Monday, February 1, 2021

Gravy Train to Heaven


My yoga teacher Janet said today, quoting Johannes Gaertner, "To speak gratitude is courteous and pleasant. To enact gratitude is generous and noble. But to live gratitude is to touch heaven." I love that! I am most grateful for these words, and the touch of heaven that is my life. I hope everyone I know has some sort of gratitude practice. Taking a few moments every day to think about what you're grateful for and why is a really good thing to do, and I support it 100%. 

But, like, also... it's ridiculous how gratitude has become a thing you can buy! It reminds me of one Dr. Adu-Gyamfi's African Tonic, a popular product that I came across during my West African travels. This magic elixir was supposed to cure everything, from diarrhea to diabetes - check out these amazing illustrations and lists!

If Dr. Adu-Gyamfi were peddling products in America today, it might well be a bottle of Gratitude. Gratitude has become portrayed as a panacea; it is said to reduce feelings of anxiety and sadness, improve health outcomes and relationship satisfaction, and even prolong your life. I'm not here to review the literature or challenge these claims, though some are surely on shaky ground. But I am here to say NO to the gratitude gravy train! 

I mean, do we really think we can get gratitude from t-shirts to hand-crafted items available at Etsy?! Gratitude lies at the heart of every organized religion, and sits firmly in the disorganized heart of yours truly. Living in gratitude is a sacred practice and an essential aspect of being in many traditions. For me, it was passed down through my matriarchal lineage, for example in Grandma Mimi's dictum, "If the trash spills in the kitchen, at least it didn't spill on the carpet." I may not channel gratitude at every moment -- notably, ironically, I'm not leading with gratitude in this moment -- but I do try, in general. The notion that there could be a price-tag for that practice is not only ludicrous, it's repugnant, and I object! 

I also don't love the trendiness aspect of gratitude, because I've never understand why anyone would want to go along with what is popular. Is it just me, or don't most people prefer to imagine they are unique? I don't want to blend in with everyone else (oh the irony of living in the bland planned community that is Irvine). I've never bought into fashion trends - to the head-shaking dismay of some friends, and entertainment of others. So when something like gratitude gets commercialized and popularized, it feels cheapened, repulsive even. It makes me want to stop doing it, which appears to be exactly what I'm doing in this post!

With that rant out of my system, I suppose the commoditization of gratitude is not a bad thing, nor a good thing, it just is. I am honestly glad there is some solid data to support gratitude as an effective salve. I appreciate that many, many people have been helped by the expanding (if popularized) call to practice this ancient art of gratitude. Clearly, these are realities to be grateful for, and they clearly matter infinitely more than my ego's selfish takes.

At the end of the day, I am grateful for the freedom to hold both opinions true, that commercializing gratitude is both good in some ways, and a bummer in others. As I practice Janet's yoga, I'm learning to release attachment to my opinions, judgements, thoughts, and emotions. In this way, I can observe these interior workings with more perspective, and with gratitude, and not be subject to their whims and rants. I practice letting the ego and her minions go, in order to see more clearly what is in front of me, and what is within me. 

Hey, I wonder if this practice of detached observation that I'm learning through yoga might also become a trendy commodity? Just kidding, I know that yoga has been around for centuries. And I know that yoga is a gravy train I will stay on for as long as possible, with deepest gratitude that I may continue to touch heaven.

Wednesday, January 20, 2021

How Do You Spell RELIEF? Inauguration Day, 2021

Inaugural Highlight, "The Hill We Climb"
by Amanda Gorman, 22, National Treasure

Trump is finally gone! Joe Biden and Kamala Harris were sworn in as the next President and Vice President of the United States today, Jan 20, 2021. I was moved most as I watched Kamala come onto the stage this morning. Finally, someone like me, representing so much more than me, in that role so close to the top. When Amanda Gorman spoke, it felt incredible, hopeful even. This was a landmark day, marked by relief more than anything.

