To Whom Am I Accountable?

Before I went to bed Tuesday night, I had a deepening sense of dread. When I woke up Wednesday, my fears were confirmed: a man who during the election season had spewed hateful rhetoric against people of color, immigrants and refugees, Muslims, disabled persons, women (though that hate started long before he was a presidential candidate), and so many other people, was going to be our next president.

Even before Election Day, even when many people thought a different candidate would win, it was very clear that people in the U.S. would need to do some serious collective soul-searching work to bridge an ever-widening divide. Days before the election, I wrote a blog post for JustFaith Ministries, voicing both my concerns and my hopes for our country.

All throughout the election season and even before, I was asking the questions – of myself and of others – What is the positive vision for our country or world? How will we mend the ripped fabric of our nation or world? And especially, What is mine or yours to do?

Any time I offered the questions on my Facebook page, friends and family chimed in, but often the people who responded were like-minded folks. I was interested in a broader spectrum of answers, but didn’t feel that calling specific people out was the way to go, so I accepted whatever answers I got.

On Wednesday morning when I woke up, the fissure in our country felt deeper and more dangerous. Many people I know felt closer to falling into the widening crevice than they had just 24 hours before. I braced myself for what my Trump-voting friends might post on social media as I saw so many people I knew expressing fear for their well-being, wondering what might happen to them when they went to school or work that day, or the next, or the next.

Because the Trump supporters I knew hadn’t ever answered my questions (why, I will acknowledge, I don’t know; I am not accusing them of anything here), I decided to write them a letter:

Dear Trump supporters,

I am sure you are feeling happy & excited that your candidate won, but please understand that many people, your fellow Americans, are grieving. If you care about those people, if you care about me, today is not a day to gloat or say, "I told you so." We need some time and space to regroup.

Our country is so divided and your candidate saying "it is time for us to come together as one united people" does not erase the hateful rhetoric and broad generalizations made against people of color, Muslims, Jews, LGBTQ, immigrants (especially Latino/as), refugees, women, disabled persons, etc. that he and some, too many, of his supporters have spewed over months, or years, or decades (even before he was a presidential candidate). It does not erase the fact that policies he & his running mate have proposed will continue to marginalize and harm the above or increase marginalization/harm done to them.

If you care about our country, as you say you do, please tell me how you personally are going to work to bridge the divide, how you personally are going to affirm the "life, liberty, and pursuit of happiness" for ALL Americans. I'm not asking about what the president-elect will do, I'm asking about you.

I write not to argue and will not be pulled into an argument or debate. I am sincerely interested in your answer.

What positive steps are you going to take for the well-being of all people in our country?

Thank you.

 

I chose to make the letter a public post on Facebook. Several friends reposted it; one sent me a message saying she had cut and pasted it without my name, because she didn’t want to subject me to any ugliness. I wrote her back and told her I had deliberately shared it publicly. I did not intend to hide in fear or quiet my voice because someone might not like what I had to say.

Both friends and people unknown responded to the letter.  Those who knew me honored my request to refrain from arguing or debate. I was grateful.

Several people who didn’t know me answered with responses dripping with disdain or telling me what I or we (“the left,” “liberals,” etc.) needed to do. I carefully responded to the anger, explaining that I wasn’t asking a question that I hadn’t asked myself and others. I posited that since we didn’t know each other, there was no foundation to assume anything about what I had or hadn’t done in the past. Finally, I asked them not to post unless they had something constructive to add. The reply was more anger, assumptions, and inflammatory language. I again responded respectfully, as did several friends. When more anger came my way, it seemed best not to respond.

One stranger in particular (who identified herself as a Bernie supporter) posted numerous times with multi-paragraph responses that included phrases and sentences in ALL CAPS and comments about the “spoiled, lazy generation that thinks they don’t have to struggle as every generation before them” (my generation, presumably). After I tried to answer respectfully and without debating (I had stated clearly that debate wasn’t what the post was about), she responded again with an analysis of my letter and ending in another implication that I was doing nothing to address the issues our country faces. I simply replied, “As I said above, you don’t know me, what I do or do not believe, or what I am or am not doing. I am not here to argue, so I will simply wish you well.”

Admittedly, prior to posting that response, my ego and my higher nature battled fiercely; my ego really wanted to tell her exactly how wrong she was about my work in the world. Thankfully, my higher nature won the battle. I remembered a meme I’d seen: You don’t have to show up to every argument you’re invited to.

