100 days and counting

I was going to write my own assessment of the first 100 days of this awful new presidency. I struggled and sputtered and wound up posting something short and bitter for friends and family on facebook, noting I’d been totally justified in melting down on November 9th. It’s all I could come up with, without meandering all over the place.

In the weeks before my brief flirtation with a “100 Days” assessment, I was going to try to document all the travesties and lies and obfuscation and cruelty as I saw them unfolding each day. But it unfolded so fast, and my jaw was hitting the floor so often, that I couldn’t keep up.  I didn’t really make it even one day.

Before that I was going to try to articulate my rage about the election, and my joy at seeing the uprising, starting with the Women’s Marches, and going on from there. And I found my rage sparked again and again in an ongoing cycle, and couldn’t keep up. And likewise, constant stories have fed my joy and gratitude for the uprising, the Resistance, the pussy hats and great signs and love of science and reason, but coming so fast I couldn’t respond to everything.  It’s all been happening moment to moment, and I haven’t found time for record keeping.

What I have done each day is absorb it as it unfolds.  And maybe that’s enough. Maybe it’s enough just to keep standing, to not crawl in a hole and hope it’s all gone the next time I raise my head. Maybe it’s enough just to live through it.

I work hard to fend off the meltdowns and the ranting; so much material to fuel so much rage.  But I can’t live in a state of rage, so I retreat into humor, or sarcasm, or distractions on Netflix. I’ve been reasonably successful; I have a lot of bitter moments, but life moves on around the bitter obstacles. I’ve channeled some of that energy into answering my granddaughter’s questions about what happening to our country. She’s only seven, and a lot of it is explaining how politics work in the simplest ways I can; like most children she has a strong sense of fairness, and the politics of the time defy that. 

I feel her frustration. I channel the tension of this chaotic time into bitching and theorizing, into listening to my friends and my clients process and vent, into commiserating with them, into consoling them and allaying their fears. I seem to come out with bursts of thought, rather than cohesive assessment.  Thus, my most frequent expressions in writing appear quite regularly in comment sections at my favorite mommy blog, recipe hub, and snarkified political commentary. Wonkette has, indeed, become a sanctuary of sorts for me, a place to release the pent up anger and sorrow in somewhere between 4 words and 3 paragraphs at a shot.

My goals of writing more extensively have been lost in just getting through it all.  Is that terrible? I don’t know.  I don’t want it to be permanent; just musing about my own process here is helpful, and I don’t want to lose that release.  But, I have to stop giving myself the assignments I think I should be pursuing, and roll with the waves in front of me instead.  Plenty of waves, no doubt there.

Comments

One response to “100 days and counting”

  1. EyesHigh Avatar

    I feel your….disbelief (for the lack of a better word) at the speed that everything seems to be happening. I think “how much will it take for some to finally see?” and then some new idiotic spectacle is reported. I see resemblance to events in my old history books and feel like shouting. “CAN’T Y’ALL SEE WHAT IS HAPPENING?!?!?!” But others who have spoken out are called paranoid or whiners or snowflakes… (I actually like that last term.. Dang right I’m unique and slightly different from others around me)…so I wonder what good would my small voice do in this circus. Yet, before I get too discourage I am reminded that one voice, joined with many, can make a difference.

    So write whatever comes to your heart, whenever it comes. Yeah, there will be people who disagree and may call us names; however, your voice may be the lamplight in the dark for someone else to know that they are not alone in the mad mad world. And you, and others, can be examples of how we can stand up for our rights without stooping down to the low levels in which some on the “other side” seem to be stuck.

    I’ve lost count of how many days this madhouse has been in operation..110? 115? I just know it hasn’t even been a full four months yet. So what can we do to survive four years of this? We call our representatives, even if they won’t listen. We send them letters and/or emails. We get out and VOTE in the next election. We even run for local office if possible. But one way or another, we make our voices heard. With respect for ourselves and others, we speak out and show that even if our voices may be small, we will not go quietly into the night.

    Always love seeing new posts from you. No matter what the topic.

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