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So What Do I Do Now? (Mary Lyon)
I’m not sure how to behave anymore.
Mary Lyon, From The Left -- World News Trust
Jan. 21, 2009 -- This is a heckuva hangover. More than just the sun dawned on me on the
morning after Obama Day. I realized as I woke up following the
Inauguration of Barack Obama as the 44th President of the United States
that I’m not sure how to behave anymore.
For eight years I’ve felt like a hostage. This might as well have been
a lesser version of Gitmo from where I stood. It’s been sheer torture
watching America taking its cue from the George W. Bush way of
operating and literally devolving.
I’ve spent eight years gritting my teeth when a view of the White House flashed across my TV. I could never look at that view without thinking how that house had been stolen out from Al Gore and all the rest of us. I’d think about the occupant within and find it impossible even to refer to him as President. I just couldn’t. Still can’t, if you really wanna know. He just was never The President, to me. Didn’t win fair and square the first time. The results the second time are sufficiently questionable in my mind that I couldn’t warm up to him then, either. And considering the ham-handed behavior of the bullies and goons surrounding him at all times, there was literally nothing to convince me otherwise.
For that entire period, I simply didn’t have a President. And I’ve gotten used to that.
So used to it by now that it’s an odd new feeling for me to hear myself
uttering the phrase “my President.” It’s even more strange to realize
that I’m saying it and meaning it -- for the first time in eight years.
And I scarcely know what to do with myself. I’m not sure how to behave
anymore. The newly-inaugurated President of the United States, MY
newly-inaugurated President of the United States, has set a new tone
alright. America woke up a different nation on the first morning in
which he presides. We’re more united than ever, we’re feeling
exhilarated again, rousing from a crushingly bleak freeze and daring to
strain into a deep, long stretch. There’s a sense of renewal and
invigoration, and yes, hope.
We’re all like tiny, tentative crocus buds
slowly rising to peek through the snow as the worst of a ferociously
harsh winter passes. We’re certainly happier. And looking at Barack
Obama and his wife and daughters -- now living in the White House and
setting the style and tone for our nation -- we can finally confirm that
we’re everything we say we are in America. The presidency is no longer
an exclusive club which some of us can never envision joining.
President Obama invites us to reach out with open hands -- to those who
might actually be talked into opening their own hands instead of
keeping them in clenched fists. Now there’s something I can still
relate to. The clenched fists part. Mine still are. The behavior I grew
far too accustomed to, the dialogue, the national discourse, for the
past eight years (no, longer even, considering the political climate
when then-President Clinton was routinely batted around like a national
piñata by conservatives, Republicans, and manipulated, intimidated, and
biased media outlets), was horrid. And horrifying.
As someone who opposes wars of aggression and choice, torture and
extraordinary rendition, unrestrained free-market orgies, unaccountable
leaders, the sell-out of civil rights, and intrusive government into
private lives and principles, I felt pretty darned batted around, too.
I felt like a stranger in a strange land. Endangered, demonized,
scorned, mocked, bullied, and threatened. I’ve had fists raised against
me because somebody didn’t like my anti-Iraq War sign. I’ve had my
tires slashed and my car keyed because somebody didn’t like my
anti-war, anti-Bush bumper stickers. I’ve had murderous and menacing
looks aimed my way by people who didn’t like how I felt or what I
thought, or where I stood. I was a Democrat -- indeed, even worse: a
Liberal Democrat, and therefore, I was regarded as little more than
another enemy of the state.
It’s left me with fists in an almost permanent clench. I know what
President Obama said during his inauguration speech. I know how he
invited me, personally, to open hands and heart as the work to heal and
rehabilitate our nation begins. I know all about the tone he’s set for
a new national discourse, new American priorities, and a new spirit of
hope, inclusion, forgiveness, and reaching out. I know. And it sounds
great -- just what we need. It’s just hard to get my mind or my gut
around -- yet. Old habits are hard to break. I still want to grab the
first Republican or Bush supporter or media apologist I see and turn
him or her over my knee. Unlike my President, I don’t want to reach
out, and be open to the “other side.” I don’t want to give the likes of
McConnell and Boehner and Krauthammer and Kristol a seat at the table
or a fair hearing. Or even an open mind. Never mind an open hand.
The damage they’ve done, the hurt they encouraged, the pain they
authored, the sins they committed and the sinners they covered for
disqualifies them in my mind from any reasonable response, courtesy or
kindness. I don’t want to listen to ANYTHING they have to say, much
less take their views into consideration. As THEIR president, George W.
Bush once said to some hapless opponent -- “who cares what you think?”
And I don’t. They’ve already had their say. They’ve forced us all to
listen and bow in silence. They’ve had their turn to run things and do
it their way, and look where we are as a nation -- what a mess we’re in
and how much work there is for all of us if we ever hope to get any of
it cleaned up. My instinct after all this time, toward all those who
vilified people like me as traitorous and un-American and resolutely
tried to grind us into the dirt -- is to want to pay them back in kind.
However, my President, Barack Obama, is now telling me otherwise. He’s asking me to pull my heart out of the freezer and let it start thawing.
So I’m stuck with old habits that are dying hard. This IS a new
America. So new and unfamiliar, at least for me, that it’s hard to
recognize. I am not yet comfortable in it. My new President has invited
me to put down the old mindset, unclench my fists, and reach out to old
adversaries. I’m being invited to rise above the pain of the past eight
(or more) years, and start fixing things, and help my poor battered
country heal. And I’m going to have to get used to it. This, too, is a
project that won’t be completed overnight. This way forward won’t be
easy, either, at least for me. Yet I know I need to accept it, just as
much as I need to get used to the idea that it’s safe to come in out of
the cold and embrace the man now in the Oval Office as MY President.
He’s talked for two years now about “Change We Can Believe In.” And I’m
realizing that a lot of that change is going to have to start within me.
***
Mary Lyon is a veteran broadcaster and five-time Golden Mike Award winner, who has anchored, reported, and written for the Associated Press Radio Network, NBC Radio "The Source," and many Los Angeles-area stations including KRTH-FM/AM, KLOS-FM, KFWB-AM, and KTLA-TV, and occasional media analyst for ABC Radio News. She began her career as a liberal activist with the Student Coalition for Humphrey/Muskie in 1968, and helped spearhead a regional campaign, The Power 18," to win the right to vote for 18-year-olds. She remains an advocate for liberal causes, responsibility and accountability in media, environmental education and support of the arts for children, and green living. In addition to World News Trust, Mary writes for Huffington Post, OpEdNews, Democrats.us, WeDemocrats.org's "We! The People" webzine. Mary is also a parenting expert, having written and llustrated the book "The Frazzled Working Woman's Practical Guide to Motherhood.
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CreatedWednesday, January 21 2009
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Last modifiedWednesday, November 06 2013