Friday, November 11, 2016

Remaining Thankful While Fighting the Urge to Punch a Big Orange Pumpkin

When the prompts were announced last week, I thought I would write a piece for Mama Kat's Writer's Workshop that outlined eight things for which I feel thankful.  After all I make my weekly list for Ten Things of Thankful pretty faithfully.  And this was to be a history making week.  At that point I thought I would be oozing thankful by now.  Well, by golly, I am sticking with my plan.  My list looks different than I thought it would, but my heart is definitely every bit as full as I anticipated.



On Tuesday of this week, I had the opportunity to vote for the first woman on a US major party ticket for the Presidency of the United States.  As soon as I voted I uploaded this photo to Instagram.  Today I am still incredibly grateful to have had this opportunity--for the vote, for the long overdue chance for the person of my choosing to be a woman, for the sense of pride that my candidate sported the best resume in the history of presidential candidates making her the all time most qualified for the job.  I am thankful for the three young adults to whom I dedicated my historic vote, and for their father who did such a fine job helping me raise them.  And I am thankful that when the dust settled my candidate, the first woman chosen by a major party to run for the highest office in the land won the popular vote.

I tried to think of something from the campaign for which I was thankful.  I am thankful that at all three debates, the woman candidate showed up prepared, knowledgable of both policy and history, touting plans for future programs, self-possessed and graceful.  She was a credit to her gender every single time.

For a minute I was thankful that I had not once during this campaign heard the phrase, "People are trying to decide which of the candidates they would rather have a beer with." I have always found this to be the most inane measure of who to vote for, but it seems to come up every four years. Then I realized that I likely had not heard that because this time around it had been replaced by the simple statement, "People just don't find Hillary likable."  Who cares if the candidate is likable by the way?  We  are not looking for Buddy in Chief here.  If I had to say which president in history I think might be most fun to have a beer with, I suppose I would say President Obama.  But here's the thing---if I got to spend a few hours with this guy, it wouldn't be drinking beer.  I would want to keep both of us sharp for the 225 or so questions I would have about what it is like to be the leader of the free world.  Come on, I work in a middle school.  I want to create a Venn Diagram... Skills it takes to work with middle schoolers/Skills it takes to work with Congress.  I am thinking the overlap has got to be tremendous.  

As the shock wears off I am trying to be thankful that I am no longer ignorant of the level of division in this country.  Let me be clear, the division itself makes me feel physically ill.  However, at least now it is apparent, so maybe we can do something to address the divide.  We are one country split in half ideologically.  This frightens me.  Abraham Lincoln speaking about slavery proclaimed in the Illinois Statehouse, "A house divided against itself can not stand."  The house feels threatened, folks.  I believe the threat is more substantial than many, maybe most, of us realized.  It has been exposed, and I am thankful for the voices suggesting it is high time to mend the rifts.  

There's my list.  Did I come up with eight?  Ten?  Truth be told I didn't count.  Somehow this week I just don't have the heart to spend another minute attempting to count things that just don't seem to add up.


14 comments:

  1. I'm with you completely. This whole week I've been in a slump for exactly the same reasons.

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  2. So much of this resonates with me, especially the bit about the beer and feeling ill about the divide in the country.

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    1. Lol...what is with the share the beer thing anyway?!

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  3. All TToT posts are good posts. Not a silly statement at all. At the core of the exercise inherent in the TToT (imho) is the intent to enhance one's perspective on their life and the world. (Or, as we say at the Doctrine, 'the way that we relate ourselves to the world around us'.)
    good post

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    1. True. Any time spent finding things to be grateful for is time well spent.

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  4. I love the title for your TToT this week. I've actually seem some decaying pumpkins that look like they have been punched. Mending the rifts is a great goal. It can happen if people are willing to work toward the common good.

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    1. I am not by nature much of a puncher either!

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  5. School kids probably act better than congress. Sorry your candidate isn't going to be in charge come January. Me, here in Canada, I really hoped for the best. It gives me no satisfaction to admit I hoped, but I didn't think the possibility of him actually winning was all that unlikely, joke though it certainly is. I would have to agree that Obama is probably the coolest of the bunch, but she would have done the job better than most men. So so close. Now we all hope and pray and do anything we can for the best possible outcome, which I wish I were a little more optimistic of.
    :-(
    Good thankful post even so.

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    1. Sexism is clearly still alive and well at a level I had not allowed myself to believe.

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  6. I think you are right about that Venn Diagram!

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  7. A very passionate post, May and one I agree with wholeheartedly. The quote from Lincoln is especially apt during the dichotomy of times we are experiencing in our country. I think the next president should be a female middle school teacher.

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    1. Great idea, Val! Talk about bringing a wealth of experience to the job!

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Penny for your thoughts.