Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Growing Pains (and a rant)


When I was about 21, I read a book of poetry by Galway Kinnell for a class (A New Selected Poems, left).  I remember really liking it at the time, which was surprising, because I wasn’t particularly interested in much poetry back then.  But as is often the case with books you read for school, I eventually kind of forgot about it. Then, out of nowhere, about three years ago or so, while I was in law school, a line from one of the poems came into my head while I was studying, and I couldn’t stop thinking about it, trying to remember exactly what it was.  There was nothing for it but to go look it up.  Here it is:

“ …Carriages we were babies in,
Springs that used to resist love, that gave in
And were thrown out like whores – the black
Irreducible heap, mausoleum of what we were –
It is cold suddenly, we feel chilled,
Nobody knows for sure what is left of him.”

Anyway, at the time, this line haunted me.  I remember thinking, “Yeah.  That’s it.  This is what growing up is.”  You give in to other people, to yourself, to your “future” and you become this vacant, tossed-out, wasteland that you can practically hear the wind whistling through, cold and numb and just plain finished with the world. 

Cut to today.  I woke up this morning and I was excited to start the day.  I went for a rambling run in the snow.  I had coffee with a friend, and we talked about how change happens in society.  (I’ll get to that in a minute – it ties into all of this.)  We also talked about how long I plan to stay in Szczecin, Poland, or Europe.  I went to school and talked to Zenon about arrangements for my visa.  He gave me a work permission form to take to the consulate that is valid for up to two years, should I choose to stay.  And I’m not 100% sure of much about my life right now, but I’m pretty sure of this: I’m not going back to living in the States anytime soon. 

Why?  On my walk home, the snow was driving into my face, and I was thinking about how annoyed I would have been about the weather last winter, but how beautiful I find it now.  I even took the long way home so I could walk around a bit more and take a few snow photos.  And I realized that this is how change happens in a person.  You do things that are hard.  You make friends who open your world up.  You figure out what’s important to you, and you do something about it.  I’m actually going back to being the person I was before I began wondering ‘what was left of me.’  I’ve been thinking about all the ways I can try to do some good in the world again, focusing in like a laser on all the things that are truly important and trying to let the rest of it go.  Caring about other people is important (that includes family, friends, students, co-workers, random people on the street, whoever).  How I spend the minutes and hours of my life is important.  What I look like, how much money I make, or my “career path” are not important.  

Actually, I’ve been anxious lately. My roommate is moving to Gdańsk at the end of the month.  I have a trip back to the US ahead of me, and when I come back from the States, life is going to be different than it is now.  Honestly, I’ve kind of been dreading Christmas coming.  (Sorry, everyone back home.  I really love you and I am absolutely looking forward to seeing you all again, I promise.)  And I’ve been a little worried about what’s going on with some people I care about, both here and at home.  It's been sort of painful to see how when you really care about things again, when you really love your life, you have more to lose when things change.  But today I realized this is all the way it's supposed to be.  If your life does change, and they aren't the changes you wanted, or if you get hurt, or if you have to find your bearings again, that doesn’t mean that you’ve made the wrong decisions, or that you shouldn’t have let people in, or that you failed.  It just means you have to be strong and make some new decisions.  And all  these things I care about are the things that have made me stronger.  The ability to really care about my life again has made me stronger.

And I’m not saying I have to be in Poland to feel this way, but I don’t think I can be in the US.  And here’s why: when I was talking to my friend about how change happens in society, I told him how pissed off I am at the culture of apathy back home.  We didn’t get the health-care bill we wanted?  Oh, let’s just bitch about it over a beer and then vote for basically the same people again in four years.  Hmm, or maybe we could sue someone about it… Our food has disgusting amounts of chemicals and pesticides in it, but I’ll feed it to my kid anyway, because it’s cheaper, and we’ve gotta pay for our two cars, the home we can’t afford, and all of this shit we think we need.  The only group of people raising any kind of fuss right now in the States is the goddamned Tea Party.  The people who actually have the fewest problems to bitch about.  I hate almost everything they stand for, but I can admit to grudging respect for them right now, because at least they actually care about something.  Enough to do something – anything – about it.  People in the UK have been pouring into the streets by the thousands because the government is cutting funding for education.  They don’t think it’s a privilege that only the rich should be able to take advantage of.  When I first heard about it, I thought ‘Oh, please.  You should see how bad it is in my country.’  But that’s bullshit.  It’s that bad back home because nobody bothered to stand up and fight about it.  Nobody cared if poor people went to school.  They didn't think it would be their kids.  The American Dream, and all.

Basically, the American Dream killed America (and it made me feel pretty much dead inside, too).  It’s all about the idea that if you keep your head down and work your ass off for your entire life at a ‘good’ job, maybe you can ‘own’ property (as if you can ever really own anything), maybe you’ll be one of the elite that has enough money to send your kids to school and look down your nose at the people who “didn’t work hard enough.”  No thought to things like community, compassion, passion or (heaven forbid) finding some meaning in life. No thought to anything other than material success.  And even those people who don't believe in it don't want to get off of their comfy sofas and fight back. Well, if America can’t dream any better than that, I don’t ever want to go back. I don't belong there anymore.  I care too much.

