Showing posts with label patriotism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label patriotism. Show all posts

Friday, May 14, 2021

VACATION MUSING

 Continuing my vacation report:

NYC:  I  just love it.  I do.  All the people and skyscrapers and parks and shops and restaurants and activity and diversity and history....all of it. Of course, I am a tourist and I only inhabit the parts of Manhattan that feel safe and welcoming.  As with anywhere, life isn't a vacation and there are challenges and dangers lurking.  Still, my experiences have been positive.  Everyone is friendly and helpful and there is less stigma about mental illness because you can't tell the difference from folks talking to invisible friends from those talking through earpods on their concealed cell phones.  Win-Win!

As I said in the previous post we walked everywhere and saw a lot.  We spent nearly 5 hours just walking to and exploring Central Park before meeting friends for dinner near their apartment on the Upper East Side -- our first indoor restaurant in over a year -- had our temp checked on the way in and tables distanced and separated by plexiglass.   We went to Wall Street to see the Bull and, even better, Fearless Girl.  We went to Hudson Yards, Times Square, walked along the Hudson River Park, along the Highline Trail, to Little Italy and Chinatown, through Tribeca and Greenwich Village and Washington Square.  We saw City Hall and the Courthouse at the Southern District of New York where we hoped smart lawyers were hard at work on some overdue indictments.  Our hotel had a view of the Empire State Building and was close to Bryant Park where we sat people-watching over lunch from take-out stands in the park or from the Whole Foods across the street.  

We visited dozens of public restrooms! Here's my take on those:  not bad!  Someone is doing a good job there.  My only issue, and I offer this Random Acts of Kindness suggestion we should all follow: Leave a tail of fresh TP after you rip off your portion.  So exasperating to sit there spinning and spinning the roll inside those massive stainless steel cylinders trying to find the starting place!  I took to always leaving a fresh tail -- you're welcome.  

DC: I am a Democrat; a liberal; a progressive.  And I am patriotic.  Yes, my gauzy assumptions about our country and what I took to be true (from my privileged white girl perspective, who grew up in the Post-WWII and Cold War American supremacy years) has been good and disavowed over the past 5 years.  But put me in front of the White House and watch me sob like a baby.  

The fences around Lafayette Square, the White House behind barricades and fencing, the Capitol behind fencing, the Supreme Court and the Library of Congress behind fencing....it was all too much for this red, white, and blue lover of history and possibility.  But there you have it.  We have gone through a dark time and it's not over.  The January 6th insurrection was a talking point on the Hop on Hop Off Tour Bus narration we overheard as it passed by.  We visited all the war memorials and statues and monuments as if for the first time, marveling and grieving at what this country has wrought.  It's complicated.  

But DC is a beautiful city and still shines brightly with hope and determination.  We joined in the periphery of a huge march for immigration and citizenship rights and I felt the awesome power of people coming together to demand compassion and justice.  Even if those things are hard to come by these days, I didn't see anyone giving up and I was inspired to keep on.   Our democracy is on shaky ground these days from those who seek power over others rather than the equality of rights we are supposed to represent.   But America is still an ideal worth fighting for.  DC is a monument to that ideal.  

Virginia:  We took a water taxi cruise from DC to Alexandria VA.  We'd never been there.  Very lovely, very historic, very hot, very touristy -- at least where we were.   At one cross street we smelled a very strong odor of natural gas and noticed a cover over an underground access point so we called 911 to report a possible gas leak.  In short order two fire trucks arrived at the intersection presumably to check it out.  Of course we will never know the outcome, but we believe we likely saved Alexandria from a pipeline explosion disaster.  Again, you're welcome.

We also went to Arlington National Cemetery and took a tram tour (two of four people on the whole tram!  Covid Times means no tourists!)  We were able to get off and wander around a bit and came across this grave marker for John Paul Stevens.  But what really caught our eye was the addendum (even though she died first) of his wife.   I wonder if Mrs. Stevens pre-approved her epitaph?  I doubt it.  I told Hub I hope my gravesite will memorialize me as "Beautiful wife and yoga teacher".  That about sums it up, right?

