exploring our intersecting griefs

To hear Brandi read this week’s essay, click here: https://youtu.be/zDdgfrLhQb0

Last month, our government tried to help us remember and mourn the over 700,000 Americans who lost their lives to Covid-19. They did so by creating a visual space that captured the magnitude of our grief: they placed small white flags on the National mall, one flag for every person lost.  It was stunning. Terrible.

 

Our world is groaning under the weight of relentless uncertainty layered on top of griefs known and, likely, unknown. Many of us, in America at least, have lived through years of instability in the institutions or identities we trust. In the Bible, there is a record of weeping prophets, who lead the people in lament. God, in God’s infinite wisdom and compassion, designed us to worship and to lament. We were not made to only see sunshine and roses, but were made to fall to our knees, crying out in anger, confusion, or for comfort. All is welcome in the kingdom of God.

 

Freud’s concept of melancholia explains that when we don’t bear witness to our grief, when our conscious selves refuse to process loss, grief moves into our unconscious. This shoving down of grief can force a break. I think of it as fracturing our souls. We try to break off the part that hurts so we don’t have to wade through the pain. In order to grieve well, we have to be honest about what hurts.

 

Understanding our identities, and bearing witness to all the intersections therein, can help. The concept of intersectionality, coined by Kimberle Crenshaw, helps us understand the ways our various identities overlap and interact, impacting our experience of oppression, exclusion or abuse. An unhomed white male experiences the world differently than an unhomed, non-English speaking female does. It is helpful to keep all our identities not in silos, but to explore how they intersect, thereby shaping our experience of the world.

 

I’d like to invite you to explore the layers of grief embedded in your own experience. People who often experience life from the margins are hurting; people who often experience life from the center of power are hurting too. Take a moment to think about the ways you encounter the world. Does your identity feel shaken? Do you sense a break within? Where do you feel disoriented? Understanding the intersectional nature of our selves and of our experience of the world can help us grieve what we have lost, and might still be losing.

 

Think about it:

For politically oriented people, the last few years have been absolute tumult. If you lean democrat then you watched Obama leave office, forced to confront the short half-life of legislative achievements and the tension between honoring diverse perspectives and the failure of delivery that posture sometimes ensures.  If you lean republican, you have watched your party morph and change in exhilarating ways, and have found yourself confused by the animosity you sense from others because of your continued allegiance. You might not understand why others assume you are the bad guy, and you feel you shouldn’t have to work so hard not to offend people.

 

For women, the last few years have exposed so much of our hidden realities in our relationships with men. We feel liberated to talk about it, and wiped out from the constant burden to discuss and process every situation. For men, many feel attacked, and find the need to reevaluate their instincts in every interaction exhausting. They feel accused, scared to trust what used to feel normal to them.

 

For those in healthcare, the burden of providing empathetic care while under-resourced and over worked, the proximity to death, and the daily frustrations of wearing PPE have led to burnout and grief. Given the ubiquity of vaccines, healthcare professionals now have the added burden of treating patients who abdicated their duty to protect themselves and others, while demanding life saving treatment from people whose lives their actions put at risk.

 

For people of color, a slew of public murders have heightened your sense of danger in public spaces. You are undone by your own inner need to investigate your surroundings. While mostly white spaces ask you to demonstrate you are one of the “good ones,” you are constantly doing your own calculations for survival. Will this police officer know how to check her implicit bias? Will the unrecognized power of white supremacy threaten the safety of your child in this space? Who is a trustworthy? These questions never stop, and the chronic asking destroys your ability to be present in a space without a hyper-vigilant sense of double consciousness.

 

If you identify as an educator, you are depleted and defeated, finding a new low that you aren’t sure you can sustain. You navigate parents who are angry about masks. You work under administrators who protect your safety by taking political hits, or who increase your exposure to dangerous environments. You teach in a mask, struggling to connect with students whose faces you may not be able to fully see. You often have to cover for colleagues, and your ability to stay prepared or caught up seems to have vanished.  Even if you experience the magic of collaborative learning some days, 5-20% of your students are out each day, and you constantly have to balance progress with remediation.

 

These are a handful out of 100s of identities. I lift these up hoping they will inspire reflection into the tiny griefs each one of us has held in the past few years. There is room to lament, to explore, to wonder about how you carry your story. None of us are just one thing, and sometimes we need to widen our view to explore all our identities and how they intersect. In doing so, my hope is that we find compassion for ourselves, and compassion for others. When you see the weight, when you witness the grief, compassion has to follow. As your capacity to mourn your own sadness grows, your capacity to resonate with and care for others grows too. Self-compassion can help you expand your us as you remember all the suffering around you.

