Monday, December 13, 2021

Let’s not normalize the abnormal or ignoble

 It’s supposed to rain Wednesday. The high temperature is forecast to be more than 50℉ until late afternoon, followed by a drop to below freezing less than twelve hours later. I’ve been pondering how much ice cover we’ll end up with and how bad travel may become. There are no returns to above freezing temperatures in the extended forecast.

As some of you may remember, last year, just before Christmas Eve we had a warm front in the 40’s and a rain event followed by a steep temperature drop. The year before, we had a major warmup and rain storms late in December. That year our driveway looked like the picture below. I liked our North Country weather better before climate breakdown messed it up. Snow can be shoveled or plowed or blown away. Ice, not so much.

December 29, 2019 puddle
December 29, 2019 puddle
Photo by J. Harrington

Meanwhile, we’ll do our best to enjoy the unseasonably warm weather today, tomorrow and Wednesday, knowing we’ll pay for it Thursday and Friday and more, until we get snow cover to provide traction or a warm spell to provide liquidity and evaporation.

While we’re considering things that aren’t the way they used to be, we strongly, no, very strongly, recommend you read Rebecca Solnit’s column of today’s date in The Guardian, America witnessed a coup attempt. Now it’s sleep-walking into another disaster.

The crisis isn’t just that we had a coup attempt and have a political party that has gone rogue, but that much of the rest of the nation seems to be normalizing or forgetting or sleepwalking through the crisis. The warnings are getting more urgent.

I’ve been reading Solnit’s work for years. She has never struck me as being an alarmist. If we were frogs, we should be noticing  the water warming. 


‘The Hill We Climb’


Amanda Gorman


    When day comes we ask ourselves,

    ‘where can we find light in this never-ending shade,’

    the loss we carry,

    a sea we must wade?

    We’ve braved the belly of the beast.

    We’ve learned that quiet isn’t always peace,

    and the norms and notions

    of what just is

    isn’t always just-ice.

    And yet the dawn is ours

    before we knew it,

    somehow we do it.

    Somehow we’ve weathered and witnessed

    a nation that isn’t broken

    but simply unfinished.

    We, the successors of a country and a time

    where a skinny Black girl

    descended from slaves and raised by a single mother

    can dream of becoming president

    only to find herself reciting for one.

    And yes, we are far from polished,

    far from pristine,

    but that doesn’t mean we are

    striving to form a union that is perfect.

    We are striving to forge a union with purpose,

    to compose a country committed to all cultures, colors, characters, and

    conditions of man.

    And so we lift our gazes not to what stands between us

    but what stands before us.

    We close the divide because we know, to put our future first,

    we must first put our differences aside.

    We lay down our arms

    so we can reach out our arms

    to one another.

    We seek harm to none and harmony for all.

    Let the globe, if nothing else, say this is true:

    That even as we grieved, we grew;

    that even as we hurt, we hoped;

    that even as we tired, we tried;

    that we’ll forever be tied together, victorious,

    not because we will never again know defeat

    but because we will never again sow division.

    Scripture tells us to envision

    that everyone shall sit under their own vine and fig tree

    and no one shall make them afraid.

    If we’re to live up to our own time

    then victory won’t lie in the blade

    but in all the bridges we’ve made.

    That is the promise to glade,

    the hill we climb

    if only we dare it,

    because being American is more than a pride we inherit —

    it’s the past we step into

    and how we repair it.

    We’ve seen a force that would shatter our nation

    rather than share it

    would destroy our country if it meant delaying democracy.

    And this effort very nearly succeeded.

    But while democracy can be periodically delayed,

    it can never be permanently defeated.

    In this truth,

    in this faith we trust,

    for while we have our eyes on the future,

    history has its eyes on us.

    This is the era of just redemption

    we feared at its inception.

    We did not feel prepared to be the heirs

    of such a terrifying hour

    but within it we found the power

    to author a new chapter,

    to offer hope and laughter to ourselves.

    So while once we asked,

    ‘how could we possibly prevail over catastrophe,’

    now we assert,

    ‘how could catastrophe possibly prevail over us?’

    We will not march back to what was

    but move to what shall be:

    a country that is bruised but whole,

    benevolent but bold,

    fierce, and free.

    We will not be turned around

    or interrupted by intimidation

    because we know our inaction and inertia

    will be the inheritance of the next generation.

    Our blunders become their burdens.

    But one thing is certain:

    If we merge mercy with might,

    and might with right,

    then love becomes our legacy

    and change our children’s birthright.

    So let us leave behind a country

    better than the one we were left with.

    Every breath from my bronze-pounded chest,

    we will raise this wounded world into a wondrous one.

    We will rise from the gold-limned hills of the west,

    we will rise from the windswept northeast

    where our forefathers first realized revolution,

    we will rise from the lake-rimmed cities of the midwestern states,

    we will rise from the sunbaked south.

    We will rebuild, reconcile, and recover

    in every known nook of our nation and

    every corner called our country,

    our people diverse and beautiful will emerge,

    battered and beautiful.

    When day comes we step out of the shade,

    aflame and unafraid.

    The new dawn blooms as we free it.

    For there is always light,

    if only we’re brave enough to see it,

    if only we’re brave enough to be it.



********************************************
Thanks for visiting. Come again when you can.
Please be kind to each other while you can.

No comments:

Post a Comment