At least, that's the view from here...©





Saturday, December 30, 2017

RESISTANCE REVIEW AND OFF WE GO...

And so 2017 is winding down.  Seems appropriate, as I look back over the year's blog posts here (and also to some extent in the Circling the Mat blog I write about yoga) that I say a few words in reflection about the political shit-show that dominated my life this year.

I'm not going to recount the horrors; it's hard to even keep track and recall them all. Thankfully, Amy Siskind, nationally known author and speaker on girl/woman empowerment,  has done that for us by keeping a weekly list of "not normal" actions by this president and his administration.  It has garnered so much interest and so many followers, that a book, The List, is being published in April about the first year of this presidency and what has occurred in our march toward authoritarianism.  Anyway, yay for her because it is truly important that we not lose track of what has happened to our Republic this year --the eroding of norms and values, the passaged of laws and enactment of policies that prove to be so detrimental to so many Americans.

So, instead of recounting all of that, I've been reflecting on how MY life shifted this year, in response.

Immediately after the election on November 8, 2016, I was in shock and grief.  So many of us were.  Then came the Inauguration and the reality that what had befallen us was not just a fleeing nightmare but our way of life for possibly the next four or more years.  I recall feeling confused, overwhelmed, disoriented and determined.  Determined.  I love that I can recall feeling determined.  It meant that I wasn't free-falling into depression and hopelessness.

Here's a list that evolved over the past year, of actions I took as part of my personal "Resistance" activities.  Almost NONE of this was part of my life prior to 2017.  Now it is all so much like breathing...it just is:

ONLINE AND IN THE WORLD:

1.  Immediately turned to Facebook as a community of sharing, my own thoughts and feelings, as well as finding support and encouragement in our collective shock and resistance.  I feel at times compulsive about posting and I know many must by now just scroll by my daily shares and posts, but many have also told me they look to me to keep them informed and motivated, which is all the encouragement I need to keep it up.  We MUST not be complacent.  We MUST remember that this is "not normal" and we MUST keep fighting for justice.  I find my online presence to be a source of information and a place of community and encouragement, as well as catharsis.

2.  Online I also found support by joining Pantsuit Nation and Resistance Live -- national groups of folks who feel as I do.  I feel not so alone.

3.  Formed a women's "support group" called CARE (Commit, Act, Resist, Enlist) in late 2016 to process our anger and grief.  We met at my home and I tried to push it beyond tears and rage and into activism, but most were not ready for that, so it faded.  I'm thinking of re-invigorating it in 2018.

4.  Participated in the Women's March on January 21st which shockingly turned out to be a worldwide event of historic proportions.  I'm so thankful to have been part of it.  I wrote all about it in earlier blog posts and won't recount, but I can still "see" and "feel" the day in my head and heart as one of my life's highlights.

5.  I, with Hub, participated in the Tax Day (Show Us Your Tax Returns!) and the Science Marches (waving signs at a street corner on Kauai); the Climate March in our town (with 450 others!), and an Anti-Refugee Ban Rally.

ORGANIZATIONAL AFFILIATIONS:
1.  Hub joined 350.org, a climate justice group, and while I haven't attended meetings, I've kept abreast of their activities through him.

2.  We both re-joined Physicians for Social Responsibility, a group we belonged to in the '80s when we were fighting nuclear proliferation, but which has now expanded their scope to climate and economic justice issues.

3.  Hub became a Justice Steward for the Alliance for Jobs and Clean Energy, working to put an initiative on the Washington State ballot for a corporate carbon tax.  We did a Lobby Day together in our state capitol and hosted an organizing meeting at our home.

LOCAL POLITICAL ACTION:
1.  We attended an organizational meeting for a group working to ensure fair City Council representation throughout the various geographic neighborhoods in our growing and ever more sprawling city.