She responded again with multiple paragraphs, educating me about white privilege, telling me how I didn’t understand what people of color go through, and ending by telling me that my heart was in the right place, but that if I wasn’t willing to engage with tough questions and issues or with discomfort, I would be “lost in the abyss of white privilege and all that that brings.”

I am aware of my white privilege (and so many other points of privilege she did not mention). I am aware that I have no idea what it feels like to be Black or an immigrant or LGBTQ or…

I am aware that there are layers – many, I would guess - of my privilege and others’ oppression to uncover and sort through. I am trying to do that sorting and I intentionally put myself in places where I am forced to do that uncomfortable and precious work. I am aware that the work will extend to the end of my life.

But did I owe any explanation to this stranger who didn’t know me but presumed to?

My higher nature and ego battled it out again. I typed replies and erased them, typed and erased, typed and erased, until finally, I pulled myself away without hitting “Post.”

It came down to one question: To whom am I accountable?

I am accountable to my brother-in-law and nephews whose skin is darker than mine, who were born outside of the U.S., who have suffered harassment simply for existing and now fear even more for their safety. I am accountable to my godson, whose parents are from Latin America, who was afraid to go to his high school the day after the election.

I am accountable to immigrants and refugees who have suffered nightmares I can’t even imagine in their home countries, in their passage to this country, and maybe even here. I am accountable because too often, my country’s foreign policy has caused or contributed to those nightmares.

I am accountable to people of color, friends who have patiently pointed out my blindness, even though it’s not their job to do so, parents of Black sons and daughters who fear for what might happen to their children for “driving/walking/playing/laughing/doing anything while Black.” I am accountable to the 12-year-old Black son of a white friend who told his mom that he skips and smiles through their neighborhood so their white neighbors will not be afraid of him.

I am accountable to my Muslim friends, as two Muslim women were attacked the day after the election, the attackers grabbing their hijabs and trying to rip them off. My Muslim friends whose children ask if they’ll be forced to leave this country. Who have to defend their religion over and over again because some people can’t make the distinction between extremists and ordinary Muslims and don’t want to acknowledge the hundreds of thousands of (mostly) Muslims our “Christian” nation has killed overseas.

I am accountable to my LGTBQ friends who wonder if newly gained rights will be taken away, who wonder if they’ll soon face legally-enforced discrimination when they try to conduct their daily business.

I am accountable to women who have been victims of sexual harassment (aka all women) and sexual assault, girls who may be more likely to become victims of sexual assault, because “if the president can do it, so can I,” words that a few boys have already used as an excuse after grabbing  and groping their female classmates the day after the election.

I am accountable to people with varying abilities, who may not move through the world the way I do, but have gifts that are just as valuable as my able body.

I am accountable to others not listed above, “for I was hungry, for I was thirsty, for I was sick, for I was a stranger, for I was in prison, for I was naked” and so many more. It is these people who I have to answer to.

It is the ones closest to me, the ones who know me, who I will trust when they tell me “you’re blinded by your privilege” (not an easy pill to swallow). There are times when I must hear this message from strangers, too; I know that. I also know that not all voices that challenge merit a response.

It is people under attack telling me “we need you to do this work for us, so we can do our own” or “we need you to do this work with us” who I must answer to. And if I fail, I must answer their questions “Where were you?” “Why didn’t you…” “How could you…?” “How could you not…?”

Even as I type, I know I will not be able to do all the work that is asked of me and I know that only some of it is mine to do. Giving my energy to every cause that asks only depletes my energy to do the work that is truly mine.

When the work is not mine, I can encourage the people doing it through words or financial support, just as others have encouraged me as I’ve walked down paths that scare me, stretch me, and sometimes scar me.

It is my work to keep walking those paths, reminding myself that my great privilege demands great responsibility so that my friends, neighbors, and family don’t have to carry quite so heavy a burden. It is my work to remind myself that while my privilege allows me to walk away, to forget, or to ignore, my responsibility does not.

And so I will try to be responsible, even if I do so imperfectly (which, of course, I will).

I will try to discern between the voices that I must listen to and the ones that only distract me from standing where I need to stand, speaking when I need to speak, and moving my body where it needs to go.

I hope that I will discern well and that I will not disappoint the people to whom I am accountable.

To whom are you accountable? What voices call you to action?

Greg Brekke/Six View

Greg Brekke/Six View

Breathing In...Breathing Out

I arrived home and opened Facebook where several friends had shared live video footage from the ongoing efforts to stop the construction of the North Dakota pipeline through sacred tribal lands: police in riot gear, a few water protectors shouting at them. I started watching.

