I miss my dad. He's been gone for a year and a half today, and it's gotten easier to remember that I can't call him anymore and that I won't see him when I go home for a visit. These last two weeks, it's gotten harder again. I've wanted to talk to him and be outraged alongside him, and make a plan to march on Washington with him, and to just hear him say that he's with me, he feels the same, and we'll figure out how to make a difference together. I have my mom, who is an activist in a different way than my dad was. She's quieter about it, but just as determined to make a difference and see the good in people, and to stand up for herself. That quiet determination is just as important. The quiet ones get shit done, too, and they are just as dedicated to their cause as the louder ones. Mom and I talked this week and have been outraged and sad and stunned together and that made me feel a little better.
My dad was one of the loud ones. When he started high school in the 1950s, my grandfather had just been transferred to Hawaii. He experienced being the outsider those first two years in high school and he later said that this experience helped him realize that siding with the one perceived as "other" was important work. He worked hard and vocally for LGBT rights. He wouldn't stand by and watch people he cared about being put down and vilified because of who they were. He wouldn't stand by as strangers were put down and vilified simply because they were perceived as different and less-than. He met with church officials to make sure his voice was heard. He worked within a church he loved to try to make a difference for the marginalized and those who were consistently pushed to the side by people claiming to be christian. I often wondered why he didn't just leave the Catholic Church. He could have moved over to the Episcopal Church, like I did. The national church is much more in alignment with his (and my mom's) beliefs. He chose to stay, though, and strive for change within. I didn't really understand it until recently. I had jokingly said that if #notmypresident was to become the next president, we were packing up and leaving. Why? Because that would indicate that this country I've lived in most of my life was not the country I had believed it to be. Do we have issues to work on? Of course. Would we EVER elect an immature, Twitter ranting, racist homophobe who makes fun of the disabled, and just about everyone else, and who only makes fear based decisions as our next president? Of course not! And then it happened. A minority of citizens was allowed to elect this morally bankrupt person to the highest office. And then allowed him to name his fellow good ol' boys to some of the highest offices of government. I will never understand the women and minorities who voted for him. (Do not try to justify your actions here. That will fall on deaf ears because
there is no justifying it.) So, when this happened, was my first thought, "We are OUT of here!"? Nope. My first thought was, "OH HELL NO." I'm pretty sure this is how my parents feel about the church they grew up in and why my dad chose to stay and effect change from within. It was his church, too, and he loved it. This is my country, too, and I will not allow it to be brought down to the lowest levels of racism, xenophobia, and the persecution of "otherness" that the new administration based its campaign on. I will let my voice be heard. I will make phone calls. I will spend my money to help charitable foundations further their causes of kindness and inclusiveness. I will stand beside other women and we will say, "No longer will I allow you to make me or anyone else feel less-than." I will let my voice be heard in a thousand different ways, every day. Some days that will involve actually speaking or writing, and some days that will mean keeping my mouth silent and acting out my voice with kindness and action. My family and I will carry on with the example our parents gave us. As Glennon Doyle Melton wrote, “The love warrior fights. Not against people- but against deadly ideas that infect humanity like cancer.” Keep on, fellow warriors. We’ll get there, but the work is just beginning. It’s going to be a long road. Have patience and faith that if we just keep moving forward, if we start conversations, if we can convince those with fear that has hardened into hatred to truly listen, we may get there, one person at a time.
Thanks mom and dad, for showing us that we were born with voices that are meant to be heard and used to make life better for those who are pushed aside and ignored.
Carry on friends, and hold the line.