2.  We actively campaigned for and hosted an event for a young City Council candidate with fresh ideas and tons of enthusiasm, as well as for an incumbent with years of experience and expertise in climate issues.

FINANCIAL SUPPORT:
The money we used to give to the church we once attended has been re-directed with generous donations to these organizations:  (*new to us this year)
*ACLU -- ensuring legal action for justice
*Ploughshares Fund --  ending stockpiles of nuclear weapons
*Physicians for Social Responsibility -- working to educate and advocate for climate and economic justice and nuclear de-escalation, with emphasis on health effects of these issues.
Housing Hope -- local housing, childcare, and job training for homeless families
UUSC -- Unitarian Universalist Service Committee -- responding to needs world wide in times of turmoil and natural disaster
*Seattle Globalist -- online publication that focuses on connections between local and global issues
Project Ethiopia -- providing schools/education, safe water/sanitary development in small Ethiopian villages
ANSWER -- sponsoring the education of two charming, bright, amazing children in Nepal
*Climate Reality -- Al Gore's organization, working to educate on the causes and effects of climate change
*Every Town for Gun Safety -- educating on the need for common sense gun safety laws
*Revolutionary Love Project -- Valarie Kaur's organization to promote love and acceptance as a public ethic in media and politics.
Smaller contributions to various other organizations.

PERSONAL COMMITTMENT:
1.  Continued to volunteer at the foster care program where I'd worked for 10 years, supporting the staff who dedicate themselves to serving children in need of out of home placements due to abuse and neglect.

2.  Volunteered in my granddaughter's 1st grade classroom, not only to support her, but to show the other kids, most of whom come from lower socio-economic areas, and racially and ethnically diverse backgrounds, that serving them also serves the community in which we live, embracing the gifts they and their families bring to our city, state, country.

SUPPORT FREE PRESS:
Subscribed to:
New York Times
Washington Post
New Yorker
The Herald (our local paper)
Sent emails of thanks to those media outlets who I felt were upholding the best of the Free Press standards in the face of a constant barrage of vitriol from the current president.

ONLINE AND ON-AIR THOUGHT LEADERS, COMMENTATORS, & JOURNALISTS WHO HAVE KEPT ME INFORMED, MOTIVATED, & SANE.  I TURN TO THEM ALMOST DAILY:
Elizabeth Cronise McLaughlin -- Resistance Live on Facebook
Amy Siskand -- Facebook presence who keeps the list of "not normal" things happening nationally
John Pavlovitz -- Facebook presence, book author, and Liberal Christian minister
Dan Rather -- Storied journalist, historical voice of calm and reason, Facebook presence, and author of great new book "What Unites Us"
Charles Blow -- NYT Op-Ed columnist
Valarie Kaur -- Revolutionary Love founder and dynamic speaker/activist
Chris Hayes --MSNBC anchor, young, bright, fair, insightful
Rachel Maddow -- MSNBC anchor, who will totally get to the bottom of the Russian connection!
Prof. David Domke, University of Washington -- Lecture series on political topics that are fabulous -- did one series online, did one on campus; third on campus starts in January.
Many others...

DEMOCRACY IN ACTION:
Calls/texts/letters/FAXes/Tweets -- almost daily contacts to my own Congressional and State representatives, as well as those in leadership positions nationally who have influence over legislation that effects everyone.  So many issues, coming up so fast, so many calls to action, so many deadlines. There were victories and also defeats, but I've never felt more engaged in patriotism through involvement.  And I never expected to be first-name familiar with the members of the Judiciary and Intelligence committees, nor recall specifically how some Senator or Representative from Montana or Virginia voted on this or that!

I guess I did this blog post as a "note to self" to remind me, when I feel I've not done enough, that  I've done what I can and so have millions of others.  Together the Resistance WILL Prevail.

Let's go, 2018!  We've got this!

