vote like everything matters

To hear Brandi read this essay, visit the Expand Your Us Youtube channel, or click here: https://youtu.be/kcIWeGnt_Tw

I am the kind of parent who likes to find a phrase that will work in a variety of situations, over a wide span of a kid’s growing years, and then repeat it, relentlessly. This habit infuriates my children. When I instinctively use such a phrase, I often privately marvel at my own wisdom: “I started saying this to him when he was 2, and it still packs a perfect punch now that he is 17!! I am brilliant!” Then I look up and see him rolling his eyes, and I watch, with dismay, as the garage door to his soul closes, in my eager, proud face.

Multi-use phrases aren’t for everyone, but I love them. They became even more important to me in the last few years, as I have leaned into trying to practice a more contemplative life. I am mostly still addicted to productivity and action, but I have grown in my practice of meditation, learning to slow down, to breathe, to observe, to listen to my thoughts, emotions and bodily sensations before I take action that can damage—or protect—others. In this way of being in the world, mantras are useful. They help center you, reminding you of who you are and how you want to be with others, rather than simply reacting in anger, exhaustion, fear or despair.

Sometimes, I pick a mantra, hoping it will Jedi-mind trick me into being a better person. “Lead with love” (instead of my natural habit of trying to slay injustice like a dragon hunter) or “I am enough” (instead of my instinct to strive, to finish, to accomplish). Repeating a phrase doesn’t magically change business as usual, but it does offer a helpful reminder, a gentle or sledge-hammer-like nudge that says, “Hey, on your best days, and in your best moments, you know there is a better way. Choose that way now.”

With early voting underway and Election day a week away, it feels like the entire country needs a reminder that we are more than our instincts. We are not automatons. You don’t have to roll your eyes or grind your teeth when you encounter a sign or a person advocating for the party you find useless. You don’t have to raise your voice when someone praises a position you find destructive. You don’t have to shut down when you have the chance to engage someone spewing hate, or repeating a lie, or disregarding the sanctity of another person’s being. We are more than our instincts.

To be clear, I am not advocating ‘staying out of it.’ This position, fueled by apathy and privilege, has somehow become a respected view. I couldn’t disagree more. In fact, this brings us to my real life mantra, one that I did not choose, but that my husband identified for me: “Everything matters.” 

Sometimes he throws this at me like an arrow, as if to say, you are so exhausting. Everything CANNOT matter all the time. Sometimes you have to say no. Sometimes it isn’t your fight, or yours to correct. Sometimes the thing in your own house has to matter more than the thing out there.

Sometimes though, he murmurs it, tossing it like a life raft. We say it silently, like a prayer, eyes locked. Everything does matter:

Choosing to invest only in my community leads me to neither know nor care about others.

Normalizing difference leads to sharing our ‘mutual garment of destiny.’

Unkindness leads to inflicting pain.

Stopping to listen leads to understanding.

Dismissing another human leads to loss of life.

Elevating the value of different kinds of work leads to respect for all kinds of folks. Relentless ambition leads to greed-driven, destructive, power.

Defensiveness destroys relationships.

Staying out of it leads to taking no responsibility for those around you.

We live in a democratic republic, and our democracy is built on the idea that everything matters. Elections provide us with the chance to vote our own interests, but they also demand that we advocate for the we. The democratic ideal leads us forward with shared governance, but it also almost works backward, reminding us that we are all in this together. No one is an island, as Pope Francis and others have said. We share resources, neighborhoods, schools, places of worship and leaders.

To pretend that I can vote on one issue, or my tax bracket, or against the thing that hurt me, is to forget that because we live in a democracy, everything matters. If you vote as if you are the only American whose interests matter, then you are likely unsafe for others, and you have rejected democracy. Everything matters, and the impact of every interest on all the people must be considered.

