Part
one: Back in the 1970s I lived for a time in a house with some friends, one of
whom was an engineer. He introduced me to the concept of natural slope by
saying the house had achieved natural slope, i.e., it needed cleaning. Not that
he was going to clean it. Cleaning was not men’s work.
Merriam
Webster defines natural slope as “the slope assumed by a
mass of earth thrown up into a heap.”
So,
natural slope is the point where gravity kicks in and soil begins to slide back
down on itself, although you can apply it to materials other than soil, like
crap stacked up in your house.
Part
two: last Friday morning while driving to my class at the swimming pool I heard
a story on the radio which shocked me. I had never heard language like that on
National Public Radio. Realizing what had been said, and who had said it, hit
like a body blow.
Then
the announcer switched out of his announcer role for a moment, and said he could
not let this pass without saying, “This is racist.”
Once
again, I found myself wondering where are the grownups? Why is there no
accountability?
Part
three: A few months ago, I quoted Holocaust survivors who said it’s too late to
leave this country, as it became too late to leave Nazi Germany in the 1930s.
We
may not have camps and gas showers and ovens, but we are letting brown and
black people die in Puerto Rico. We gun down and lynch black people. Our
president is calling countries populated by black and brown people “shitholes.”
He praises white supremacists as “fine people.” He has made it okay for Nazis
to march with impunity in America.
The
Republican party, which is in power, does nothing to stop this.
As
a mother and a grandmother, I have to say it: shame on you, Republicans. Shame
on you.
I
don’t say shame on him. I know he has no shame.
Part
four: I keep thinking that all this unregulated terrible behavior is piling up
like all the papers and boxes and other crap in my house. When that stuff
reaches natural slope, it starts to fall. You can keep throwing things on top
of other things, but they slide and roll over each other and spread out and you
can’t walk anywhere until you clean up the mess.
I
keep thinking that’s what our government is doing, stacking crap on top of crap.
I keep thinking it must be getting to natural slope. Every time the president
shoots himself in the foot, I wonder, is this it? Is this the day the country
simply cannot bear the weight of one more quarter-teaspoon of bullshit?
Part
five: Yesterday I watched a video taken in Orange County, of homeless people
camped in tents and makeshift shelters on the banks of a river there. Their
encampments stretched on mile after mile, and looked like the encampments here,
tents and tarps, and piles of bags of stuff, and people milling around. I
imagine most homeless encampments look like that. Homeless people and their
encampments have become normal in America.
Then
I hear on the news that the stock market is hitting record highs. I see
pictures of white guys in suits, smiling because they are making lots of nice money,
like they think this boom will never end. What short memories they have. The
stock market’s natural slope is not predictable.
Part
six: Last night I watched, “I Am Not Your Negro,” a documentary about James
Baldwin. If you have not seen it and you get the chance, see it.
The
movie tells Baldwin’s story, and the story of race in America in his lifetime,
and now.
When
they showed film of him speaking, his intelligence, his search for exactly the
right words to say exactly what he meant, his clear and profoundly humane
being, were a balm to my heart and mind and soul. He did not pull any punches,
he spoke the truth, even though white people really could not handle hearing
the truth.
Sometime
after his friends Medgar Evers, Malcolm X, and Martin Luther King, Jr., were
shot and killed, he moved to France and lived out the rest of his life there.
Listening to him in the movie I realized how much I miss hearing the intelligent,
rational voices of honest, humane people.
Part
seven: I encourage you to spill intelligence, rational thought, honesty, good
humor, and kindness over every person you meet, as if those qualities have
reached natural slope within you, and are tumbling out of you unrestrained.
If
you can’t do that, at least be quiet and don’t make things worse.
Blessings
and peace, friends. We are all in this together.
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