At least, that's the view from here...©








Wednesday, July 27, 2016

IT'S PARTY TIME FOR POLS

I hardly know where to begin.  I'm in turns restless and impatient, dismayed and agitated, excited and joyful.  Hopeful and bereft.  And sometimes just crazy happy.  I'm trying to breathe through it all and BE HERE NOW, but damn!  It's hard.

Every four years I become obsessed with presidential politics.  I'm a presidential campaign junkie.  I watch all the debates in the primaries (OK, this campaign I skipped some of the R debates, because really, that was just torture).  I devour news and opinion.  I tune in to primary night results.  I listen to the pundits.  I scroll Facebook and news sources.  I get invested.  By the time summer and the conventions come along, I'm in so deep I can barely keep afloat.

Every night last week I tuned in to the Republican National Convention.  I knew I would disagree with much of what was said, but I was curious about their perspective and the hows and whys of our differing world view.  Holy Shit!  Armageddon over there at the RNC!  The United States, in their view, is a dystopian landscape of violence, death, destruction, anger, hatred.  Who are those people?  How can they deny actual facts and spin a web of fantasy that is based on nothing but pumped up fear and the desire to have a strongman (strawman) save them from people like me?  It was startling.  Their presidential nominee has been labeled a racist and narcissist with not one iota of experience in elected office, yet he declared in his speech that only he can fix the world they are so afraid of... and they cheered him!  This, after chanting over the course of the week in true mob mentality fashion, "Lock her up!" about the Democratic nominee for president.  Yes, that's one way to deal with your adversaries.  Not really what our democracy is about, but then the word "fascist" hasn't been tossed in his direction for nothing.

In the party I support, the Democrats, we've had our own brouhaha what with Socialist/Independent Senator Bernie Sanders suddenly becoming a Democrat to run for president and then decrying the primary process the Dems have in place for choosing the nominee.  He struck a chord, hit a nerve, revved up the disaffected on the Left and used his bully pulpit to push the Dems leftward and good for him for that.  But in the process he denigrated the true Democratic candidate, Hillary Clinton, effectively undermining her to the point that now that he has lost the nomination and is trying to get his troops to line up behind her, they've gone AWOL and on Monday even booed him when he called for unity.   Their intractable ideology is looking just as whacked out as those on the far right.  Comedian Sarah Silverman, a Bernie supporter, even took them to task during her convention appearance with one of my favorite (and ad-libbed) lines of the convention so far:  "Bernie or Bust people -- you are being ridiculous!"  Golly this is fun!

I know I am biased, but ask anyone who is an expert on conventions and they will tell you the RNC was a hot mess.  Nobody knew how to run a convention and it was a bit crazy and chaotic.  No big name Republicans agreed to speak or even attend, and even the entertainers were washed up third rate oldies who ranted a good rant, but really, who cares?

The Dems have run theirs, the first two nights this week, like clockwork and all the biggies are out to support Hillary.  On Monday Michelle Obama gave a speech for the ages (ask anyone, even the sensible R's say she rocked it), along with inspirational Cory Booker, firebrand Elizabeth Warren, and Bernie himself finally stopped with his Ego Trip and gave his full-throated support to Hillary.  (I don't dislike the man at all; he just annoyed me a lot.  I hope he is an important voice in the Senate with Warren).  Last night Bill took the stage and did his Bill thing.  I have some quibbles with the speech, but overall he bragged Hillary up and gave us an insider's view of the absolutely life-long dedication she has shown (not in front of cameras or on the national stage) to helping others and moving our country forward.  Tonight the trifecta of Joe Biden, Barack Obama, and Tim Kaine (VP nominee) will all speak.  Tomorrow Chelsea will introduce Hillary.  In contrast to the doom and gloom at the RNC, the DNC is upbeat, positive, hopeful, and reveling in the slogan "Stronger Together".  Yes, our side gets silly trying to out-Liberal each other at times, but I love our diversity and our can-do spirit and the knowledge that we really are all in this together.  We are not looking for a "daddy" to fix it.  We got this.