Shouting is not the same as holding a baton, ready to strike.

The image froze on the police, faces shielded, batons across their bodies. Though not as ominous, my mind shifted momentarily to the "peacekeepers" in The Hunger Games. On my screen the image of the police changed to a screen with a geometric pattern. Was the signal lost or blocked? By the time the video came back on, the police were moving, telling protesters to move south. Some water protectors faced the police, walking backwards as the police moved towards them. “Keeping moving south or we’ll arrest you.”

I start writing with the video on, though I can’t see it as I type. I only listen.

This is not what I thought I was going to write about when I opened a new post.

I turn to the video and see armored police vehicles. I think of Palestine.

I return to my page.

This morning I woke up grumpy. I had no excuse for my mood except that I was tired. The mood followed me through the day. It’s actually been haunting me for several days, coming and going as ghosts do. The source is a sense of loneliness, a desire for more constancy than my current relationships provide, a ghost that visits me periodically, even in times like now when I am being showered with love and love and more love from far and wide. I would like to befriend this visitor, Loneliness, but thus far we haven't hit it off.  

This afternoon I had a meeting at the local Tibetan Buddhist center. The friend I was supposed to meet with was tied up in a call when I arrived.  I had arrived a few minutes late, but my attention only focused on her lack of immediate availability. I could feel a foul mood sweep over me again – resentment, loneliness, anger, impatience, each out of proportion to my current situation. And on top of these, frustration with myself for feeling all those things.

I type now and hear chanting and the rhythm of a drum, what I assume is prayer. I turn to the image and see the chanters standing calmly, feet planted solidly the ground, as their voices sing words I understand only in the way one understands rustling leaves or rushing water: they offer soothing beauty.

I return to the page.

As I sat waiting and stewing earlier, it occurred to me that a few feet in front of me was a beautiful shrine, a room that for me is peace. I entered, sat down, crossed my legs, closed my eyes, and turned my attention to breathing. The aroma of incense lingered in the air as I started to take deep, slow breaths.

Breathing in peace.

Breathing out, releasing anger.

Ah, yes, there are things I need to let go of.

Breathing in peace.

Breathing out, releasing sadness.

Breathing in peace.

Breathing out, releasing impatience.

Breathing in peace.

Breathing out, releasing intolerance.

Breathing in peace.

Feeling my body relax, calm.

Knowing I am ready to offer something different to myself, to the world around me.

Breathing in peace.

Breathing out acceptance.

Breathing in peace.

Breathing out love.

Breathing in love.

Breathing out patience.

Breathing in love.

Breathing out gratitude.

Breathing in love.

Breathing out gratitude.

Breathing in love.

Breathing out peace.

Breathing in love.

Breathing out peace.

I opened my eyes, ready to meet with my friend. Ten or 15 minutes had passed.  She had just finished her call.

She apologized for being late. She apologized for a few other things from the last few months that she labeled as “failures.” If I had not spent time in the shrine, I feel certain I would only have given an insincere “It’s ok” in return. Having had those minutes to focus, I could tell her that her that her delay had been a blessing and that her perceived failures had also allowed me unexpected gifts.

The video behind my writing has ended. I am relieved by the quiet, but left wondering about the well-being of all whose faces and voices passed through my consciousness.

I want to be there. If the protests continue, if my presence is needed, I will go in a few weeks.

In this moment, I am far away. In this moment, I can offer no more than my breath, my calm, my prayer.

This afternoon as the meeting with my friend wrapped up, she apologized again for our late start. I assured her that the wait had offered a gift, sacred solitude, that unfolded into other gifts.

I carried them home: calm, trust, patience. I nearly allowed them to spill out, wasted, as I watched and listened to the video. And then I heard and saw the prayer.

I remembered my own prayer hours before in the shrine.

Now, holding peace gently, I leave my hands open,

ready to receive what may come,

ready to release what must go.  

Breathing in love.

Breathing out peace.

open hands.jpg

Commitment

A week ago at about the time I am starting to write this post, I was lying on the ground by a lake, looking up at a sky so unpolluted by human-made light that I could see the Milky Way and constellations whose names I’ve long forgotten.  I breathed in fresh air and listened to the night sounds that tonight enter my home through blissfully open windows.

