... and on and on.
So life goes on, and the practice of being ok where you are, how you are, settles deeper into my bones.
On the morning after Trump was elected President for the second time, I am trying to find my courage and resolve.
I will work to understand what people voted for. What do they want that they believe he can provide? And if it's a return to white supremacy and the violence of exclusion and racism, I will work to understand the fear that drives that anger. I will work on releasing the fear that drives me to reject difference and focus on what connects, what softens, what embraces.
I'm hearing the quote by civil rights activist Ruby Sales from the podcast On Being that I keep returning to:
How is it that we develop a theology or theologies in a 21st-century capitalist technocracy where only a few lives matter? ... What do you say to someone who has been told that their whole essence is whiteness and power and domination, and when that no longer exists, then they feel as if they are dying? ... I don’t hear any theologies speaking to the vast amount — that’s why Donald Trump is essential, because although we don’t agree with him, people think he’s speaking to that pain that they’re feeling.
...Where is the theology that redefines for them what it means to be fully human? I don’t hear any of that coming out of anyplace today.
There’s a spiritual crisis in white America. It’s a crisis of meaning. We talk a lot about black theologies, but I want a liberating white theology. ... I want a theology that begins to deepen people’s understanding about their capacity to live fully human lives and to touch the goodness inside of them, rather than call upon the part of themselves that’s not relational. Because there’s nothing wrong with being European-American. That’s not the problem. It’s how you actualize that history and how you actualize that reality. It’s almost like white people don’t believe that other white people are worthy of being redeemed.
It is okay to be white. It is not okay to be white and wield disproportionate power to exclude non-white people and disavow past injustice that led to the inequality for BIPOC today.
It strikes me that I've wasted time not learning how reconciliation worked in Germany after the Holocaust, or in South Africa after apartheid. On a micro level, I'm thinking about Brené Brown's emphasis on boundaries being the prerequisite of compassion.
We can't want what's best for someone different from us unless it's clear that there is space for each of us to thrive.
And I want America to thrive as a place that believes in one person, one vote. How radical that seems in this dark moment. Justice and freedom for all. Not some. Not those who win. All. And not just freedom to oppress but a promise that rights will not be abridged. The land of opportunity.
I will work for systems that promote justice.
I will work on softening myself to stay open to connection and love. I will look for the good in everyone.
I will practice calming myself and acting out of a boundaried place that leaves space for everyone to thrive. That is the American Dream I believe in.
Life has gotten busy again. Teaching, working, mothering, and churching. I've said yes to things that serve me or that I can serve through skills I enjoy. All good things.
And yet, they've coalesced into 2 months that feel more than full, a little frantic, a little frenetic, a little too much.
Last week, I didn't do yoga AT ALL. !!! Not good!!!
"Rise up and hear your calling..." we sing in church. Yes, ok. But can my calling pace itself a little?
Good lord.
And in the meantime, "I am grateful for the winding road that brought me to this place," the choir leader has us sing.
Yep, so grateful for all these opportunities. I am. And I'm trying to remember to take things one at a time, just in time, and let that be enough.
It's a lesson that my kids actually have learned, somehow. They are both really good at choosing where to put their effort, giving themselves permission to skate through some things, get Bs, do just enough - or let what they do in the time they have be enough. I remember my mother trying to tell me that it was ok to get Bs. (And then try to tell me I couldn't do my homework in front of the tv. I told her when I didn't have straight As, then she could tell me to turn off the tv. That never happened.) But the lesson never stuck.
Today, our community minister reminds us that in the everlasting now, we are joined by all other beings in their search for meaning and purpose. And... even better news ... there were many who came before and many who will come after. (So take a breath, keep perspective, and do what you can. Let the rest go.)
And so, a special meeting that was a to-do for me turns into a meeting of past and present doers, who all hold the flame.
In the spirit of trusting the great AI in the sky, I typed in "does life get better" into Google search bar, and the first response was a Reddit forum "AskOldPeopleAdvice." Yessssssss.
Here are some gems:
"It does get better but you have to look for the positive things. You have to work at being happy. No one tells us this. We are conditioned to believe that happiness is something that just occurs or happens to us but it doesn’t." - Maxwyfe
"It gets much, much, MUCH better. As you get older, you get more agency over your life. You free yourself from toxic parents or stepparents; you finish school; you get some kind of job and have some freedom because you have your own source of income. ... I am your grandpa's age and I am so, so, SO much happier than I was at your age. And every decade, it got better. I promise you. Try to look for the joy, to focus on the positive. And see if your college offers therapy--that's what made the biggest difference in my life." - ThaneOfCawdorrr
"I have sought therapy three different times when I was struggling, choose my friends very carefully, and try to find things every day to be grateful for. It's not always easy, but I want to enjoy my life as much as possible. It's not that things really get easier or harder, but rather that life is always changing. Probably the three best things you can do for yourself to stay positive are to:
"I’m 55 and my life is SO much better than when I was 24.
My advice:
Make genuine human connection your top priority. Read the book “How to Be Yourself: Quiet Your Inner Critic and Rise Above Social Anxiety”. Even if you don’t have social anxiety, you might find that some of it resonates.
Regularly exercise outdoors for mental health. The benefits are too numerous to mention but combining movement, daylight, and nature has more proven benefits than any pill or therapy. I do rucking, which is just walking with weight in a backpack.
Read the book Tiny Habits for practical, well-researched approaches to change. I use these with myself and my clients.
Reflect on what kind of person you want to be, and start acting as if you were that person in little ways. Remind yourself of who you want to be every day." -- OffbeatCoach
https://connectedfamilies.org/equipping-kids-calm-self-regulation/
self-awareness → calming strategy → emotional insight“Motion changes emotion.”