So, I don't know where I'm going with this except to say, every four years I get caught up in the excitement.  I lose sleep over polls and worry about the ups and downs of the race.  I pray nothing will derail my candidate (hello email scandal) and I lament that the other side is often so mean, with this year proving to be worse, with the meanest SOB yet as their standard-bearer.

I also get overwhelmed with patriotism.  I reflect on our democracy and the history of our country and I weep with gratitude that, warts and all, we have maintained this grand experiment for 240 years.  Other countries still want to be us.  The least we can do is be aware, involved, and engaged in this process. At the very least, we must  realize what a privilege we have; one that should never be thrown away or taken for granted -- just ask anyone who has lived under a repressive regime.

The next few months will be a roller coaster ride.  But also a time to play catch up if you are not as tuned in to politics as some.  Time to listen, read, ask questions.   Be informed.  Think critically.   And get ready to cast your vote on November 8th.  People have died to protect your right to do so.  Don't diss them by not caring.

At least, that's the view from here...©


Wednesday, September 16, 2015

USA! USA! USA!

AND NOW.. the last installment of the D.C. adventure:  The Big Buildings.

THE WHITE HOUSE:  My fondest wish for this trip was to get a White House tour.  I contacted my Congressman's office in late June because that was the soonest we knew we were traveling to the East Coast.  As it turns out, I was far too late to get inside the White House.  Applications are taken 6-8 months ahead of a visit to D.C. in the summer.  So, we stood outside and took pictures through the fences.  My heart pounded like I was sighting a rock star.  I am a political junkie and most especially for presidential politics and most especially I have deep regard for this president, Barack Obama.  Our hotel was close to the White House so we ended up walking past it frequently.  One day we watched a heated and rather scarily escalating protest outside the gates between people from Saudi Arabia and Yemen.  Security forces moved the tourists out of the area but before we shuffled  along a safe distance away, I felt a sense of pride for our Constitution which affords the right to gather and engage in free speech, no matter who you are or what you have to say.  This was also in great evidence at nearly every public monument we visited where Christians with bullhorns took to their "pulpits" to preach to passersby at high decibel levels.  I may not agree with their religion, but I was happy they could do it.



THE SUPREME COURT:  Tears welled in my eyes as I approached the stairs to the iconic Supreme Court building.   I don't know why my emotions were so raw.  I do know I am a sucker for pomp, circumstance, history, and tradition.  I guess because the Supreme Court, in theory, is above the political fray, it holds a place of esteem in my mind as the branch of government we can count on to get it right.  (But not always....Bush did not win that election and Citizen's United is a blow to our democracy.)  Sitting in the chambers of the court -- rather a modest room -- moved me deeply.  The tour guide was full of inside information, historical facts, and an obvious love for the Court.  I bought a pocket Constitution in the gift shop.


THE LIBRARY OF CONGRESS:  Oh, I do love a library!  This is a big, beautiful one.  The
building itself is awe-inspiring.  It epitomizes all the architectural wonders of our capital city.  Stone, marble, sculpture, relief, stained glass, murals, wood, soaring ceilings, wide swooping staircases...and a collection from Thomas Jefferson's personal library on display.

THE CAPITOL:   Our consolation prize for not getting into the White House was a private guided tour of the Capitol building by an intern from our Congressman's office.  She is a fine young woman, who aspires to a job with the State Department.  (I'd advise her to lose the sorority girl "vocal fry" speech and the habit of ending every statement with a question mark?)   We found the Capitol building to be confusing, noisy, hard to navigate, requiring lots of backtracking and winding down long and institutional looking corridors, emerging into big beautiful rooms, then ducking again into the abyss of confusion.  The rotunda is encased in scaffolding for restoration, both inside and out.  So we didn't see that.  Maybe that is the centering feature of the place, and with it being hammered upon, entropy and chaos have ensued.  I don't know.  I did leave wondering if the anger, partisanship, animosity, back-biting, and ineffectual lack of meaningful legislation is the cause or the effect of the building's chaotic nature.  I wouldn't want to work there either.