Lent Readings, week one

To hear Brandi read this week’s essay, click here: https://youtu.be/7ZxMEwTD5t0

Last year, a Global pandemic erupted in the middle of Lent. Although it comes every year, this particular Lent feels like a time warp. We were just here. I encourage you to lean in to this feeling, recognizing that we are often powerless to change our circumstances, to heal our woes, to protect those we love. Maybe we used to think life was linear, so our only chance to find meaning or joy was to work hard and fast until we felt secure. This second pandemic-Lent forces us to recognize that life with God is not linear. That God’s timing is eternal, God is present everywhere, and our life with Christ has seasons of doing, of being, of plenty, of want, of joy, of pain, of rush, of stillness. The pandemic has felt for many like a pause, and I hope this year we will recognize that sometimes frantic doing actually hurts our ability to find security. Lent allows us to observe that joy and meaning often come in moments of stillness, silence and solitude. What better time to lean in than when we are forced to be still, to be silent and to be alone?

We diminish the power of God when we try to protect and expand our own power and security instead of looking to God for significance and peace. In the past, I wanted God’s Kingdom to be made in my image, so the hardest workers and the kindest, the most intentional people won. The Beatitudes remind us that God’s values are different. God promises to be present, generous and sustaining to those who have no power, to those near the margins, to those who align themselves with the overlooked. 

Knowing this, I’ll suggest a few disciplines for the season ahead

1) Consider giving up a treat, an excess, or activity that gives you a hit of pleasure. When you long for the satisfaction it brings, ask God to reveal the hunger you have for comfort or belonging, and to sit with it before your Maker.

2) Consider making an effort to spend time with those who are underserved and overlooked by your community. Find people and institutions who care for vulnerable people, and increase your proximity to widows, orphans, immigrants, refugees and those trapped in poverty, learning from and serving them.

3) Consider picking up a new practice that allows you to make space for stillness, silence and solitude. Pay attention to your body’s sensations, your mind’s thoughts and your heart’s emotions as you contemplate the love of God. Pray scripture, and try sitting before God, consenting to Divine action and just BEING with God.

Given the chance to introduce himself, God says, “I am.” That’s my best name. I am the present one. The always here one. The never past or future tense one. The ongoing in the moment one. To be near God is to be awake for this life, for these current moments: joyful and heartbreaking and everything in between. May these readings be an invitation into presence, with yourself, with others, with the God of “I Am.”

For these 40 days, allow yourself to recognize the abundance in your life, while also leaning in to the lean places. In my own experience of God, there is a connecting holiness—an embodied solidarity—that comes when I decide to stay present with pain instead of escaping. The Torah and the Bible speak of a God who is willing to wrestle with us, to cry with us, to listen to our lament; indeed, God is just as present when we cry as when we refuse to let the tears come, only hoping for, or seeing, the good. This Lent, create moments of stillness so you can notice your own joy and heartbreak. Cry. Or don’t. But don’t believe the lie that crying is unfaithful.

If we want to prepare ourselves for Christ’s coming kingdom, we would do well to spend 40 days marinating in the words Jesus used to describe it. On Tuesdays I will post a few thoughts and quotes for the week ahead. Each day there is a scriptural reading (all poetry…Yikes?! Or Yay?!), and each Sunday we will read the Beatitudes and Woes from the Gospel of Luke. 

Dear friends, find stillness, and believe the Gospel.

Week One

To Ponder:

“God is that way with us, He wants to hold us still with Him in silence…They cannot all be brilliant or rich or beautiful. They cannot all even dream beautiful dreams like God gives some of us. They cannot all enjoy music. Their hearts do not all burn with love. But everybody can learn to hold God…We shall not become like Christ until we give Him more time.”                                                    -Brother Lawrence

“Maybe you search for understanding, but find only one thing for sure, which is that truth comes in small moments and visions, not galaxies and canyons; not the crash of ocean waves and cymbals. Most traditions teach that truth is in these small holy moments.”                                          -Anne Lamott

To Read:

Feb 17 Matthew 5:1-12

Feb 18 Proverbs 2:1-15

Feb 19 Ps 94:12-22

Feb 20 Micah 6:6-8; Mark 7:6-8

Feb 21 Luke 6:20-31

Feb 22 Ps 90:12-17; 91:1-2

Feb 23 Ps 95:1-8

fear of abandonment in the US Congress

To hear Brandi read this essay, click here: https://youtu.be/zj15FBXYuBQ

2020 was a year spent outside. Bike rides, dog walks, scooters, skateboards, hikes, and long runs. This week I ran the dog while the 2 younger kids rode their scooters. I paused while the dog did her business, and then jogged over to a trashcan to dispose of said business. I returned to find my youngest in tears. Big ones. “I was afraid you left-ed me.” I knelt down, held her close and promised to never leave her.