A week ago I was at camp. Camp GLP (Good Life Project), a once-a-year weekend camp for adults, filled with many of the great things summer camp offered when we were younger: beautiful land, a lake and a pool, games, songs around a bonfire while toasting marshmallows, a talent show, and most importantly, a kind of joy that sometimes we forget to live into as adults. On multiple occasions when all 380 or so campers were gathered together, we danced. We Danced!

A week ago this night, there was a dance party.  Exhausted from the day and the previous night’s not-great sleep (the “comfort” of the beds was another indication that we were really at camp), I had decided not to go.

I was in my cabin talking to a bunkmate, when I heard the start of a song – Suavemente, bésame, Que yo quiero sentir tus labios  a song that compelled me to say to my bunkmate with an urgency that surprised me, “I have to go dance.”

Besándome otra vez – I slipped on my flip flops and jogged to the party to make sure I didn’t miss the song. I was not disappointed.

Suavemente, bésame
Que yo quiero sentir tus labios
Besándome otra vez

Once upon a time, I used to dance to it every weekend and I even sang it when I was in a Latin band. Last weekend, after the song ended, I stayed and danced with no one in particular for a while before eventually heading back to my cabin, where I slept maybe just a little bit better than the previous night.

Our camp days started (if we chose) with meditation. Despite being tired, I got up for it every morning. The first morning I stayed for yoga afterwards. The next two I chose to walk around the lake, sometimes taking off my flip flops to let my feet feel cool dew on soft grass. 

One afternoon, I attended a meet-up that included another guided meditation (bonus!).  What dominated the images in my mind were not so much pictures, but colors – red-oranges, browns, white, olive green mixed with just a hint of pink. I tried to make note of the colors, their nuances and changes. At one point in the meditation, we were guided to meet our future self, who would give us a gift. This image, not simply colors, was clear: she gave me a small box that contained a bracelet made of rusty-orange stones and clear quartz.

peace.jpg

Later I talked to the meditation guide and told her about the question I had brought into the meditation and the images I had seen. She suggested that the message was about commitment… to myself.

I have thought a lot about that since camp. I thought I did a decent job of committing to myself, following the path I know is meant for me, when it’s straight (rarely), with its curves, in its switchbacks.

Before I went to camp, I had reached out to a couple of people who I knew I needed to speak to in order to feel at peace. One of the people I’ve seen. I had no specific words to say, no agenda but to talk and to listen to whatever might surface in the moment. The conversation flowed naturally and easily. Without asking a question, I received the answer I needed. The other person I haven’t seen, and without any assurance that I would any time soon, I sent an email with words, precise and careful, that I needed to let go. Both were acts of self-liberation, commitment to the voice within.

In one of the camp workshops about project planning (more interesting than it might sound!), the speaker talked about the importance of displacement and asked, “What needs to go in order to make room for your project?”

As I am currently getting ready to lead a delegation abroad, whose preparation and execution require a lot of time and energy, I have twice said “no” this week to events I had planned to attend. One night I spent the newly freed time sending emails and doing other delegation work. The other night I  spent most of the time walking the bridge and soaking in beautiful weather and a lovely sunset. While the first night may seem to have been more valuable than the second in terms of preparation, both were necessary for me to be able to feel ready - logistically and energetically.

 As I talked to a friend today who has been going through a rough time (“I’ve aged ten years in the last 6 weeks”), cognizant of my own renewed commitment, I asked, “What are you doing for self-care?”

After silence was the first answer, “That was the reminder I needed,” was the spoken reply.

In order to get through those times that sap our energy, that can age us months in a single day, we have to make a commitment to ourselves, even if a small one.

In order to get through life with any sense of joy and peace, we have to make this same commitment, probably over and over again, as so many things or people attempt, wittingly or unwittingly, to steer us away from our center. 

We have to recognize that our most significant relationship is the one with ourselves – it’s the only relationship we have from birth to death, at all times, in all places. The way we honor that relationship ripples out into the way we honor any other one.

A new camp friend wrote about her experience standing on stage at the talent show reading a most powerful poem she had written. She described the experience as liberating and healing. As someone who was in that room, I can say that hearing and seeing her honest and deep truth was liberating and healing for more than just her. She had committed to herself.

And so I invite you, if you haven’t already done so, to commit to yourself. Not onlyto yourself, not to self-indulgence that shrinks you instead of growing you. But first to yourself, the kind of self-commitment that expands your being, enabling you to be more of who you are. Enabling you to breathe deeply. Enabling you to accept yourself, and thereby, to accept others. Enabling you to live into the abundance that is you and recognize the same in every other person.