If you REALLY know me....
If you REALLY know me, none of this will come as a
surprise. You might even nod your head
and smile a little bit.
I value my friends.
Throughout the years I’ve found friends of all colors, races, genders,
political backgrounds, and varying faiths.
I’ve learned and gained so much richness in life from them. For that, I
am thankful.
This week – actually this whole election cycle – has made me
examine my values, my beliefs, my feelings.
The whole thing has been ugly, on both sides. At times I shook my head in dismay and
amazement. The things I have read on
social media, things I have seen on television, things I have heard first-hand
-- all have astounded me.
I chose to vote for Hillary Clinton.
I absolutely could not reconcile my core beliefs with the racism,
misogyny, prejudice, and bullying I saw in the other candidate. To be perfectly honest, I was shocked by the evangelical support he gathered. I was disgusted by most of what I heard and saw of him. Now -- did I agree with Hillary 100%? No, but rarely do I agree 100% with any politician. Overall, I felt that she was by far the better choice. I felt a thrill to be casting my vote for HER!
We all know the outcome of the election.
We’ve all seen the beginnings of the backlash. The blatant in-your-face acts of racism, the
sexist comments, the fear that runs through the hearts of those who are
marginalized in some way.
Therefore, I made another big decision.
I decided to march in the Women’s March on Washington on
January 21, 2017.
The moment I heard about it, I KNEW I was going. I could
feel it in my Spirit, that I HAD to do this.
It is one of those once-in-a-lifetime things that I knew if I did NOT
go…I would regret it for the rest of my life.
As soon as I could find a group going from my area, I booked my seat on
the bus.
WHY am I doing this?
I avoid crowds, and often find myself “all peopled out” after dealing
with folks a while. I am not one to
rock the boat, or be vocal about my opinions.
I enjoy my nice quiet retirement life.
But this is one thing that
requires me to forget my “comfort zone” and show what I believe.
So to answer WHY:
I am marching in support of love and tolerance, equality for
all.
I am marching to honor my parents, who taught me from an
early age to value the dignity of EVERY person, to respect all people
regardless of color, sex, or belief system.
They taught me that bullying was wrong; I believe it is STILL wrong.
I am marching to honor my daughters and my son, and my
grandsons -- who I hope will one day live in a world that has no more prejudice
or bullying, where the words “with liberty and justice for all” do not just apply to all white men of a certain
faith system. And I hope they also enjoy
the richness of knowing people who come from different backgrounds than they
do.
I am marching to honor my friends whose skin is not the same
color as mine. Two of my dearest friends
were victimized in the days following the election. One received death threats and his car was
vandalized. The other was harassed in a
local restaurant and called horrible names by a white stranger. I’ve had many African American friends who
have marched in protests before. I
realize that I am ashamed for not marching with them before now.
I am marching to honor my friends whose faith is different
from mine. I believe that sharing our
respective beliefs with one another strengthens us all in that we can all learn
something from each other. Education can
conquer fear.
I am marching to honor my friends in the LGBTQ
community. May they no longer have to
live in fear for accepting who they are and who they love.
I am marching for women’s rights. I will march in gratitude for women in
history such as Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and the other
suffragettes who bought the right for women like me to vote. I will march in gratitude to Rosa Parks, who serves as an example of quiet strength and bravery for all of us. And I will march in gratitude and remembrance
of strong women in my own family – like my great-grandmother Emma who struggled
to provide for her children after becoming a widow, in an age when it wasn’t considered
“proper” for a woman to work outside the home.
And I will march for those of us women who know firsthand how it feels
to be discriminated against because of being female, how not being in the “good
ol’ boys club” made a direct impact on our lives.
One of my favorite authors, Maya Angelou summed it up
perfectly when she wrote, “We are more alike, my friends, than we are unalike.” I choose to focus on helping build a world that works together for the common good. I choose to see how we are alike, rather than separate us because of our differences.
Blessings to all.
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