Biden went on to sign 17 awesome executive orders at the Resolute desk today, rejoining the Paris Climate accord, ending the "Muslim ban" and the Keystone XL pipeline permit, extending a ban on federal evictions, and undoing some of Trump's recent last ditch efforts to make America cruel again. And while I feel great about the executive branch for the first time in four years, I am also skeptical about the ability of Biden, Harris, and their allies to get the biggest things done to truly save the soul of this country, even with a majority in Congress. It is too tall an order, to change vast swaths of the public's belief about the election not being stolen, much less expose the myths of supremacist culture, or reveal the moneyed interests promoting those lies. I heard nothing on day one about hunting down and locking up all the hateful, gun-toting domestic terrorists, or stripping away significant parts of the supremacist structures and policies of this country. Maybe Biden's words of unity were the right words for the moment; time will tell if the administration can meet these most pressing priorities with clear and decisive actions. As others have said, we cannot have unity without accountability. Nevertheless, today certainly represents a much brighter and better direction than the last four years, and I am celebrating, to be sure! I do feel hopeful, I suppose, but it feels too soon to embrace the idealistic optimism that used to be my trademark.

What I actually wanted to put down here tonight is something else. I want to wrap the Trump chapter so I can start to re-focus my attention and time. Perhaps I will be able to write more about other things, be a fuller person if I can get this done. So for posterity, here is what the past four years have been like for me, living in the United States under President Donald Trump. 

It has been the longest, darkest few years of my life. I did not plan to spend these past few years as community organizer or pseudo-resistance leader. So much has been lost in this time, personally and societally. It feels like we on the left have fought one fight after another, won some and lost some, grieved and grieved until we have come to believe we may never be happy or hopeful again. Thankfully, I've been in the fight with many sisters and friends, old and new, near and far. Quite often, I've looked to Black and brown sisters and brothers from past and present to help me get back up to stand another day, keep showing up, keep digging deeper. I have tried to pay the fees along the way, but I still owe so many for their inspiration. 

Rewind to Nov. 8, 2016. Election Night. Peter and I attended a small gathering of politically-minded friends at a friend’s house, to watch returns and celebrate the election of the first woman president in United States history. There was no doubt in my mind about the outcome. Of course Hillary was going to trounce Donald J. Trump. Peter tried to warn me, but I blew him off; he and Michael Moore were out of touch. Women were ready for this -- and we were making it happen! (Sure, I had volunteered in Ohio for Obama both times he ran, but only did a couple phone banks for Hillary. Phone banks are hard, polls said she is solid, it’ll be fine!) Hillary becoming president was the next logical step after Barack Obama’s 8 years of calm and competent leadership. We are evolving as a society, and the future is bright for our us, our daughters and our country.

Seeing Hillary accept the Democratic nomination had been a powerful preview. I was hit from behind with goosebumps and tears, seeing someone like me in that role. I was just entering a new phase of mid-fifties awareness myself, growing increasingly frustrated by and not ok with the decades of my life spent feeling like an outsider under the deep patriarchal roots of America, roots that had made my own perspective and internal voice turn against me too often… thinking my body is not beautiful as it is; thinking it’s ok if a man takes my idea and restates it as his own, it’s part of my job; thinking that being humble and following the rules are more important than having a strong ego or going against the grain. I was fatigued by the years I’d spent as a strong professional woman who nevertheless limited myself by the boundaries of social expectations for my gender, even when I had the logical or emotional or moral upper hand.

So that election night in 2016 felt like vertigo, as the ground shifted from under my feet, from under our feet. I recall seizing a bottle of red wine and drinking straight from it, knowing I could walk home if needed, or stumble into a bush and just pass out until I woke up and happily found out that the nightmare was exactly that, just silly projections errors we would laugh off and promptly forget about. Friends who were more on top of the numbers left the party early in the evening. They knew which early states we needed, and wanted to grieve in private. Dumb hopeful me still went to bed defeated, and drunk, but thinking there was a glimmer of hope.

