[Joy Reichart originally wrote this on the morning after the US presidential election in November]
Iām writing this on the morning after the US has once again downshifted into some seriously dark who-knows-what sort of futureāone thatās too big for even me, an historically expert bypasser, famed acrobat in the art of Itās All Going to Be OK, to find any purchase, anything to point to say ālook! Itās fine.ā
Itās not. Of course itās not.
Walking around yesterday, though, in the last moments of the Before Times (this round of them anyway) I did notice the ways folks have been working to stay in the light. Not in falsely hopeful or cheerful or naively determined ways, but in the more grounded ways weāve learned over these recent years.
Yes, learned.
It occurs to me that, since 2016ish, weāve been in training. Like most deep and effective training, itās worked because we havenāt necessarily been out to achieve any one thing. Weāve simply kept showing up for the challenges in front of us and, in doing so, weāve developed some serious skills.
Truly, look at all weāve been working on for this last almost-decade. For instance, we know about trauma now. Itās no longer a big scary extreme shadowy label reserved for unimaginable situations. We understand how it happens on every level, how to recognize it and to meet it. Thereās even such a thing as being ātrauma informed,ā and so many of us are, or working to be, that the phrase itself is a common one. Scores of people are training as healers to help folks move through their trauma⦠or better yet, prevent it.
Weāve learned about checking in with each other, how much of a difference that can make. Weāre doing that everywhere today, pretty automatically. Itās a long-dormant instinct reawakened in the pandemic and beyond.
More of us are, at long last, awake to the injustices perpetrated and perpetuated in this country. Weāve learned to keep our eyes and hearts open to it. Weāre working everyday to be more inclusive, be better allies. To stay aware and make sure history isnāt repeated, or at least notice when it is and not let it stand. Weāre standing up for each other. Exercising self-compassion and patience with one another. Weāre willing to be messy and imperfect in it because it wonāt get done any other way.
Weāve learned so damn much about grief: its realities and its nuances and the many ways to be with it. Itās something weāve become deeply familiar with, individually and collectively, and inside whose corners we have found new ways of connecting.
We are doing far less flailing. More and more I see folks giving up the notion that outrage is going to get us anywhere. Instead we are turning inward, finding ground in ourselves. Weāre feeling our pain fully, letting it exist, not denying it, understanding on a soul level that adage that says the only way out is through.
Weāre seeking out as much good news, as many sweet stories as will balance out the bummers. And weāve come to recognize a lot of positivity in our midst as toxic.
Weāre holding space for one another. Weāre forming circles. Weāre cleaning up our own messes. Weāre learning about generosity and boundaries and how neither of those can exist without the other. Weāre each welcoming a broader range of experiencesāour own and others.ā
Do not mistake any of this for hope, though.
None of this is going to turn the tide. It never was. Becauseāand hereās where Iāll lose some of you I knowāwe were never going to turn it. No matter how many pleas to the rationality, the sanity, even the fear in people. No matter how immovable our own integrity, how fierce our love. No matter how surprised at or disappointed we are today. No matter how much we analyze or try to understand it.
Itās a tide. Tides donāt turn, except in their own time, set to a clock of a far greater intelligence. And actually thatās one idea in which I am finding some real, deep settling.
There was no ambiguity in the decision America made. It was clear, unmistakable, and not for any lack of trying to prevent it. Our country, our world, is in a place of deep fear, trauma, brokenness. We are lost, and when weāre lost weāll usually respond to whatever voice rings out most loudly in the darkness. This election has proven that beyond a doubt. I find a strange comfort in this clarity. In a sense, we know exactly what weāre working with.
Another idea that relieves me a bit is the idea that our civilization is gasping its last, and we are not going to restore, revive, or reanimate anything.
Terminal lucidity
Have you ever been at a deathbed? Do you know (or have you heard) how sometimes, days or hours before the end, the dying person rallies in impossible ways, awake, moving, eating, laughing, before eventually, inevitably returning to their process of rapid decline?
Science has given this state the gorgeously poetic name āterminal lucidity,ā and I think thatās where the old ways are now. They are dyingācollapsing in on themselves, as they were always going to. These crusty, harmful systems and those who work so hard to uphold them are on their way out to be sure, but not before passing through those mysterious final moments of resurgence before death comesāwhich, in this case, means the ignorance, the injustice, the greed, the bigotry, the fear mongering, the violence are amplified.
None of it will last, no, but history has a much longer lifespan than any one human. The terminal lucidity on this beast will last years. It will bang around, knock shit over, get drunk, party its ugly face off and do a lot of damage in the process.
Unfortunately, in this moment in history, we are caught in the throes of this. Itāll likely take a lot of us down with it.
Hereās where our training comes in.
We actually do know what to do in the face of this chaos. Weāve been doing it. For the last eight years (and much, much longer for some), each in our own ways, weāve been growing capacity in our hearts and our minds and our bodies, and we are capable of so much more healing than we ever have been.
Of course, by all means, keep fighting if you must. I fully understand that this is how many of us navigate the pain we feel. Donāt give up. Work hard. Turn things around. Believe that can happen. Iām not here to throw an ice bucket over belief. Itās a powerful thing, and it may yet get us somewhere.
I for one am done trying to revive ideas that may once have been alive and vibrant, but that have clearly run their course. I feel more called to tend the garden of what has been growing up inside the destruction all along. The new ways of living weāve been cultivating without even knowing it.
This doesnāt mean there wonāt be sufferingāindeed, there will likely be more of it before there is less. There will be more brokenness and scariness and strife. Weāll watch this tidal wave of fear manifest in the world in unbearable ways, surely. Our hearts will keep breaking.
But we know how to be with this.
Thatās another really important part of our trainingāmaybe even the most important: weāve grown some serious capacity for discomfort these last years. We are each highly trained professionals in being uncomfortable. Of course itās not fair that weāve had to, we shouldnāt have had to, but again, it is what has happened. Look at all the ways weāve adapted, made it work in impossible circumstances. And yup, thatās surfaced trauma. And yup, weāve held each other in it. And on it has gone, and on it will go, until this healing cycle is complete.
Weāve become goddamn warriors. Weāve held each other in our ongoing grief. There are few things more beautiful than that.
Thereās no need to start anything now. Weāve already begun. Whatever happens, we are (no, of course not everyone, but if you are reading this, you are) perhaps more ready for it than we realize. There may not be hope for things to return to how they were, but if we look closely, we might start to see that weāve already started to create something new.
Article by Joy Reichart, proprietor at Soul Writing,Ā Integral Coach and former Communications Director at New Ventures West.