If I had to sum up my husband’s life matra, it would be, “Everything’s gonna be ok.” He has a miraculous gift to be unbothered. He trusts…himself to survive?...the world to right itself?...God to protect us? He teaches me that life does go on, whether or not I exhausted myself trying to fix the thing I had to fix. He teaches me that much is to be gained through loss, through failure. He teaches me that sometimes accepting my own powerlessness is the most courageous act of all. He teaches me that investing in people helps soften the blow when things aren’t ok. That we all desperately need each other, and that being loved does not require earning my keep.

 Middle age—and countless griefs—have challenged these mantras. Crying out on our knees over senseless death, damaging others even when we tried to do everything right, we know now that everything is sometimes not okay. 

Throwing ourselves at systems that continue to diminish others, speaking up against unchanging, stubborn injustice, working and failing to restore broken relationships, we now know nothing seems to change even when you live as if Everything Matters.

Like all good marriages, there is little beauty found in being right, but loads of wisdom in learning to learn from each other. When everything matters, everything will be ok. When we learn—in relationships, in our lived-out-faiths, and in our civic engagement—to expand our capacity to care, invest and act on behalf of others, we become part of the beloved community. When we do this, we build such strong relationships that we survive and resist and fail and achieve together. Everything really will be ok. These ideas both motivate us and temper us.

 As we make a plan to vote in a pandemic, I share our mantras, broken as they are. As the world seems to unravel, I remind us of these ideas that are insufficient when they live in isolation. My hope is that we can find power and perspective when we hold them in tension: Take action on behalf of those around you as if everything matters. It does. Lean in to your community, sharing in joy and suffering, need and want, as if everything’s gonna be okay as long as we belong to one another. It will. (Vote.)

remembering 2016

To hear Brandi read this week’s essay, visit the Expand Your Us Youtube Channel, or click here: https://youtu.be/Pvs3FKxR4i4

This week’s essay is an open letter I wrote in the days after President Trump was elected in 2016. I post it now in an effort to help us think about what we knew and how we felt then, and to reflect on what we have experienced together in the last 4 years. As America votes in the next 2 weeks, I hope we will think about what we intend to endorse with our vote, and what kind of thoughts and actions we want to welcome into our communities. However we vote, I hope we will commit to care for and to find value in the many diverse peoples who call America home.

Friends

 This week has been hard for me and many others in our country, and I suspect it would help us heal if I tried to explain why.  After spending time with college students and talking with a few of you, I realize that many who voted for Trump misunderstand our weeping and gnashing of teeth.  I am reaching out because I don’t want to be misunderstood.  I am reaching out because I want you to have every chance to understand.  I am reaching out because I need to heal and believe developing empathy for each other is a crucial part of that process.  If you also want to heal, if you are willing to see me as a thoughtful person whose feelings and perceptions of the world are valuable, then read on.  Although I think many will resonate with me, I don’t want to generalize or make assumptions, so I will only write for myself.  

 

I am disappointed we elected a President who, in my view, does not have the experience to excel at the multiple aspects his job will require.  I am disappointed we chose to believe he will surround himself with wise council, even though he repeatedly thwarted opinions--even in his inner circle--that did not confirm his own.  I am disappointed we chose to trust him most of all with our economic future, even though he has repeatedly filed for bankruptcy, refused to pay bills, and has chosen to make the vast majority of his products overseas rather than in America.  

 

These truths disappoint and frustrate me, but they are not the reason I have cried every day, or look with pride to some of the protesting marchers, or feel betrayed and shocked by my country.  The reaction I have had to this election has nothing to do with red or blue, my candidate getting defeated, sour grapes or even frustration with policy positions.  My deep sadness comes because I feel alienated from my country given what a vote for Trump necessarily affirms.  Let me be clear: He has openly encouraged behavior and statements that portray

  • Women as gratifying objects whose primary value is demonstrated through their physical attributes.

  • Muslims as radical, unwelcome terrorists who are not to be trusted or made welcome, and who cannot be loyal to America even if they die defending our freedom.

  • Hispanic immigrants as thieves and criminals who have come to ruin American livelihoods, who cannot function as professional Americans in any environment.

  • Disabled people as objects to be mocked.