12 comments:

  1. My last comment evidently didn't post. A shame, it was well written, in my opinion.

    Anyway, the gist of it was that there are plenty of people in America that care and work to make a difference, not just the Tea Party. However, the squeaky wheel gets the grease, and I imagine that the Tea Party is the squeakiest, particularly in international news.

    You can care and do good things regardless of where you are. You can't blame any society for checking out for a while. People do such things all over the world.

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  2. This is actually my point. Why are they the squeakiest? Why isn't anyone else up to making any noise? It's like the rich conservatives and corporations are fighting and making a lot of noise, and the "regular" people and the liberals are backing up with their hands over their face saying, "ok. Whatever you want. Just please don't yell at me anymore, okay guys?" (imagine me saying that in a whiny voice)

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  3. It's fine if they are the loudest group. The solution isn't to shut up the loud people, it's to get them to rally for a better cause. With better spelling on their placards.

    Liberal politicians just haven't noticed that solution yet because they are too busy making fun of it.

    Also, Bernie Sanders just got loud the other day, so we've got that going.

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  4. Yeah, I agree. I don't want to shut up loud people either...just wish more people were loud, so it would be a real debate.

    And responding to a point from your first comment: you're right. I can't blame America for my checking out. That blame lies with me, and my reaction to what was going on there, and to my life there. I just don't think it's the healthiest place for me right now, with my priorities and my temperament. The weird fear-driven media and consumer-culture just seems so huge and unstoppable, especially with so few people publicly questioning it all. You know, our friends are the exception to a lot of rules... maybe it's all the time I spent in law school, and then in Point, before I left.

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  5. I disagree that there is a culture of apathy here. Everyone is pissed off at the government, right and left. I think that's why this last election went the way it did. A lot of incumbents were voted out. A lot of them were democrats, which saddens me greatly, but is to me just a coincidence. People want change, they just don't know how to get it.

    I don't think there is a culture of apathy. I think if anything there is a popular feeling of frustration and hopelessness.

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  6. Well, I hate to be this guy, but what was voter turnout at for the midterm election? 40%? Tops?
    Most people don't even vote, much less protest, or write letters, or even actually bother to find out what's going on from any source other than a ticker tape at the bottom of the screen on CNN or FOX.
    Like I said to Evie, our friends are a little bit different. I have talked to some of them about this, and they're more politically active than most. I don't want to take away from that - it's good. But as a whole, I think a lot of people are apathetic.

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  7. I think you know me better than to assume that when I talk about the population in general, I am only talking about "our friends." I'm casting a much wider net when I say I still think the general population is not apathetic. I think it's extremely frustrating that many Americans don't do the research they should and that does lead to dumb decisions at the polls. Voter turnout was low this year, even for a midterm election, that's true. But I still think that's driven by hopelessness more than apathy. I think most Americans don't believe there is much they can do to change anything and look at the 2008 election as an example. That's spectacularly flawed thinking, but it's how people are. It's easy to claim apathy caused low voter turnout and is why there is a lack of a loud voice crying for change. But there was a loud voice for change and nothing happened. People still want it, but they feel like it's out of reach. Most people don't see a way to change the status quo, so they complain to each other at work and in stores and at home. You're not here, though, so you don't hear it or see it.

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  8. Hmm...touche. I am not there now, so my arguments are based on old information. I do think the hopelessness/apathy debate is one well worth having, though. I'm not so sure that hopelessness is all that far removed from apathy, in a lot of ways. We'll have to get coffee when I'm back for the holidays and talk about it.

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  9. You know, I've been thinking about what you said all day, Margo, and I'm not sure there was really a loud voice for change. There was more of a "maybe this guy will do it for me." This has always been my beef with this whole Obama Nation business. I always liked him, but a lot of people seemed to expect him to be able to fix everything for them. There was a single-minded focus on getting him elected, and that was it. It seemed a lot to me like everyone thought if they could just do that, they could go back to their regularly-scheduled lives and he would sort everything out for them. The problem is that he's just one man, and even if he was doing everything he promised to do, he couldn't bring about all the changes people wanted. One of the reasons I was excited about his election is that I thought he was making more people motivated to get involved in their communities whether by volunteering, writing letters to their senators, raising awareness, or even just reading a newspaper now and again. And as of my leaving in July, I still felt like a lot of people were sitting around saying, "What has the government done for me?" And, yeah, they should. But not to the exclusion of all the things they could do for themselves.

    Also, I'm not entirely sure that one presidential election in which a major-party candidate is elected is the kind of "loud voice for change" I'd hoping for, but that's just my personal preference.

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  10. I think if Obama had been able to get things done these last two years, people would be more apt to be involved in that way. I think that since the president and the leader of the voices for change was not able to change stuff, people lost hope. That's a powerful disincentive to do anything.

    I'd love to have coffee with you when you are home, but I don't want to talk about this crap.

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  11. i just wanna say i LOVE galway kinnell.

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