"I have almost reached the regrettable conclusion that the Negro's great stumbling block in his stride toward freedom is not the White Citizen's Counciler or the Ku Klux Klanner, but the white moderate, who is more devoted to "order" than to justice; who prefers a negative peace which is the absence of tension to a positive peace which is the presence of justice."--Martin Luther King Jr., Letter from Birmingham Jail
"I don't want to be a product of my environment. I want my environment to be a product of me."--Frank Costello, The Departed
"I don't want to be a product of my environment. I want my environment to be a product of me."--Frank Costello, The Departed
I'd originally planned a post for New Year's Day last year, but got caught
up in holiday festivities, and later the inevitable winter ennui oozing from
failed resolutions. This never surprises me, since January is a terrible time
for realizing hopes and dreams (and February is even worse). Also, 2016 turned out to be a tumultuous year, which goes without saying. In fact, 2015 was really one of the best years of my life, looking back on it. I suggest we take some advice from the trees
and start the new year on the vernal equinox, reserving winter for its intended
purposes of hibernation and excessive indulgence. Winter is not for huffing and
puffing on the treadmill at Planet Fitness--it's a second glass of port, a
third log on the fire, and a fortieth episode of Curb Your Enthusiasm. It's the
season for perfecting your impersonation of a pupa beneath blankets, while the
trees wait silent and patient for March. If we listened to trees
more, I think the world would be a far better place. It's ironic that this post starts out with a call to laziness and ends with a call to action, but humans are nothing if not contradictory. Anyway, this post has
spent a long time gestating, so I'd better get on with it.
Now, let the wild ramble start!
Sometimes I have to be reminded that I'm a person, not a machine who gets in a car every day to go sit and churn out products while consuming other products. We're far messier and less efficient than that, with strange needs like space, sleep, and love. Still, it seems like the things a person produces are often much more valued than the health and well-being of the person themselves--for instance, think of how often people deprive themselves of sufficient rest or exercise to study for a test or finish a project for work. Anyway, these reminders of my "inefficient" humanity tend to come as random headaches and muscle pains, insomnia, and a general boredom with the world so strong that I step outside and sincerely wish that gravity no longer existed. During these restless periods, I also tend to have the attention span of a pinball machine, which leads to less writing, which leads to more difficulty in coming up with clever metaphors to describe my foul temper that arises from said lack of writing. Early this summer, all of these symptoms reared their ugly heads at once after I'd spent several weeks neglecting my gym membership and mostly sitting at a desk in front of a computer, thanks to an unexpectedly tight project deadline.
Thankfully, I was offered a small moment to reclaim my personhood in the form of a two-day trip to Lake Norman in June. I spent it letting my skin drink in all the sunlight it desired, eating home-cooked food, communing with friends, napping with a Bedlington Terrier in my lap, and swimming in the cool water. It's interesting to swim in a place where instead of flat concrete, your feet feel the squishy, pokey detritus of living things. At night I sat on the dock, watching the languid recession of daylight and admiring the strange silence of the lake. Even at my childhood home in the woods, I was used to the subtle yet constant whoosh of traffic from Highway 15-501, but here, the stillness of both water and air was rarely broken. I'd hear only an occasional lap of water against a wood post, the creak of a beam, or my friend's voice as we discussed far-off dreams. Over those two days, I slept better than I had in weeks, and I came home with a new resolution: the needs of my body and spirit will be held sacred above any job, project, assignment, or other worldly pursuit. If I can't accommodate something in my life without sacrificing some aspect of physical, mental, or spiritual health, that thing will be let go.
This resolution is just one example in a long series of what I
call "personal declarations of independence." Others include the
declaration that I don't have to listen to any person who tells me what to do with
my body, that I'll never be silenced for being young or female, that I can view
my tendency to listen more than talk as a strength rather than a weakness, that
I don't have to tolerate anyone's disrespect, etc. As dust falls on our heads
from the world's shaking foundations, these assertions of our own power to grab
the wheel of the future and steer (both on personal and societal levels), and
to reclaim wildly evaporating freedoms and prizes of progress, become more
important than ever. Just the past year alone has reminded us that the
recognition of inalienable human rights never simply happens when
enough people have good thoughts or intentions. It must be constantly fought
for and defended.