At some level, every night since then has been more or less the same. Trying to sleep in a blanket of disbelief, outrage, and despair at the barrage of daily horrors that our country became under Trump… battling the impact of the news with the impulse to get that asshole out of my head and my daily life… taking that nighttime trip to the bathroom just hoping to go back to sleep soundly and forget, to dream away the nightmare of daylight. Then, every morning, waking to face the nightmare another day, the same dark clouds looming, trying to find ways that my actions could make things better, or sometimes a path without guilt to just ignore the suffering and injustices, and make the best of my life. These years have been filled with peaks of anxiety and depths of sadness, difficulty breathing, continually trying to stay balanced on shaky ground.

Of course, there was more to life than this, but in its essence, this is what the past four years have felt like for me, and likely for most of my friends, and I would like to say, for any thinking person who’s been even passively paying attention, although I’m sure that last claim would be challenged by a few people I am related to. I wonder if they have any idea how hard these last four years have been. 

(Note this recounting comes from someone who is not a news junkie. I don’t have cable or watch TV news, rarely go on Facebook or Twitter. I read things people send me, scan headlines maybe once a day, read things in the NY Times a few days a week on average, I listen to a few select podcasts weekly. Compared to most of my friends, I stick to a pretty lean news diet most of the time.)

On Nov. 11, 2016, I wrote in a journal:  Now that the shock of Hillary’s loss is wearing off, the horror of what is to come is beginning to settle in. The past 2 weeks have been consumed with grieving, talking to friends, feeling nauseated, crying, drinking, reading, trying to cope with one piece of awful news after another. Obama’s hosting President Elect Trump and his wife Melania was a sad, sad, sad thing to watch, like some kind of twisted World Wrestling Federation presidential match-up: King of Class meets Dumpster of Trash! Trump has scrambled to set up a transition team as protests, hate speech and hate crimes explode around the country. We are at war with ourselves already. There are safety pin people and bigots. Trump’s most avid supporters appear, by and large, to be white-supremacists and  backward-thinking angry whites. It’s just too much already and we’re still only in November! Leading the world to address climate change, a peaceful world order, civil rights, religious freedom, voting rights, a free press, so many of the things that make the United States of America what it is are at stake with Trump. This is a truly dark, unbelievable time. I wonder if this will end in civil war.

And now we have the past four years of proof; the list of Trump’s daily scandals is dwarfed by the list of lies he has told from the oval office, but when I think of all the horrible things, the terror we on the left have pushed back against time after time, it is deeply exhausting. Trump, with full support of the Republican Party, pulling out of the Paris Climate Accord, demonizing the press, crying “fake news” about any reporting he doesn’t like, trading constantly in one conspiracy theory after another, shitting on Black Lives, giving the finger to NATO and the WHO while cavorting with dictators, just dragging the US down outside and in, with a cabinet full of incompetent, corrupt, or destructive assholes, the Muslim ban, #MeToo, the gross nepotism of putting his children into key white house positions, inviting foreign interference in US elections, separating scared little children for months on end from their parents and losing the keys to reconnect them, demonizing asylum seekers and immigrants though we are literally a nation of immigrants, elevating white supremacists, encouraging racial violence against Black and brown people, dissing veterans and people who are differently-abled, talking about all women in terms of how they look or whether they are nice or nasty, buying off all those sexual abuse accusers, selling off the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge and other federal park lands, appointing Brett Frat Boy Victim Kavanaugh and all the other incompetent unqualified federal judges appointed, trying to bribe Ukraine to scandalize a political challenger, tanking the USPS and the Census for political gain, refusing to release his taxes or divest from his businesses so that taxpayer money funnels into Trump properties, constant baseless demonization of the other of our 2 political parties, all the name calling and bullying… and that’s just a randomly-ordered list off the top of my head! It has been relentless.

How many times in four years have I texted these words, UGH, SIGH, WTF, F*CK TRUMP about the pussy grabber in chief and the old white men of the GOP, whether those in power or just those who vote that way, holding his hand as he assaults America. It’s disgusting, and even more so now that we know half of this country is not only fine with it, they are still eating this made up conspiracy sh*t right out of his biggest loser hand. As the first president in our history attempts to overturn the results of a free and fair election, Trump’s cult would rather believe that somehow the "evil Socialist-Democrats” rigged the election (but only in the presidential column) than accept their part in the degradation of the US presidency, society, and democracy. 