Please hear me say that I feel confident that you, the majority of Trump supporters, disagree with and loathe these statements.  I do not think you are racist or misogynistic in the way you approach others.  I also know you might feel judged and attacked by those protesting or weeping for our country.  I am sorry to have lumped you in with voters who enthusiastically endorse the statements above.

 

Here’s the deal though, and this is the key to understanding the tears and despair: By voting for him, you did endorse his perspectives on the value of others.  With zero intention on your part, you confirmed a perspective which negates the value of about half of our country.  For a female survivor of abuse, a Muslim, an immigrant, or a disabled person, our country’s decision to elect Trump was an irreversible statement screaming that we find them unvaluable, expendable and not one of us.  I believe you when you say you didn’t mean it, but this is the message that is rattling around in the hearts of half of our society.  I am a white Christian professional woman, and I am devastated that I can’t pull that message back.  I can’t unring the bell.  My students and friends and African-American daughter will have to live out the consequences of all of us saying these statements aren’t bad enough to be absolutely rejected.  They have to face the rest of us, wondering if we love or hate them.  They have to get up and go to work and school in a country that elevated a man who said they were not and never would be his equal.  Can you imagine leaving your house this week if you were a minority teenage girl or boy?  We had the chance to say, “no”, and instead, by electing him, we said, “more please.”  This is why I weep.

 

I have heard many reasons a person might have voted for Trump, and none of those include bigotry.  I hear you, and am trying to understand the dignity of your choice.  For a person of color or for a female, these statements are not just about personality or a gaffe, they are deadly sentiments which ruin lives, and I weep because our country voted to affirm them.  I know these ideas are already out in the world, and I know voting for Trump didn’t cause them to exist.  However, I am deeply wounded that we had the chance, as a people committed to liberty and justice, to say, “Absolutely not. I will not allow comments like that to go unchecked at my dinner table/workplace/playground.” We missed it.  Instead of saying we want to heal as a country with a terrible track record on race and gender, we decided deadly sentiments like Trump’s were not a problem.  This ability to overlook the danger in his comments reveals to me that my community either does not know any immigrants, Muslims, disabled people or victims of abuse, or that we just don’t care.  This is why I weep.

 

I am not interested in blame, but in helping articulate a path forward so that we can stand up as a people and say, “Absolutely not!” to words that inspire violence and exclusion.  In light of that interest, here are my commitments to you:

  1. I commit to not speaking of all Trump voters as bigoted misogynists, as if you are all the same. I will believe that you do not and did not support or minimize the damage his comments would cause many in our country. I commit to working hard to finding empathy for those whose value system allowed them to vote for our President-elect.

  2. I commit to giving our new President an open mind and my respect, even behind closed doors.

  3. I commit to confronting my own despair and to finding and celebrating moments of hope and healing.

  4. I commit to making it my daily mission to reach out and affirm every person marginalized by the power of the majority.  I will go out of my way to listen and to actively value people who are different than me.

In our commitment to healing, I ask you to consider the following:

  1. Will you commit to finding empathy for those whose lives feel endangered by trying to build relationships with people outside your race or gender?

  2. Will you commit to standing up and speaking out against jokes, stereotypes and comments that undermine the dignity and value of all God’s people?

  3. Will you follow your vote up with action that affirms life, liberty and equality for ALL, to look beyond your own interests in order to rebuild the fabric of our society?  Will you reach out to those who might feel marginalized or endangered and let them know you are an advocate for them?

I am committed to making this the moment when we agree as a people not to blame each other for our own failure as a society.  No matter who you voted for, can you commit personally to moving toward those who are weaker than you, who have less power or comfort?  If we say yes, Trump’s presidency will be one of healing and hope for all of us.

follow the leader

To hear Brandi read this week’s essay, visit the Expand Your Us Youtube Channel, or click this link: https://youtu.be/8pNTEKtHr4c

My family flew last week for the first time in over a year. My third child is sometimes overcome with anxiety. His life has demonstrated to him that occasionally the worst thing actually happens and thus he has little faith that “everything will be okay.” Flying is scary, so I gladly tried to distract him by reading our next chapter of Harry Potter as we took off.

