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Eric Lin Doub's avatar

So helpful, John. To complement this, I hope you don't mind my sharing part of what Jess Craven wrote yesterday (Chop Wood, Carry Water):

[My husband and I] had begun to touch on some of the many things our country was about to lose—freedoms, climate progress, tolerance, justice, a functioning public educational system—and somehow, perhaps in an act of emotional self preservation, we’d pivoted to what we would not, however, lose, no matter what.

The number one answer? Love. Partnered with that? Joy.

Fascists can take many things. They can break many more. But there are things they can neither steal nor destroy—unless we let them. And these are, without question, the most important things we possess.

Fascists cannot take our place in our families.

They cannot take our friendships.

They cannot take our empathy.

They can not take our ability to experience beauty, nor to create it. They can’t take away our sense of wonder. They can’t rob us of compassion. They can’t take laughter—in fact they can’t get anywhere close to it; humor, to fascists, is like garlic to vampires.

Fascists can’t take away community, although they surely will try. They can’t take our pleasure in gardening, or drinking good tea, or listening to music, or making great art, or visiting the dog park, or walking with a friend.

They can’t take most of what makes life worth living. They can’t, in fact, get anywhere near the “human essentials,” for the place those essentials come from is a place where fascism starves.

So while we still grieve, and are only just coming out of shock, and are being forced back into a resistance stance we thought we’d long moved beyond, we must not forgo opportunities to find joy. To achieve connection. To feel love. We must, instead, chase them, nurture them, grow them, increase them.

For it is in the spaces fascists can’t enter that we can begin to build the structure of something entirely new, something stronger and more fascist-proof.

Something made of love.

Will we succeed?

Only if we try. Nothing is guaranteed, but it is in the trying that we’ll keep our humanity, grow our hope, and find new strengths.

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Andra Watkins's avatar

I'm in the exact place. Grief isn't linear. My emotions are rollicking every day. But at the end, I come back to how proud I am of myself, of you, of so many others on this side of history. The right thing doesn't always win, but that doesn't mean it wasn't right. To use Prince, in our house we did what was right, what historians will deem to have been right, and we have a right to define our own value.

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