As 2021 begins, I’ve been thinking a lot about our fear of being left behind. I can’t help but notice how pervasive it is. We see teenagers suffer when we don’t let them go to parties. We see grades drop as learning is stunted. We watch grief simmer as we fail collectively to mark the impact of a life. We miss so many moments that seem important to our maturation: from seasons to travel to graduations to marriages to memorializing celebrations. We see colleges not attended, jobs not started, bills not paid and apartments lost.  

Every individual has a story about the moment they felt left behind in the last year. It is fruitful to name these losses and fears, but we must also consider how our fear of being left behind rips at the fabric of our communities. The fear of missing our moment, of being excluded, can be consuming. It isolates and diminishes us, but we can battle those feelings by placing ourselves in context. Our moments of isolation do not occur alone, but before a backdrop of communal isolation. Many of us are alone, disappointed, worried. Together.

When we don’t confront our fear of being left behind with intentional efforts to contextualize our experience with the similar (and worse) experiences of others, our fears create a tunnel vision that highlights our own needs, often leading us to take action that hurts others. For those in power, the fear of being left behind can destroy communities.

This week, our Congress will count and accept the votes of our Electoral College. I scoff when I think about naïve Brandi from 60 days ago, who thought elections are daily events, which rarely take a week or more to resolve. We are now painfully aware that American elections were designed to take forever to resolve. Many states legally receive ballots after Election Day. The pandemic prompted a few changes to existing law, approved of in advance by state judiciaries, legislative bodies and executive branches. Every state has laws that preserve the right of watchers to watch and then to complain, laws that trigger recounts, and laws that allow for judicial contestation. States bake in time for these processes to occur, certifying the election days or weeks later, followed by appointing electors, certifying the electoral college vote, and then presenting that vote to Congress. Such a time line exists in order to ensure we get this right.

This year, more than ever before, we had front row seats to watch each line of election law exposed, pushed and prodded. After multiple recounts were executed, affidavits recorded, 60ish lawsuits litigated, resolved or thrown out, accusations and threats tweeted, our electoral college—endorsed with the bipartisan confidence of election officials, governors, state legislatures, secretaries of state, and every court involved—has certified and presented the results. Our current president did not win reelection, and a new president has been chosen by the American people.

The process, divisive and hard—but ultimately fruitful in that it worked, and we had an excellent and just presidential election—will officially end this week when Congress votes to accept the will of the American people, expressed through the ballot box and presented representationally through the Electoral college.

Sort of.

As January 6th approaches, more congresspeople are announcing they will contest the results of the election. Their choices are, I believe, adult manifestations of my 5 year old’s fear: They don’t want to be left-ed behind. Rather than realizing they serve in a representative democracy, they seem intent to act only in their individual interest. Their fear of being left behind, of losing power and prominence, of being called out by their guy, exposed and found wanting, fuels them to act in a way that damages the communal fabric holding us together.

Their self-absorbed, short-sighted decision to reject the results agreed upon by every state and branch of government through due process could have dire consequences. When we let our fears of being left behind motivate our actions, we often hurt those around us.

As we wrestle with our own angst in facing 2021, one hopes we will see the way their fear is wreaking havoc on their communities as a cautionary tale. How are we interacting with our fear of being left behind, 10 months in to this pandemic? How are we handling our fatigue at being alone, with no stability for future prospects, unsure of what is coming next? Are we allowing our fear to isolate and depress us? Even worse, are we letting it guide us to make short-sighted decisions with potentially devastating consequences for those around us? Let’s hope we the people are braver and wiser than our elected representatives.

Our fear of being left behind does not lose power as we grow up. Feeling excluded, and seeing our prospects for inclusion diminished, hurts as kids and as adults. It is up to us to make sure our very real hurt and fear do not negatively impact the way we treat others. Do not let your own disappointment hurt your community; instead, strengthen your belonging by protecting the vulnerable and elevating the voices of others. Acknowledge your fear of being left behind, and then pay attention to so many others facing the same fears. Even when we are scared of what will happen next, we belong to each other, and will only thrive when we remember that truth.