Everywhere we went, on every street, stood huge government buildings we hear about but never really visualize -- The FBI, The Treasury Department, The State Department, Health & Human Services, Department of Agriculture, all the Smithsonian Institute buildings -- even a National Botanical Garden which I'd never heard of and it's fabulous!  I felt like a backwoods girl in her first visit to the "big city".  I told you I'm a sucker for this stuff.  I'd like to have the marble concession (so beautiful!) as well as the security contract for government buildings.  We were searched at every entrance to every building; all had barricades of some type surrounding them; often gates, dogs, and armed guards were in evidence and sirens wailed 24/7 as police, fire, and ambulance sped to some disaster or another.  Big city.  Big city trying to protect itself.  It made me sad.

Opinion:  In my first D.C. post I posed the question:  Can a die-hard Liberal Democrat actually succumb to feelings of patriotism?  This is a no-brainer.  Questioning our leaders and the policies they enact is the mark of a Democracy.  But one would think that any criticism of the Conservative status quo these days is tantamount to treason.  I, for one, am a patriotic optimist.  I believe that progressive ideas, compassion for others, reason, intellect, and emotionally literate people of integrity will win the day -- regardless of party affiliation.  Walking around Washington D.C. I was filled with pride and hoped desperately that the virulent contentiousness of the past couple of decades will subside soon so we can all embrace this Grand Experiment in democracy with humility and hope.  This country is mine too.  And I love it.

At least, that's the view from here...©


Tuesday, September 15, 2015

A NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM. I MEAN DAYS..AND DAYS...

Washington D.C. has a large number of impressive museums.   We spent hours and hours touring them on our trip earlier this month.  We ambitiously thought we'd sail through two or so a day.  We were wrong.

Who designs modern museums anyway?  These are not dusty old repositories of used up things anymore; they are works of architectural and design excellence.   In my last post I mentioned that I felt I had inhabited different worlds in D.C.  These museums were part of the reason why.  Entering each one meant entering a universe of multi-sensory experiences.

Ford's Theater:  After milling around in the bright street level lobby/bookstore we were led down a flight of narrow winding stairs to another world -- the world of Lincoln's Washington during the Civil War years leading up to his assassination.  The museum was set up as a an old cobblestone street with "storefront" displays and artifacts of the time.  Then we were invited to climb two narrow winding staircases to the Theater itself where we took seats in the balcony to hear an historian describe the night Lincoln was shot.  We looked across the theater to the very box where Lincoln and his party had sat.  History came alive.  Across the street we visited the Petersen House where the wounded Lincoln was carried and died the next day.  That museum continued on with experiential displays of the manhunt which ensued and finally a depiction of the hanging of John Wilkes Booth and his accomplices.

The National Gallery of Art:  I remember 30-plus years ago spending 3 days in a row at the National Gallery -- my Art History Minor studies still fresh in my mind.  This time, as I wandered through the galleries for about four hours, I found myself awed again.... and impatient.  I think Hub was proving a point -- I always say we do the things HE wants to do, but rarely do we go to a poetry reading or an art gallery.  He insisted that we see each and every painting and sculpture in each room of the gallery.  I tired before he did.  HaHa, funny Hub.  (The outdoor sculpture garden renewed my energy after we exited the indoor works.)