The culmination of these past 4 years was terrifying. On Jan. 6, 2021 thousands of Trump supporters, at his encouragement, stormed the US Capitol in an attempted coup. Violent, armed, entitled, white Hatriots killed 2 Capitol Police officers and ransacked Congressional chambers, hallways, offices. They were out for blood, some wanting to kill Nancy Pelosi or any Democrat, along with Mike Pence and other Republicans over whether they would approve the electoral college vote count (normally a formality; this year, a riotous mess after months of Trump’s insistence that the election was stolen from him because he’s a child and could not accept that he is the biggest loser in the history of the country). The reception these “insurgents” got at the capitol was gut wrenching. They walked right over the line of police, and there were some officers who were clearly complicit. It was sickening to witness this angry throng just waltz into what most would expect to be a safe, if not sacred public space, after seeing militarized police forces brutalizing, beating, tear gassing, and arresting protestors in the Movement for Black Lives in DC and so many cities over the past months and years. The images and realities of Jan. 6, 2021 were nauseating, frightening, depressing, and most importantly, revealing. We are at war now with ourselves. “An uncivil war” as Biden called it today in his inaugural speech. Domestic terrorists comprise the mainstream of one of our 2 parties. They live among us, and if there is not a swift and public crushing of those extremists, overt white supremacy may yet win again. 

Terrorizing. That’s what the past 4 years have been like, in a nutshell. 

Though I had canvassed for Obama a bit in 2008 and 2012, I got much more politically active after 2016, and that antidote to the Trump era was critical for me. Aligning my values with my words and actions was a necessity. I went to every protest I could, starting with the women’s march on January 21, 2017. I attended that first one in Nashville, where I was helping Mom recover from knee surgery. I was blown away by the river of rad women and families gathered by the Cumberland river. Back in Irvine, the number of people turning out at the corner of Culver and Alton grew visibly with each Trump administration atrocity. I amplified my volunteer time by organizing activism efforts through DemOC PAC, a federal PAC that went overnight from the cusp of folding to a vibrant, if deeply distraught community of liberals. I also tried to engage and mobilize every single person I could think of over the past 4 years to help with activism: we did door to door canvassing, tons of phonebanking and textbanking; we registered hundreds of young people; we wrote tens of thousands of postcards and letters and emails; we made our own signs and t-shirts, and we marched. When Biden's win was announced, we danced in the rain.

What did my activism get me? I amplified my own political effects by helping to organize others, and I am proud of that work. But one of the best outcomes of these years for me was growing closer through activism to people I knew. Especially satisfying was working with old and new friends on Katie Porter’s 2018 run for Congress, and her very solid win again in 2020. We built a network of like-minded liberal people where there were only isolated connections before. We literally built community here. We ultimately helped Democratic Congressional candidates turn Orange County blue in 2018 for the first time since the 1930s. Sadly, we lost that trophy in 2020. But there are so many people here now whom I just adore, who consistently raise their hands when we call for volunteers, and stretch far beyond their comfort zone… talking to voters at their front doors, making phone calls to strangers, or mastering the technology required to reach people during the pandemic. I’ve been talking trash about Irvine and Orange County for years, but am finally starting to feel that I can bloom where I’m planted.

And collectively, with others around the country, we did our part to reject Donald Trump’s bid for a second term as president. He will go down as a masterful con artist and maybe even a good politician, and he will also go down in history as the worst president this country has ever had, the biggest loser, twice impeached, and a mass murderer, thanks to a mishandled and increasingly tragic failure to respond with a national plan to the global novel coronavirus pandemic. To date, more than 400,000 people have died from COVID-19 in the U.S. Today alone, the equivalent of 15 full flights crashed today, and everyone on board died of COVID. Most people would think twice before getting on a plane, given these statistics. Why won’t people stay home, and wear a mask in public? Donald J. Trump is why. Lock him up, along with those who would take down the democracy, and let’s get on with our lives. 