I love Harry Potter, and sharing it with my kids feels like a rare gift, as they will soon fly the coop. Engines roaring, I was quickly swept up in the story as masks, other people and anxieties faded behind the magic of Hogwarts. We witnessed Harry’s first flying lesson, when, to his great relief, he realizes he is a natural, soaring through the air with ease. His surprised delight, his joy in realizing he need not be afraid anymore, is matched by the pride his friends and admirers feel. They erupt in cheers, stunned and thrilled that their friend is as remarkable as they hoped he might be.

Naturally, I start to cry. Thank God I had a mask on and the airplane was loud, shielding me from the embarrassment of humiliating my son as I read a kid’s book aloud to him.

Confession: surprising but inarguable talent in others makes me weep. Watching a person—any person—thrive as they exhibit what they are clearly made to do, elicits emotion in me. Standing ovations undo me. There is so little good news in the world, and I am prone to cynicism and lament these days. However, when I witness sheer talent in a person enjoying the task before them, I get overwhelmed. Catch me at the theater, or watching a professional athlete celebrate in an endzone, and you will find me tearing up, shamefully wiping my eyes.

My easy tears at takeoff confirm my suspicion that I am becoming sappy in my old age. But they also remind me of what a beautiful thing it is to delight in someone else’s success. As I sat there trying to steady my voice and wipe my eyes before he noticed and rolled his, I thought about how desperately our country needs the collective moment when we know we are being led well. We need to share the exhale that come when a leader rises to the occasion. As I imagined Harry Potter’s friends whoop and yell, amazed by his talent and bolstered by his success, I thought about other cheers I have seen of late. Political rallies, where the biggest cheers come when a crude insult is issued from our national leader.

Is this where we are? We get most excited not by someone’s success but when a group of people is shamed, mocked or dismissed? We seem to have forgotten what leadership looks like. In the absence of talent or the joyful expression of raw giftedness, we have decided to settle. Instead of cheering for good in others, we celebrate those who mock, blame or deny.

Stumbling into my tears on the plane, I felt myself longing for those moments of pure pride, of the shocked recognition that comes when a winsome leader invites us live lives worthy of celebrating. Have we come to a place as a country where the most we can hope for is to have a bully on our side who is meaner than the bully on the opposing side? Can we not hope to raise our gaze, to experience the joy that comes when we see others succeed?

If our greatest cheers come when others fail, what is it that holds us together? If we celebrate most when another is rejected, how do we hope to share our communities? We love to hate our national leaders, to roll our eyes at their shallow behavior. They are a reflection of us though. It was not a brilliant politician who realized votes will come if we stoke fear and blame and accusation with consistency. It was a shrewd human who figured that out.

The lowest form of human community is a battlefield, where there must be winners who take from losers. In this type of society, there is no appreciation for struggle, for admitting to and learning from mistakes. There is no room for seeking the wisdom or experience of a different kind of person. There is no room for compassion, space for empathy or capacity to share grief. Do we even remember how to cheer each other on without simultaneously rejecting another group? Do we celebrate friends who express resilience, apologize or achieve, or do we celebrate when others flop, fail, or get kicked out of our way?

It is certainly a condemnation of our Presidential contenders when they expect us to cheer loudly at the expense of others. Lest we lose sight of who we are becoming, it is also a condemnation of us. Even if I am currently on the side of the bigger bully, is that where I want to be? Do I want to approach every other person as an adversary, a threat, a loser, until they prove they are loyal to my way of seeing the world? I reject this as a terrible way to share a country. Even if your leader seems to win by acting this way, you don’t have to see the world this way. Don’t fool yourself by thinking you can support and vote for that way of life without welcoming it into your own neighborhood though. Meanness has a way of protecting itself, and it will find its way into your thoughts, habits and speech unless you specifically reject it as a destructive way to live. Follow leaders who celebrate humanity in all its forms, who welcome strength and weakness, who learn from success and failure, who invite same and different to the party. Follow leaders who cheer for people they can’t influence just for being brave and beautiful. Be a Potter, not a Malfoy.