I’m older than a lot of people who are awake. That means I was around in the days when America still felt like America. We had a Memorial Day parade every year in grade school, and we’d walk down the suburban streets near the school waving flags and eating popsicles. We said the Pledge of Allegience everyday and we learned about the importance of Democracy throughout my years of schooling. Yeah, I was the generation that played outside until the street lights came on and cartoons only came on Saturday mornings. Nobody had much materially back then, but in hindsight, I realize we had so much more than we knew.
I see what we’ve lost already since those days, maybe with a clearer view than younger folks. I’m coming from a different point of view. I remember the America where someone came out and pumped your gas and wiped your windshield and said, “Sure is a beautiful day.” I miss the simplicity of life back then, when your father worked at the same company his whole life and your mother stayed home and made you a sandwhich when you came home from school. Oh, sure, America still had a lot to learn back then, and there were things we needed to fix, but we knew who we were as a people and we were united in our declaration that to be and live free was the most important thing in life.
Things started changing after Kennedy was killed, and the Vietnam War seemed to be a harbringer of things to come. I could palpably feel the change—as if some kind of dark cloud was gathering on the horizon. It would take me thirty more years to figure out where the dark clouds came from and who was responsible for them.
I wish I could say that everything is going to be all right—that the days of simplicity and good education and respectful children and happy families are going to come back sometime soon. I think it will happen one day, but I’m not sure we’ll completely right the ship in my lifetime. In some important way, the world is forever changed. We can never paddle back to 1952.
So, my scars are deep. So are yours. We have collective scars—even people who don’t completely understand what’s happening around them. Our lives, our country, our friends and family and neighbors are suffering and may suffer more as the days pass. Some of that suffering is hidden—a few unpaid bills, a lack of formula for the baby, the shock of filling up our tanks. And there’s the loss of a family member from Covid or missing people who are gone from our lives because of disagreements.
Scars used to be something we could be proud of at the end of a battle we fought. Those scars showed we had survived something. But the kind of scars we’re seeing now are wounds not inflicted by the long course of life, but purposely by others who have decided they want a different kind of world. They’re the kind of scars that are hard to abide because they bleed more and heal slowly. Those scars are as deep as our love for our families and our communities and our country.
It hurts me to see my neighbors picking through packages of chicken at the grocery store, or going in to the counter at the gas station to give them their last twenty dollar bill. It kills me to see so many young people in the obituary section of the newspaper and not worry about my own kids. I wake up most mornings afraid to look at the news, afraid to make plans for my old age, knowing all the while the next week, the next year—hell, even tomorrow are so uncertain. I’m not in control of my life anymore and so the future sort of looms ahead in the shape of a big question mark.
But here’s what I want to say: the man who said, “There is nothing to fear but fear itself,” was a smart man. What he meant was that being afraid is worse than death. It steals moments from you, it steals joy from your soul, it robs you of the freedom to truly live. Ask anyone who survived the Holocaust how important dignity and hope were to their survival. Like those survivors, you can find peace floating on a shard of wood after a shipwreck, or watching as a cyclone passes by your house. It is possible to find a calm place inside of you no matter what is happening outside your window. What you do is just breathe. You assure yourself that no matter what happens, the dignity and pride you’ve built over a lifetime cannot be taken from you in any shape or form. Surrounding you and within you is all the beauty and goodwill you’ve collected through the years, no matter how long or short your life has been.
I fear death a lot less than I fear living in a world I no longer recognize. There are things worse than death—that much I know after all these years. Giving into the demands of your enemy or hiding your head in the sand rather than standing proud for what you believe in—those things, to me, are worse than death. For once you stop fearing death, you can raise your sword and run into battle. Or you can open your windows and see the truth penetrating the glass. That’s an act of self-love, however silly that might sound. But we all know the truth shall set us free.
Don’t think too much about the end of the war. That’s not half as important as what you do and how you approach today. We’re all learning to live in the moment—to be present right now and create change and engage in resistance by sheer will. That’s the only way anyone has ever changed tomorrow.
Like every other soldier in history, there are days that feel like years to me. I miss my old life. I take it out of my pocket and look at it like a picture from time to time. But then I pick up my sack and march on across the field, unafraid and ready to die if I have to. I’ve been called upon, I guess, to do this for my fellow man, for the family that will continue on when I have left the earth. Our battle today is the only hope for tomorrow. And so I do this for them.
I think most people born before 1980ish got a taste of what America was and can be again. Im convinced they started a phase two of their plan starting with Bush's election in 1988 (phase one was Kennedy being "replaced" with that faggot Johnson and all of the progressive bullshit that came along with that cowardly queer). It seemed to accelerate down the shit slide around that time.
I don't know if it's because I am older or whatever, but it almost seems like the USA has been frozen in time since 9/11. Bush I did his job setting up his pieces in the intelligence community ... He handed the country over to Clinton to kickstart globalization, and that led to Bush Jr to install the police state. No matter who would have won the Presidency from 1992 thru 2012, we'd be right where we are at today.
Anyway, it seems as if the culture has remained frozen and fanatically divided since the start of Bush Jr's second term The USA has always had a lot of infighting ... It's history is loaded with it ... But when things mattered, the population would unite in a nanosecond ... That is NOT true today thanks to the fucking swamp and all it represents.
I guess what I'm trying to say is that if I were to hop into a time machine and travel back to the 50s - 90s, I'd be able to get a sense of when I was just based on what people were wearing, how they talked, and the cars they were driving. Drop me in, say, 2009 or 2018, the only way I'd have an idea when I'm at is going to be based on the cellphones people were carrying or overall TV/display quality, size and weight. Nothing seems really new anymore save all of the LCDs that pop up in homes, phones, and cars anymore. It's like all tech advanced are made to either bombard you with advertisements and/or spy on you.
I pray we get America back ... Not so much for me ... I want my kids to experience it regardless of whatever age they may be when this nightmare ends. If that would happen to mean my life, so be it. People haven't a clue as to how bad things get when you're no longer free. None. They have no idea what a ruling, elitist, leftist regime can do to crush people's will to live.
Great reply. I agree and enjoyed reading your thoughts.
Thank you both, well worth the read.
Well, we went from tunics with leggings and statement necklaces, to mom jeans and crop tops. Also houses went from Tuscany to farmhouse modern, but all in all it’s just swapping out one blandness for another, and I agree overall with your assessment.
Great observation- especially with regards to the time travel.
A friend and I were talking about getting older and what we appreciate about being born in the time we were (mid to late 60s). I said without giving much thought to it that I was grateful to have lived in a time before the internet. Now that may seem odd (after all, how else would I have met all my fellow pedes?), but I think it has blessed me with perspective. I look at my niece and nephews who are in their late teens and early 20s. Without them, it is hard to realize the passage of time because you are right- not much has changed. But if you compare say 1962, 1972 and 1982 - the differences are vast.
Maybe it is because of the 60s and the radical changes that happened then. My dad spent a year in Vietnam in 1968. He told me that he literally did not recognize the country when he got back and he only spent a year there. Compare the last couple of years - sometimes I really have to think about when things have happened. 2020? 2021? Frozen is an apt description.