Are You Down With This
Re-posted from Zo Blogs For Obama
May 17: Has this been the longest five weeks of your life or what. Looking at my first post here, I can't believe the tests—test after test after test—faith has been through. Least my shreds of. I don't know about you, but I wobbled, I withdrew, I detached—I did all the things people do when they fear. When they care about something so deeply, have allowed themselves to dream—and watch that dream get shoved around. Dragged real low. Sullied, even, by some of the shabbiest human behaviors, when that is not where a dream is supposed to go.
Dreams are genuinely precious. Dreams are pure hope—pure child. And who, really, can bear to carry anything so vulnerable into this world. I don't suppose anyone can, or does … without some kind of faith.
And what if the dream remains unanswered? Hopes go unfulfilled?
I begin to see, I would have made a terrible black person like around the time of the Civil Rights marches. I begin to see the ways in which, as a white woman, I get to stay home.
Maybe this is what happens when someone inspired grabs hold of your heart and your hopes, especially after such a long time of national despair—I mean, torture, can America sink any lower—and says, “I'm asking you to believe in your own ability to bring about change.”
Someone like Barack, who ... despite all the crap politicians go through, despite the crap Black Americans go through ... somehow both the Obamas manage to exemplify faith. Somehow Barack has managed to stay on-path through some truly cringe-worthy trashings—times that make me wonder if the Republicans can possibly do worse—without giving up, without trashing back. Okay, he tried trashing back a time or two, but his heart wasn't in it. It was pretty damn feeble, as trash-backs go.
Here's the hard thing: he may lose. And of course, that's what it looked like, during this agonizing … has it really only been a month?
I still don't have any answers. I can see what the Obamas have that I do not, and that is working faith. One that carries hopes and dreams past the idea of wins and losses—and apparently, at the same time sustains your ability to go for it, in the present, as if it's a done deal.
Why, as a white woman, am I so invested. Why do I want to see a black President in the White House so much it scares me. Why is this the most exciting thing to come down the road since the Sixties …
In April, I had pure Obama-bliss. Looking back, boy, was that easy. Now we get down to it. To the uglies: racism, in all its profound discouragement, the swift-boat thinking that has so gripped the American mind. To hope anyway. To find one's way of working for Obama, toward the dream. Perhaps that's the key. Perhaps faith is the working-toward.
And of course, working-toward never stops.
COMMMENTS
this is achingly lovely. you say what so many (like me) are feeling these days. i'm scared too, in between the hopeful bliss.
can i link to this post?
came here via Annie.
Yes, it's a scarey thing to hope for so much. Our nation has been dragged down to a profoundly low point. Dare we lift our faces out of the dirt and hope for a better country? Obama's steadiness amazes me -- this is the stuff leaders are made of.
As a white woman myself, I am soooo for Obama because of the human being he is, for the vision he brings to the discouraged masses. Hilllary is a good candidate as well, I just think the country has had too much of the Clintons, and she's a very effective senator who should stay in the senate. We want real change -- I think Barack is our only chance.
Annie is great ... I don't think much of Hillary anymore, poor woman, or Bill either ... but thanks so much for your comment, for sharing your hope, too. It's not an easy thing to do. Come by again.
zo~i finally fixed the link to this post on my blog, so it goes directly to it. i had to adjust my settings so that the "blog this" link showed up. doh, sez me.
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