Sometimes the storm you’ve seen coming all along still sneaks up on you.
COVID essentially obliterated 2020. My colleagues and I saw the signs in the spring. We knew all summer that things would get worse again when folks started gathering indoors. But I did not anticipate a surge until after Thanksgiving. Wow. I stand a little agape, but I shouldn’t.
Four years ago I knew it could go either way… in my rational brain. But my limbic brain would not believe it. So I was despondent. I’ve done so much work since then, channeling rage and outrage into nascent activism. I have hewn closer to my core values, strived hard to be my best self, walking the talk, as if that would make any outcome tonight easier to take. All year we have known it would be a toss-up again. And here I am, suffering something akin to PTSD.
My usual workouts and mind-body practices would not cut it. This day I needed rhythm, music, and another kind of movement. Some folks at work joined me on a video dance-along to the Kongos—thank you Kathy Varol! I listened to my Spotify playlist instead of books or podcasts, and walked in time. Daughter and I played piano for the first time in months—Pachelbel’s Canon and Clementi’s famous Sonatina. Nice to know that muscle memory can persist 30+ years.
All of my coping skills are called forth now and for the foreseeable future. At least I’m better today at hearing how my soul asks to be soothed. That’s a win.
It’s Election Day Eve. Big day tomorrow. What do you need?
A few of us asked each other this question today. I need to stay connected to my tribe and get good sleep. Another needs to form a tribe, learn to reach out and connect on her own terms. Others need safety. Crystal ball, genie, group hug (but COVID GRRRRR), a certain election outcome… I suggested maybe we need an hourly, one song, Zoom dance-along throughout the day. The playlist is growing.
After multiple queries it becomes clear, as it always does, that more than anything, we need each other. My Facebook friend, a Trump supporter, told me how a colleague came to work crying the day after in 2016. He hugged her. No matter what I think of his politics I need for him and me to stay friends, to commit to not abandoning each other as fellow humans and fellow Americans. I’m not sure if that’s what he needs… I should ask.
We all need, once again as always, to feel seen, heard, understood, accepted, and loved. And we need to help others feel it, too. This does not mean we are not held responsible for our words and actions, and the harm we cause with both. Compassion and empathy are not exclusive of accountability and reform.
We need vulnerability and courage. We need to come alongside rather than come at. We need to monitor and manage our own assumptions, to hold a mirror to ourselves and own our contributions to current state. We need calm, discipline, breath, and self-control.
So, what stands out most to you these days? Surging COVID cases and hospital admissions? SCOTUS aberrations? Election tension and drama? A sense of doom and nihilism about the future of humanity? Hope requires ever more effort to acquire and maintain, no?
So many people complain about how divided we are, how the country is headed toward civil war… How we can’t talk to our friends who disagree… As if there nothing we can do about it. But they attack my position, they just yell and scream, they get so emotional, I hear. It’s too hard to talk, so I abandon my relationships that used to bring joy and connection. And I blame the other; I take no responsibility myself.
Huh.
What’s the phrase, Be the Change you wish to see in the world?
Maybe we could do this a little more?
And then elect people who can lead by a much better example? What would that be like?
Yes, it’s work. So. Much. Hard. Work. And it never ends.
We are all full participants here–the current state of things is the logarithmic sum of all of our relationships—the good, bad, ugly and all. For whom are we waiting to save us? How much longer will we each play the hapless victim?
We ALL share responsibility.
But it’s too hard, I hear. Yes, I know. I’m sorry, there is no way around this. And it’s okay! We can do hard things! Humans have dominated our environment, defied nature, and flourished for generations. And yet, we somehow still succumb to our most primitive and self-defeating tribal instincts—how fascinating! Sometimes I really do feel like we will drive ourselves to self-destructive extinction in my lifetime. But every day I wake up is another opportunity to avert this fate.
And it is hard! Every day I bite my tongue, moderate my thoughts and words so as not to slide down the rabbit hole of despair and denigration. I still commit ‘passionate trash mouth’ as a friend calls it—I often follow “Be the Change” with “Own Your Shit.” I’m not perfect. But my mission is worthy and I pursue it with fervor.
It doesn’t have to be anything grand or far-reaching. We can just remember a few things, for starters, to get us through whatever comes next—to exercise our own agency, each of us, to shape it all for the better.
The Opposition Will Not Be Vanquished. Neither will they stop opposing. Polarities are necessary and healthy in life. Both conservative and progressive ideals serve the common good. Competing and parallel goals and values will always co-exist—it’s a paradox—and the more we can accept this necessary and inextricable relationship, the sooner we can move with the push/pull flow rather than against it.
I lean progressive; you lean conservative. Rather than mutual categorical conquest, we can seek dynamicbalance—of power and goals, among other things. Life with other humans is a dance; it requires attunement and differentiation, give and take, and mutual cooperation for us all to thrive. Extreme ad hominem rhetoric and arrogant, self-righteous displays of disrespect fracture our relational foundations. Cracks then propagate widely and we find ourselves here, on the verge of violence and social disintegration.
Find and Acknowledge the Kernel of Truth. Life coaching taught me one of the most important lessons in life: Everybody’s right, and only partially. When the opposition criticizes you, your position, or the outcomes of ‘your side’s’ policies, do you validate the partial truth of that criticism? Do you even see it? Or do you maintain that your side is always right, and the opposition is always wrong? Give and take, remember? Admitting a flaw does not mean invalidating an entire ethos or platform. Complex adaptive issues cannot be solved or even managed with sweeping and yet oversimplified, sound-bitten solutions. I acknowledge the imperfection(s) in my program. And, my intentions and objectives are important and worthy. How can I learn from your challenging perspective and make mine better, more accountable and resilient, in service of more people? What small steps can we take toward mutual understanding and collaboration, rather than bickering and stalemate? How is my opposition actually my ally?
It Starts With Me. Stop bystanding—complaining and whining like a spectator. Rather, upstand for civil discourse—engage. When someone yells at/near me in criticism and contempt, I can yell back, give as good as I get. I can get defensive, stonewall, or disengage. These are the horsemen of the relationship apocalypse, as John Gottman describes them (read about the antidotes here). Instead of fight, flight, or freeze, practice tend and befriend. Acknowledge people’s emotions and core values on all sides. Empathize. Verbalize understanding. Voice your hurt feelings and invite the other to understand your personal perspective. Tell your story. Invite others’ stories and listen wholeheartedly. Scary, right? Vulnerable. Brave.
This moment calls us forth to peel off the heavy armor of hostility, binary thinking, and tribalism. We are called to meet the ‘opposition’ disarmed and disarming, offering humility and compassion, on the open field of shared humanity and common goals. We must advocate for our causes repeatedly with ardently calm and patient logos as well as pathos, and hear the others’ retort, calm and patient or not, with open hearts and a learning attitude. It is up to each of us to lead by example.
We cannot ‘beat’ them; we may or may not join them; and we can always meet them. Negotiation is always possible, and like in all relationships, we must all show up in good faith, and have some faith in the each other. We must commit and live up to our own trustworthiness first.
These are all skills we can learn, practice, and master. There are models all around us. We only have to look, listen, and emulate. If you’re interested in more formal training and practice, check out Braver Angels and Better Arguments. I’m signed up for another training session in December. Practice makes better.