The National Museum of American History:  Wow!  We never made it to Air & Space Museum because we ended up spending seven hours inside this one!  The exhibits were divided into themed rooms and each was a world into itself.   Two highlights:

Next Stop: Oak Park Avenue  In the American on the Move exhibit there was a full scale display of a Chicago Transit Authority (CTA)"el" station, with an actual elevated train car we could enter and sit in.  Immediately we were back in Oak Park and Chicago where we lived, went to school, and worked as young marrieds from 1973-80.  So many memories flooded back and we delighted in reminiscing about our twice daily commutes into the city from our little apartment and first house in Oak Park (western suburb just adjacent to the Chicago city line) -- the time I was groped, of course; the time my friend Sara fell asleep, her head resting on a stranger's shoulder next to her; the time a friend working at the Medical Center filled a giant balloon with nitrous oxide and I transported it home in a crowded el car to a party for recreational use.  (A looooonnnnngggg time ago!)

Oh Say Can You See?  In another display (sponsored by Ralph Lauren, for some reason!) was a dramatic display of the actual Star-Spangled Banner -- the flag which had flown over the burning capitol in 1814 inspiring Frances Scott Key to write the poem we know so well (set to the popular 1700's tune of a song celebrating drinking and sex -- also very American.)  The flag, spread out flat on an angled floor panel, was displayed in a darkened room with stark spotlights and a star-lit ceiling.  The places where it had been cut during one point in history and portions of it given away as souvenirs was evident.  But the majesty was still there.  Hearing the story told, reading of the very real fear the people of that time felt, worried that their fledgling nation would not survive the British attempt to wrest control yet again, I felt myself filled with the same sense of relief and resolve they must have felt.  I wept with patriotic pride standing there listening to the familiar melody, so challenging to sing, and the words I've ridiculed for their glorification of war.  In that moment, in that context I was so moved.  I got it.  I just don't get what it has to do with sporting events.

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum:  I didn't want to go.  Hub has been there twice before, both visits cut short by tight scheduling.  He wanted to go spend more time.  He said it was difficult but worth the discomfort; it was important.  He was right.  About the difficulty.  And the importance. Talk about entering a different world.  It was extremely crowded, but everyone moved through the museum in hushed silence as the crowd of museum-goers moved together through the dark times of Hitler's rise to prominence.  We watched emerge his rapid, unquenchable thirst for ultimate power, fueled by his belief in a "master race" and his subjugation of the Jewish people -- and many others he deemed inferior.  It was stunning in it's stark depiction of the concentration camps, the ignorance and willful denial of the world's citizens, the incomprehensible cruelty of those who carried out the "extermination" plan and the abject horror and hopelessness of those caught in the Nazi net.  At one point I had to leave the gallery to compose myself -- tears streaming from my eyes.  But I came back; I faced what was there to see, to contemplate.  The very last display was of current events -- recent examples of genocide from Pol Pot in Cambodia to the current crisis in Syria. It was a call to action.

Smithsonian Hirshorn Museum and Sculpture Garden:  We had to be outside.  We had to find beauty and whimsy after such an emotional immersion.  At the Hirshorn we found it.


National Museum of the American Indian:  By now we were seeing a common theme.  History is
the story of people rising to power, acquiring land, subjugating or eliminating the peoples and cultures of those who had come before, and then eventually losing it all to greed and a new wave of conquest.  Our little "Angel", our step-granddaughter is Native Choctaw and Caucasian/Cherokee on her birthfather's side of her heritage.   I read of the people on the Trail of Tears and wept for the loss of their homelands.  Yet,  the beauty and resilience of Native cultures is inspirational.   This museum has the unique Mitsitam Cafe, composed of five food stations featuring cuisine of the Native people of the Northern Woodlands, South America, the Northwest Coast, the Great Plains, and Meso America.  What a delight to sample a variety of dishes prepared with traditional ingredients, cooked with traditional methods.  A cafeteria feast of culture.

This is a long post, huh?  Imagine how sore your feet would be if you were me actually spending hours and hours in these museums!  I did it for you; you're welcome.  Until you get to D.C. yourself, I encourage you to Google each of these museums for lots of information I didn't provide and to fact check what I said.  I could have it all wrong; my memory isn't super sharp sometimes.  What is true, however, is how grateful I am to live in a country that provides access to these national treasures free of charge to its citizens.  We are so blessed.

