There’s a lot in the philosophy of yoga about not being
disturbed by dualities. It’s an important result of a good practice, and it is
one we’re going to need more of in the coming weeks/months/years.
It feels to me like a time when we need to hold certainty
and curiosity both at once. Certainty – because Donald Trump is not only
violating the basic standards of democracy but trying to tell us he’s not.
Because authoritarianism can creep up on you when you adjust to incremental
moves that limit our democracy. Because we might start believing in “alternate
facts” if we don’t hold tightly to the certainty that what we know, what we saw,
what we heard is reality.
And then there’s the need for curiosity, which assumes maybe
we aren’t certain, maybe we don’t know everything. I’ve been thinking about
curiosity a lot ever since the election. I had huge flashes of anger and
resentment at the people who voted for Trump right after, but pretty quickly
that dissipated and instead I just felt sad. I mean – I am still angry at the
rich and entitled who cynically supported Trump because his band of craziness
will make them richer and more entitled. But I also know there are a lot of people
who were confused. Who didn’t fully understand that he meant what he said.
People who found him entertaining and aren’t clear about the role the President
plays. People who felt that no one understood or articulated their experience –
but it seemed like he did. I feel sad for those people because I know that Trump’s
impact is going to fall on all of us. Unless you are very very wealthy, you are
going to feel it. And many of those people are going to lose their health
insurance, or they’re going to lose aspects of it the employer-provided
insurance that Obamacare created, like free preventive care or the ability for
their kids to stay on their insurance longer. Those same people are going to
see disinvestment in their communities when Trump’s tax plans funnel resources
away from public services and into the pockets of wealthy people and big
corporations. Those impacts are going to hit all of us, whether we understood
it back in November (of course I think I did) or not.
And then there’s the women’s march. I was ambivalent about
this event from the beginning. I worried that compartmentalizing our outrage into
something that conforms to gender was too limiting. I worried that I wouldn’t feel
part of the sisterhood. I’ve been an avowed feminist since I learned, at age
18, what that means. But I’ve also always felt sort of on the outside of the
mainstream feminist movement. Maybe that’s because I grew up poor and my
experience of class defines a lot of how I see the world. Maybe it’s because I’m
queer and so my experience of gender is different than straight women’s.
Nonetheless, seeing the organizing taking shape and all the activity around the
march, I started to get excited about it. I decided to attend
the local march in Madison, WI, instead of staying in DC and working as a marshal
for the national march. Like many people, I was buoyed by the energy, the size
of the crowds, the creativity, the sense of power. The feeling that we could
say collectively that what is happening here is not okay.
Some feeling of certainty.
Maybe some of you have seen some of the women of color
commentaries on the various marches (if not look here, here, here). Women of color felt suspicious and wary of
it because too often feminism seems to be an arena to advance the interests
of upper class white women (though the national women’s march was organized by
an amazing and diverse group). Women of color had bad experiences – there’s an especially disturbing account about indigenous women being dismissed,
tokenized, made to feel unwelcome. And underlying all of that is the basic
reality that white women helped elect Donald Trump. We can’t deny it. Maybe I didn’t
vote for him, but a lot of my sisters did.
I have read this commentary with a mix of emotions. I have
to admit that initially it made me defensive. I wanted to say LOUDLY to
everyone I saw – Hey I didn’t vote for this guy. In fact, despite my own
complicated feelings about Hilary Clinton I put my whole life aside to try to
get her elected precisely because I saw the danger he posed. And I’ve worked hard
to support women of color leadership – so don’t point that outrage at me.
Defensiveness is a kind of certainty. It is a statement that
you have nothing to learn. It is an insistence that whatever needs addressing,
it is not your problem. It is a refusal to listen and accept the truth behind
the critique. So I’m putting that aside, and being open to what I
need to learn. To be curious, not certain.
I am sharing all of this because I know that other white
women have had the same reaction and I really want to ask that we all try to
adopt, instead, an attitude of curiosity.
Obviously we have something to learn.
Obviously we need a broad-based movement that includes
everyone – we aren’t going to beat Donald Trump any other way – and that means
listening to and understanding where women of color are coming from. It means
elevating their leadership, literally following their lead.
And it means we have to get in the game when it comes to
supporting and addressing the issues that women of color have put on the table –
like Black Lives Matter, among other things.
I have a lot to say about how the yoga community could be
showing up more and better for a multi-racial, multiple gendered movement for
liberation. I’m going to write about that another day.
But for today I’m making a pledge. Starting in February I
will donate the proceeds from my yoga teaching to organizations that support
women of color and communities of color. Initially, I’m thinking about the
Movement for Black Lives and Mijente. If someone reads this blog and wants to
suggest other organizations, I want to hear it.
I don’t make a lot of money teaching yoga, but I am lucky
enough to have a full-time paying job. So I can afford to give. If you are able to give, I can vouch for both of these organizations and the value of the work they do.
What can you afford to do? Money is only one way to help. Go to a meeting or a protest. Volunteer. Contact your Members of Congress on the whole range of issues, including immigration, the Dakota Access Pipeline, and the criminalization of people of color communities. If you are reading this and you
have questions about how to connect with organizations that support Black Lives
Matter or the struggle for immigrant or climate justice, leave a note in the comments and
I’ll hook you up.
It’s time, sisters. We have to claim and create the feminist
movement we want to have and for me that means being curious, listening with
big ears and an open heart, and stepping into this moment ready to do what is needed to make change.
With love, gratitude and solidarity.
All in.
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DeleteI love you, girl. You impress me more each time I read. And I loved hearing your voice in last week's meditation. Write on and continue to share your passion and wisdom. We need you.
ReplyDeleteThank you Casey. That means a lot to me. Love to you.
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