Wednesday, November 9, 2016

A Mother's Reflections: Post Election Day 2016

To My Daughters:
Yesterday I proudly, and with great expectation, cast my vote for Hillary Rodham Clinton. I lived to see the first African-American president and I felt certain I was going to see the first woman become the 45th president of the United States. However, it was not so.
I am heart broken. While I am working through the disappointment of “that highest and hardest glass ceiling” still existing – I am even more discouraged by what the election of Donald J. Trump means for and about our country. He has campaigned with careless calls to violence, bigotry, racism, sexism, and xenophobia. He has taken the long covert, shamefully lingering intolerance of our past and allowed it to once again be acceptable and overt.
He has preyed on our fear and weaponized it against us. And with great sadness I tell you, people rallied behind such a message. The darkness of America’s heart was revealed to the world when we validated his rhetoric with votes cast in his favor. Most of the people we know voted for him. Indeed, I believe it is safe to say all of my family of origin are on his side of history.
But, it is important to me that you know on this most emotional day that your father and I continue to stand for tolerance, integrity, and the civil rights of ALL people – not just those deemed worthy.
Know that because of the courage of generations before us, our country has evolved and grown to at least know more about what “right” looks like, to better understand civic duty, inclusivity, and justice. As history lovers we have read that once upon a time the natives of this land were stolen from, murdered, and all but destroyed. Our black friends were bought and sold as slaves, our children forced into labor, our Chinese-Americans placed in internment camps, our women denied even the right to read, work, or vote. All of these great injustices and many more, were once political topics that impacted the American economy and divided families. What now seems egregious, was once acceptable and preferred. What now seems acceptable and preferred, I believe, will one day also seem egregious to a wiser and kinder generation.
As we look back with great awe on the founding centuries of our country let us also find gratitude and respect for those who were brave enough to effect change, even when they felt that they stood alone. As the election results became clear into the evening hours I felt a horrid cloak of loneliness take hold of me. I, like most of our nation, was shocked by the results and with that came a feeling that I did not know my country or my countrymen as I thought I did.
You, my valiant girls, will not have the luxury of passivity or ignorance. You will never know what it is like to fit perfectly in with the masses and comfortably accept the status quo. This is simply not your destiny. I wish I could make life so easy for you…but even I could not force it upon you. In your veins flows the blood of thinkers, doers, feelers – people who must and will know more and do better. While your father and I value knowledge, tolerance, and betterment – these are simply resources for illustration that we offer to you. What we already know of each of you is that inquiry and justice are in your nature.
Remember to be brave, be kind, and when you fear something your greatest defense is to learn more. My world is better than my mother’s world and I believe that one day your world will be better than mine. Embrace that which sets you a part. That search for truth that can be so painful does not seem to be intrinsic for everyone – but it is a beautiful burden for those of whom it flowers and grows inside.
While, today, I am fettered by layers of disappointment and worry for the days and years to come, I put my faith in those agents of change. They have always existed, persisted, and they/we will not be quieted now. Leaders will come and go – evolutions of thought and theory will ever thrust us forward.
“And to all of the little girls who are watching this, never doubt that you are valuable and powerful and deserving of every chance and opportunity in the world to pursue and achieve your own dreams.”

                                                -Hillary Clinton Concession Speech 2016

No comments:

Post a Comment