There's no doubt that the world is at war right now. People are getting murdered in the streets for being the "wrong" color, the "wrong" orientation, the "wrong" religion, in the "wrong" occupation, for existing. Beautiful, ancient cities are being blown to bits. Political campaigns and discussions have reduced themselves to glorified dodgeball games with less maturity than a middle school gym class. And as all this has unfolded, pundits on the right have been busy distracting us with fear-mongering about bathrooms, pundits on the left with complaints about "beach privilege." To be fair, it's much easier to make a mountain out of a molehill than to actually summit a mountain, which requires courage that whining about how you were "sweat-shamed" for the pit stains on your shirt does not.
Yes, we are at war, but it's not a war between liberals and conservatives, Christians and Muslims, black people and white people, etc. It's a struggle between people who want to live their lives in peace while letting others do the same, and people who won't be satisfied until the world is so bent and broken that it finally fits their narrow ideals of perfection (to be honest, I doubt even that would satisfy them). Some groups won't stop until even history is twisted toward their will--we've had ISIS destroying ancient artifacts in the Middle East, and we've had American school officials wanting to revise history textbooks to suit their opinions. The allies in this struggle are the European man and the Pakistani woman who'd rather discuss the best way to cook lamb than slit each other's throats. They're the cisgender woman and the transgender woman looking for the right song in the hymnal. The cop who just wants to protect and serve, the black man who just wants to get home. The creators, the doers: people who pour their hearts into things they make with their own hands and their own minds and their own hearts, whether it's a poem, a delicious meal, a well-built coffee table, people determined to be more than just products or consumers of their environments.
Although doing something about a problem in society, rather than
just ranting about it or finding less intimidating "problems" to
focus on, seems like the obvious way to fix it, it's sometimes hard to figure
out exactly what to do. I don't know what to do about some of the
problems I listed. When someone commits a crime or passes legislation that
harms a certain group of people, I want to post a Facebook status or a tweet
showing support for my friends who are part of that group, but I usually end up
not doing it because it feels like it's not enough, like it's a lazy,
self-righteous thing to do (not saying that it is; it just feels that way sometimes). "Why waste time posting on the Internet when I could actually
be doing something to help fix this?"
I think to myself, but what can I do about it? One time, I decided to practice
what I preached by going to a protest, but I left frustrated. It wasn't as
well-attended as I'd hoped, and all it seemed to produce were a few angry motorists when we blocked traffic and a lot more spam emails in my
inbox. I got a similar feeling when I attended an anti-discrimination rally sponsored by a music festival, expecting hoards of angry artists demanding change, when it wound up being just a dozen or so people standing under a tent in the rain. I'm less cynical about protests after seeing the incredible turnout at the Women's Marches around the world today, especially since they finally seem to have a coherent platform, but I admit that I'm still a little skeptical of how much change they'll ultimately bring about. I also feel a sense of futility in writing letters to senators and representatives. Again, I hope
I'm proven wrong someday, but it seems like most of the time, politicians have
already made up their minds, and no amount of writing or phone calls will change them.
It can also be hard to create something useful or beautiful because it can require such intense focus and dedication. Artists have more tools than ever these days, but we also have so many distractions, and hundreds of thousands of shouting voices breaking the media into skinny, two-dimensional shards we call sound bites, tweets, etc. I recently read some of John Adams' letters and thought about what an arsenal of beauty and venom the English language is, yet we're forced to limit so many of our thoughts to 120 characters. I push a few buttons, and my phone assaults me with so much light and noise and bad news and so many unfounded opinions that my eyes burn looking at it. I've lost count of how many attempts I've made just to finish this stupid blog post in one sitting. Sometimes my mind feels less like a pinball machine and more like a pile of broken, disconnected chain links that I'm struggling to solder into something coherent.