What will become of the US is unclear to me. Trump did not attend Biden's inauguration, signaling to the world that he's a cowardly baby, and to his supporters that the lie of a stolen election should be kept alive. Yet GOP leaders Mike Pence, Mitch McConnell and Kevin McCarty and other astonishingly hypocritical white men did attend, attempting decorum today. They too have a tall task ahead in deciphering what the Republican party stands for. And while having a Kamala Harris in the VP seat is two steps forward, we took one step back on the same stage when J-Lo belted out a blatantly colonial slap in the face, “this land is your land, this land is my land.” Ugh. Biden gave an earnest speech today, with some good things in it. But the theme of unity which has been widely praised all day falls flat with me. We must call this war with domestic terrorism what it is, and publicly reckon with the white-wing forces that seek to trample on truth and destroy the country’s legitimacy. We can’t just hope it will recede. Thankfully, many eyes are more open now, and I understand systemic racism as the baked in drive for greed and power that it is. There is a mighty wall of righteous resistance to the white power “insurrection,” and that gives me hope, for now. 

How did I get through these past 4 years? I would like to say it was my healthy sense of humor, but I seem to have lost that thread somehow. Nature saved me daily… trees and trails, ocean and sky. I am so grateful for my friends who have carried these burdens with me. Unwavering moral and financial support from my partner, and the beautifully informed minds and consciences of Zana and Lux have held me up. Travel used to be a source of inspiration and relief, though it’s hard to remember what life was like BC (Before COVID). Mabel, our camper van has been a happy place. And thank goodness for yoga class and my wise teacher, Janet. 

In the days since Biden won and with the promise of life in America without a President Trump, I am sleeping well. My breathing goes un-noticed for days. I dream about normal things, like my teeth falling out or losing my car keys. I wake up feeling lighter, well rested. We may still be headed for that civil war, sooner or later, and the ground still has some instability thanks to Trump and GOP leadership spinning out in one long public tantrum. But it’s feeling like we, the majority of people, the caring, thinking people, can likely stand for a while longer. COVID is running rampant, but vaccines are being injected into arms. Hope is tangible. 

Though there are still many hard fights ahead for the country, and I know the respite won’t last long, it feels like my grieving is done for now. As much as I want to leave the political realm and works behind, I probably won’t. I am unable to take a seat while others take a stand. This evening, the ground underfoot is solid again. I stand firm in mountain pose, knowing that whatever is next for me, I am unmovable. I stand in tree pose, and know I will flourish come spring. 

Monday, May 20, 2019

a woman's place


Michele Bratcher Goodwin recently headlined an event that I helped organize. She spoke about "a woman's place, where we stand and what's at stake." Michele did not sugar coat anything. Nor did she disappoint. 

This gathering of about 60 Orange County women was held at the Museum of Woman, a unique and beautiful space run by a goddess queen named Ava Park. The venue created a comfort and intimacy that really made the evening special. Michele (like Ava) also has a timeless quality, and a sort of royalty about her. 

I wish I had taken notes on Goodwin's remarks, but here are a couple take-aways, with apologies for any misrepresentations. Yes, there is indeed a war against women the United States today. Michele shared many stories about women across the country who have been or are being denied their basic rights and dignities as humans. It is not unlike the treatment of African Americans as chattel during and since slavery. Hundreds of women in Southern states and elsewhere have been locked up for things like miscarriages and abortions in the past 2 years. At the rate this roll back is going, a fetus will soon have more rights than a woman. I believe Goodwin compared the country to a family in crisis, where one parent is on a power trip, abusive and dismissive of all others. The other parent is nurturing, validating, healing, listening to the young ones, holding up the family -- and society -- by extension.

