who we see in the mirror
I came back home the day before the Election
so that Joan and I could be together
to deal with whatever might happen,
the optimist in me hopeful that the country would choose
an inclusive vision to embody who we have been as a country
and build toward a future
greater than the whims of narcissism and retribution,
a friend years ago argued
that politicians should live for a time
on only what they could pay for with minimum wage,
no wonder that those who have to settle
for what the minimum gives them as their share
are so angry at the rules of this game,
at the lack of politicians knowing their world,
the voters this time chose to knock over the table of the game,
without really knowing what happens next,
we had little idea that resentment and the price of eggs
could emotionally hijack so much of the country,
while masquerading as rational choice,
the system is not working well enough for them
so they chose to break it,
far too many of us chose to trust our well-being
to an angry, cognitively-declining male
who promised all will be well,
despite how many steps he demanded
that would have disqualified him to many previous generations:
mass deportation of would-be citizens,
abandoning Ukraine to Russia's greed,
enshrining tax policy to continue to allow the wealthy to pay little,
and caring nothing about deficit spending
and the burden that self-indulgence places on our grandchildren,
stopping the government from helping with rules, with infrastructure,
with protecting people from the whims
of profit-hungry corporations, power-hungry billionaires,
this last week I have chosen to tend my figurative garden,
I quit binge-listening to political news,
to the ins and outs of disasters, current and impending,
I got lost in an Audible book
of science/natural philosophy persevering during the Middle Ages,
I finished compiling my poetry of '24,
and creating a booklet of the questions and answers
that have suggested themselves to me the last year,
I finished planning and ordering calendars
of the Smokies, of Maine, of our visit to Germany,
I worked to deal with the fallen leaves that cover the ground
and smudge the view of what's underneath them,
there's a meditation I am cautious about embracing:
"they are the real lovers of God
who feel others' sorrows as their own,"
I need to choose to empathically leap
only into some of what might be coming at us,
I need to learn and act upon my carrying capacity,
I learned in graduate school the primacy of helping kids
develop a "crap detector," so that each can know
how flimsy the argument is if it's built on sand,
in our current case the sand that we choose to value
is on the Internet and on Fox "News,"
my heart aches for our grandchildren
who would like our country to be as a city on a hill,
inspiring all in the world to be their best,
rather than a fortress of our tribalism
while we look out for #1
and deny the equal humanity and value of the other,
when we look at our reflection to know who we are,
I still hope for love to expand us
to see all of Creation looking back at us.
by Henry H. Walker
November 12, ‘24