At least, that's the view from here...©

Wednesday, September 9, 2015

MONUMENTS & MEMORIALS

Washington DC seems like a million miles away, instead of a mere 2764.5.  I'm home now, sitting in my favorite chair watching the the faint hints of pink fade to darkness in a dusky sky, the Cascade Mountains etched in blue on the horizon.  Yep.  A million miles in my mind and nearly 3000 in reality, I am definitely in a different world than I was a few days ago.

Different worlds.  I thought about that quite a lot during our trip to the nation's capital.  We purposely decided to do the whole DC "tourist thing".  I had not been there for 34 years, which when I figured that out stunned me greatly.  Where does the time go?  Hub had been there a couple of times without me, once taking Son-One along when he was in college -- a Political Science major.  How could you not?  But this trip for me was one long-delayed by distance, child-rearing, job responsibilities and competing travel priorities.  I started to get insistent that I go before Obama is out of the White House.  I am such a supporter of his that I felt a pull to be there when he was.  I figured he and Michelle had been waiting for me to stop by long enough!

We already had a plan to visit my brother and his family in Jacksonville, FL and Savanna, GA.   A
jaunt up the eastern seaboard seemed in order.  Landing at Reagan Int'l. and cabbing into downtown DC, catching glimpses of the Washington Monument, reminded me of the awe with which I view that city.  It became even more so the next day.

We had the good fortune to be able to stay at the Mayflower Hotel, a gorgeous building on the National Historic Register, situated in the heart of the business district and within walking distance of just about everything we wanted to see and do.  Of course, when I say "walking distance" that is a subjective determination.  To Hub, nearly everything is within walking distance.  He'd just returned a couple of weeks prior from a Mt. Rainier camping trip where he'd hiked 12 mile mountain tail loops over rough terrain.  A mere city sidewalk was nothing to him.  As for me, I had been told the Metro is a fine way to get around.  But walk I did.  I gave that new FitBit quite a workout!

Day 1 saw me rack up 8.6 walking miles as we visited nearly every monument and memorial on the
National Mall:  Washington, Lincoln, MLK, FDR, Jefferson, World War II, Korean War, Viet Nam War.  At each one we took the obligatory photos and read all the inspiring quotes and descriptions.  I felt I was in a living history book, recalling being taught of the feats of these great leaders, of the battles of these great wars.   The monuments are enormous, the settings breathtaking, the artistry of the marble and sculpture inspiring.  Yet, the pattern I saw clearly was the history of our country told through the lens of war and the strength of the men who fought in them.  I began to look for any hint of women in the history of country.

At the Vietnam Memorial, just across from the stark black wall of names inscribed there, is the Vietnam Women's Memorial, a bronze sculpture depicting three women,  one of whom is tending a wounded soldier.  The sculpture was created by New Mexico artist Glenna Goodacre. This is the first memorial ever erected honoring the sacrifice of women serving in war, the project spearheaded by former Army nurse,  Diane Carlson Evans.  While I was moved by the iconic wall of names, tears came to my eyes when I stood at the the Vietnam Women's Memorial, drawn to the detailed faces sculpted in bronze of a young man in agony and woman ministering to him with great compassion.  All of the old evening news segments from the 60's came to me, where we watched the horror of war unfold in our living rooms a world away.

By the time we walked a dirt path skirting the Tidal Basin, heading to the Jefferson Memorial, I had developed a blister, was beet red in the face from the 93-degree heat and humidity, my sundress sticking to me and just about "monument-ed" out for the day.  But also grateful for the opportunity to explore these historical monuments, remembering classroom history and feeling a renewed sense of pride and connection to my country.

Could a diehard Liberal Democrat, our ilk so often reviled for not being unquestioningly pro-American, actually have a hint of patriotism springing up in her heart?  A question to ponder.

At least that's the view from here....©