My interpretation of where we stand is this: The unchecked structural and cultural power inherent in our entrenched racist, misogynistic patriarchy plays the leading role in the attack on woman's humanity. We have to keep calling that out. The media plays a part in perpetuating and masking these hidden forces. The majority of white women play a part by virtue of their voting record and ignorance. The challenges for thinking women today include
  • keeping control of the microphone of our own movement
  • inviting nuance, complexity, empathy, and compassion into public discourse and holding it there
  • telling stories that help lift the veil of ignorance and unite our species
  • staying focused 

As women in the US, we stand in a scary place. But we stand together. I don't know all the ways this resistance will manifest for me or for us, but I know we need to lean on each other and try to have fun along the way. Tomorrow, some of us will turn out at the local versions of a nationwide protest themed #stopthebans (re: abortion bans or restrictions, which have passed in 30 states since Trump was elected). Katie Porter's campaign was also such a powerful Trump resistance experience too. . . so maybe that’s my best vehicle for focusing my energy and reclaiming woman’s place in 2020. Here's to chalking up the next win for KP and to staying on this journey, for my daughters, my sisters, and the nieces I'm about to go adopt (thanks to Michele). 

PS  The day after Trump was elected, the women’s march brought millions onto streets around the world in protest. It felt like a movement. A mere two years later, it has been torn apart. One might argue that this is another case of a patriarchal media unable to accommodate the intricacies of differing opinions amongst leaders and factions. The movement has not gone away… #metoo happened, and we are all still here with intent to keep progress moving forward in the face of increasing horribleness of rightwing minority rule. But it’s a shame we can’t hold it together and claim more power faster.  I still believe that if women had been in charge, we would not have looming climate disaster, a culture of hedonism and rampant greed, a government sponsored system of corruption (citizens united), a federal budget that prioritizes military spending over everything else, or a government trying to gain more control of women’s bodies and keep brown bodies out. Boy, I really hate this period in history we’re suffering through! Michele Goodwin says we’re living in a time when we’re all in a constant state of PTSD. That idea stuck with me, but that’s another post.

Friday, October 26, 2018

The Matriarchy


I've been reading some feminist lit lately (Rebeccas Traister, bell hooks, Sonya Renee Taylor), talking to my daughter and friends and just trying to process where we are in this country post-Kavanaugh. This is the thought I had on my brief walk the other day today: the only entity that may have the power to replace the patriarchy is a matriarchy.  Matriarchy sounds very hierarchical, but it doesn't have to be.

My friends and daughters and women across the US and the planet... maybe we are a part of a matriarchal movement. The curtain has been pulled back on how deep the patriarchal power runs, and women are not going to remain nor let others remain sub-human (men included). Women are running for office, speaking to neighbors, cleaning campaign bathrooms, nurturing each other, and having fun along the way. The community of the movement is changing our lives from the inside out. This organized energy can and must transform our society and our government as we know it. 

Maybe we should set a clear goal to re-imagine, reform, and take over the patriarchal power structures, starting with the US Democratic party, bottom to top. Perhaps we should form a party or society of our own... I don't know.  I think about all the women who are taking action right now, so many for the first time in their lives. I've met a lot of people like that in Orange County and in Nashville and I know that this is fundamental part of the story of this time.  

It is a long fight that started way before today, but I am clear on this: we can and will see much better days, because women are organized af and angry af and empathetic af and we value love. Since the election of Trump as 45th president and through the ridiculous outcome of Brett Kavanaugh's nomination to the Supreme Court, it is clear that the toxicity of the patriarchy is ingrained and the system will not just fade away. Powerful white men will do everything they can to defeat the threat to their power that comes in the form of a women’s experience of sexual assault or the assault on the equal treatment of black lives….

But I have to believe that the majority of people in this country know in their hearts that this patriarchy no longer serves our needs as a society or a species; young people know it, people of color know it, and most women know it. The matriarchy will claim our political power and turn this country tf around, in a way that is not so hierarchical, competitive, or exclusionary. It has to be just. We have to keep the faith, because what other course is there?! 

If I'm the matriarchy, here's my message to the patriarchy. You had your chance and look what you did to this country, this planet. Your competitive bs and your lust for war and your disdain for those most vulnerable among us is bullshit. So we're going to jump in and figure out a new way forward. We will lead in our way, while you sit down, take a breath, and listen. Maybe if we all work and play and love together, we can fix this awful mess you made. 