I don't have all the answers when it comes to mending a torn up world or a torn up mind, but as cliche as it sounds, I think it might be the little things that matter most. Look at a shirt where the arm meets the shoulder, and you might see hundreds of tiny stitches holding them together, without a single thread seeking recognition. Sometimes the threads are completely hidden under the hem, but their existence is manifest in what they bind together, which they do with humility and consistency. A friend once said that change happens person to person, and I think he's right. Building chains of kindness and honesty in our daily interactions, and committing to creating something beautiful and satisfying each day, no matter how small, may help save the world. Remembering to be humble in our work would also help. Too often, when someone says or does something hateful or ill-informed, the first response is to flip them off, create an inflammatory hashtag, or write a snarky, holier-than-thou think piece (forgive any hypocrisy here). However, humility doesn't equal passivity or silence. I think of humble activism as walking straight through a crowd of people who believe you are what's wrong with society and blame you for their struggles, sitting in their midst, and not moving, because America is your country too. It's looking after and defending your friends, even if your family constantly tells you they don't belong (and vice versa), leaving an extra seat at your table for someone who disagrees with you, standing and speaking when you're told to sit down and shut up, helping people less fortunate, asserting what you do know while acknowledging what you don't, refusing to look the other way when someone is in trouble, and never, ever forgetting that no matter how low society bows before the five-second video or the clickbait headline, every human we encounter is a web of experiences, genetics, and circumstances so intricate and complicated that they'll never completely fit inside our convenient categories and assumptions. The thing that's so deadly about over-generalization is that it expands like an umbrella over more and more people. If your enemy expands from "imperialists" to "Americans" to "the West," or from "terrorists" to "Muslims" to "immigrants," it just gives you an excuse to hurt more and more people. Again, person-to-person relationships help combat this. It's harder to hurt someone if you know their mother, if you've kvetched over bourbon on the porch, or if you know what their hands feel like on your face.
Another form of resistance is to defend your time with an iron fist, the time you need to think, create, learn, and sustain yourself, to be human. We need to be healthy to resist properly. For instance, I never check my work email outside of work; I ask coworkers and employers to call or text me instead if there's an emergency. I'm trying to figure out a workable creativity and workout schedule, and making my home a refuge from the distractions of social media. Also, I'm learning a martial art--what's the point of defending my time if I can't defend my life? Once you make this time, don't let anyone or anything take it away from you. Declare yourself independent of any forces that seek to do so. I know from experience how hard it is to make this time when you have multiple jobs, but even a little creativity is better than nothing. No matter how badly someone treats me, I can still come home and write and sing. The guy who yells "nice tits!" out his car window, or tells me that I belong only in the home and not at the polls or in positions of power because I'm a woman and therefore can't handle conflict or face the truth, will never make me put down my pen or guitar. If we keep working and creating in this way, showing that we'll never stop and never be moved. I believe we'll make those who try to tear us down look like they're just flinging themselves against brick walls.
I want to close this post by saying I'm sorry, for any times I've looked away instead of facing a problem, ignored a cry for help, kept silent when I should have spoken, jumped to unjust conclusions, or taken the easy way out instead of doing the right thing. I'll do better. The truth is that I do hate conflict, but that's not an excuse anymore. I even have reservations about sharing this post because I'm afraid some people won't like it or might disagree with it, but trying to please everyone is suicidal. The "negative peace" Dr. King mentions in the quote at the beginning really isn't peace at all; it's a constant, simmering tension, but to people who aren't on the receiving end of injustice, it's often still more palatable than walking across the hot coals of conflict and disorder toward real peace on the other side. This can be true in personal as well as societal conflicts. People who are the targets of injustice, however, tread these coals every day. Rocking the boat is not in my nature, but I've learned that if you don't do so when the moment is right, the boat rocks you.
To anyone who might need a port in the storm over the coming years: my door is always open. I'll have wine, tea, and a frayed 40-year-old arm chair waiting for you.