Sunday, July 26, 2020

Clarity

Every year for the last several years, starting in 2012, I have picked a word and participated in Ali Edwards' One Little Word workshop throughout the year.  This year's word that I have chewed on for 7 months is
For July, I have been sitting with my word almost daily. A question that keeps surfacing: About what am I clear at this point in 2020? I thought I would take some time for a brain dump on my sorely neglected blog.  

It is clear to me:
  • that life is precious
  • that talking about lives affected in terms of percentages is callous
  • that the society I live in (United States) believes it is invincible
  • that hypocrisy is rampant
  • that we are all affected by COVID-19
  • that public opinion changes on a dime
  • that people can amass great amounts of power and have very little sense
  • that schools and their teachers are vital to a well-running economy
  • that children's sports are viewed as more important than protecting children's health
  • that a large portion of US society gets an F in science
  • that critical thinking and discussions are skills that must be instilled in our youth and retaught to our adults
  • that I look through the world with the lens of a white female
  • that I can always make it a priority to understand a different perspective
  • that shutting my mouth and listening is not synonymous to agreeing, and it is helpful for the common good
  • that sometimes people with good intentions make bad decisions 
  • that wide brushes need to be put away
  • that I can't be surprised at how we treat people of all backgrounds when we abort unborn babies and neglect the aging
  • that considering a person's intersectionality helps in understanding his/her view
  • that I need to perpetually think and surround myself with minds that bring up differing perspectives
  • that my definition of summer has non-negotiables
  • that altering the rhythms and seasons of life can have a ripple effect in my emotional health
  • that social media can build up as well as tear down
  • that everyone is doing the best they can with what they have
  • that we need to lean in to delayed gratification
  • that I dislike feeling physically vulnerable because of the non-action of those in charge of my well-being
  • that autism can be lonely when you are a teenager
  • that hiring practices rely heavily on social communication skills that are created through a lens that excludes many
  • that I need to open a school that has alternative "business" hours for kids whose circadian rhythm matches mine
  • that powerful women can intimidate the weak
  • that depression sucks the life out of its victims
  • that the new "normal" stinks, but God has a reason for new pathways
  • that my job as a human is to learn the lessons that this time in history is teaching

That's a whole lot of clarity!

JoLynn