Sunday, March 5, 2017

Seeking The Good Life

Sunday, March 5, 2017

One thing that has held me back from the blog is knowing who the audience is.  I think I want to just write for my kids.  They’re the reason I got caught in the vine in the first place, after all.  Ok, ok, that’s not true… I can’t blame them for our decision about where to live.  But they are the two people on the planet I care most about reaching.  So here we go again…

I realized yet again yesterday that I’m living too much of my life in a self-inflicted virtual hell.  ACK!  Perhaps I’ve had a little bit of help from the algorithms that load my Facebook feed and such, but mostly, I’ve been doing it to myself.  This insight came after listening to an Ezra Klein Show interview with historian and author Yuval Harari (Sapiens, Homo Deus: a Brief History of Tomorrow), about a wide range of topics, from how we treat animals to how AI will likely treat humans in the future (e.g., without feeling).  They talked about the evolution of human economic activity from hunter-gatherers to agrarians to a mechanized system to the service industrial complex.  What’s next is the era of data, connectivity, and AI, which all come with a big test of our species’ ability to adapt well in evolutionary terms.  My current level of optimism says we’ll probably just decline and head toward “Idiocracy” but anyway… the conversation between Harari and Klein was just fascinating.  I wish, as I so often do, that I had someone to share and process it with.

The future as Harari sees it (disclaimer:  all from my faulty memory, and my impressions are intertwined here; any mistakes in representation of his view and the conversation are honest ones) say 300 years from now, involves co-operative artificial intelligence (think self-driving transport networks, delivery of medical diagnoses and knowledge globally connected) playing a central role in solving problems, doing everyday tasks, and running the world’s economy.  The challenge for humans will be to create a way of life that adapts in meaningful ways as we get there.  The challenge of our time and the next perhaps then will be to think big… for the average American to be open to the idea of a universal basic income, a strong social safety net, and lots of leisure.  Hard to imagine people embracing this, based on society as we know it, but when you think about it, it’s actually hard to imagine people NOT embracing such a better life!  I mean logically, don’t we all want a shorter work week with a better quality of life?  More time for family and hobbies?  Personally, I think maybe the biggest challenge is in how to get from here to there.

This is something I’ve puzzled about for years.  Since we have indoor plumbing, washing machines and Amazon, why don’t’ we have more free time?  It’s not hard to imagine that many things that many people do for work today will be better done by machines and/or automated, integrated systems in the future.  Sure, there will still be people doing jobs.  We will need software engineers and yoga instructors.  We are going to need philosophers to help us figure out the meaning of our existence when we don’t have to work so hard.  What is important for a good life? 

One direction some may go, and may already be going, as time becomes more available is to use the extra time we have to just check out, for example by entering the gaming or VR realm, smoking a lot of weed or doing opiods… spending more time away from the here and now, in places like the news cycle or social media, rather than in actual their own personal development or human interaction.  He talks about religion as a form of Virtual Reality that has served our species for a long time…it’s a place where, depending on where you enter, the rules help you to make sense of the world and know your place in it.  In the same way, we use social media &/or the news cycle to do that now (my ACK realization), or gaming and/or VR to create our own realities.

That podcast was what got me to realize the self-inflicted nature of the trap I have set for myself, and the change in direction that I want to take.  That, and looking at pictures over the past couple of days… seeing that it was only a few years ago when our kids were growing up we didn’t have cell phones or wifi in our lives.  Thank goodness the kids had their childhood.  I know that tech isn’t going anywhere, but I earnestly want to try and keep it more in its place from now on, in the background of my life instead of the automatic extension of me that connectedness is now.  Do I sound 90 yet?!


My goal now is to unplug as much as possible without hurting work.  Keep building and reframing my tribe, my time, my play, my work around a more “here and now” existence.  Carli comes to mind as inspiration here.  She hasn’t really been into technology much as she has matured.  I see her bare feet, a flower in her hair, and hands in the soil on a sunny day. Butterflies, the sparkle of light on water…mindful meditations… tea and conversation, let these be my new addictions.  Good life, here I come!