It was a last-minute
decision to go. On Friday night, October 5, Amy and I were watching Murphy
Brown, newly rebooted and excoriating the fictional White House Press Corps. We
were scrolling through our feeds and seething as the “on the fence” votes changed
to Kavanaugh votes. I was double-seething because my “friends” on social media
seemed to think that Susan Collins was the ONLY person to blame.
“I think we have to go,”
I said, and I looked around on my facebook until I found the Flood the Capitol
March, lead by the Women’s March and Planned Parenthood Action. I already had a
sign I’d made for an anti-Kavanaugh rally we’d attended a few weeks before in
Philly.
It didn’t feel like the
other protests. As I cleaned the house, rearranged my Saturday plans, and went
to bed early, I didn’t have as much power-to-the-people hopefulness buoying me
up. Instead, I was SEETHING, so frustrated to still be doing this work, decades
after my own rape experiences and millennia after women were enslaved. IT HAS
NEVER NOT BEEN THIS.
Since I became
politically active, this blog has often been about convincing people that
protesting and other political work could be nice, friendly, loving, inclusive,
and all of those things are true. But in the past few weeks, I have become less
and less willing to perform polite, feminine, hopeful organizing and more
willing to give voice to the feral fury that sometimes makes me feel out of
control. Getting ready to Flood the Capitol, I felt almost none of my usual aren’t-humans-amazing
feelings. It was more a feeling of “Survivors, let’s burn it down.”
For professional reasons,
I’m hesitant to be honest about the fury. Because I work with children, it’s
important for me to feel nurturing, loving, and safe. My clients and their
families deserve a solid, peaceful presence in their lives, so I feel guilty to
also be this raging, scary thing. But at the same time, it’s love, nurturing,
and protectiveness—for myself (both adult and inner traumatized child), for my
nieces and nephews, for the fear that my students, mostly children of color,
will face in a future with Kavanaugh on the bench.
As Amy
and I drove Washingtonward at way-too-early-on-a-Saturday-o’clock, we decided: No
getting arrested. The priority was to get safely back to the students, to not
miss a single tutoring hour. As much as I admire those who get arrested (Later
in the day I would sob watching a young woman have a panic attack as the
handcuffs went on.) I knew my priorities were elsewhere.
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