This article has been chosen as a Making Sense of These Times
FIVE STAR PIECE
The value of this piece is that it doesn't just say to choose love over fear, which is a hard sell at such an incendiary time, but it shows you the landscape in which that can occur. "...plant yourself in the middle of that which you love most...it will tell you exactly what this broken world needs from you. This is your holy work."
-Suzanne-
September 19, 2001
Love and Fear
Yael Lachman
(originally appeared in Good Times: Santa Cruz County’s News and Entertainment Weekly)
I was up in the mountains last week. Tuesday morning, just after dawn, I
crawled out of my tent and ran smack into a ranger whose job that
morning was to whisper the news from New York and Washington, D.C. When
he had finished, we looked at each other for a long, helpless moment.
Then we both turned away before either of us could cry. The ranger went
off to find more campers. I stood there staring at a tree.
There are moments in your life when the world splits open and forces you
to decide what is most important to you and what you are going to do
about it. Immediately, my mind ran through all the scenarios taking
place back in the city: fear and hysteria crackling over the airwaves;
calls for retaliation; a declaration of war, complete with nuclear
warheads, biological weapons, and unthinkable devastation.
Then something made me stop and look. Right in front of me, the river
ran down the mountain. A marmot froze on a rock. The real world grabbed
me by the collar and hauled me back from the brink. Once it had my
attention, it demanded to know exactly what I intended to do. What is
required of me, right now, by everything that is holy?
That’s the question, and we must find an answer fast. We can no longer
deny that evil exists, and we can no longer fail to respond. Standing by
the river, I thought, We love the world too much. We love our own lives,
and it has made us soft. Everything we love is fragile and vulnerable:
this river, this fish, this rock. We are doomed. They know how to fight.
All I know how to do is love this world.
Panicked, I scrambled around in my mind for inspiration, for an image of
someone wise who had lived through a war and who could tell me who I was
supposed to become in these desperate days. I was expecting a freedom
fighter, maybe someone with a gun. But the person who sprang to mind
was Chiura Obata, the Japanese-American painter who fell in love with
Yosemite and the High Sierra. He appeared to me looking exactly as he
does in a photograph from 1942, taken at the Tanforan detention center.
In the photograph, Obata is calm and smiling, teaching a bunch of
children to paint.
Of all the things to do. There’s a war on, your people have been rounded
up like cattle, and there you are playing with a paintbrush. I blinked,
hoping to conjure a more martial role model this time, but Obata
stubbornly remained. He sat before me, out on a rock in the middle of
the river, watching impatiently as I struggled to comprehend.
Then, all of a sudden, I got it. Obata wasn’t teaching those kids how to
paint; he was teaching them how to love. Day after day, right through
the barbed-wire fence, Obata taught showed those children how to see
beauty; how to keep their hearts open. He knew that when evil and
destruction arrive, we must refuse to stop loving the world. Then and
this is the crucial thing we must act on behalf of that enormous
love.
What America has just learned, very painfully, is that we have not loved
enough. We have cringed at gruesome wire-service photos and turned our
backs on the suffering of the world. We have allowed our own government
to bomb civilians, withhold medical supplies, and sell weapons to brutal
thugs in every part of the globe. Through our own ignorance, we have
helped create a world where desperate people will gladly sign up to be
the messengers of death. And now that death and destruction have reached
our own shores, we must decide how we are going to respond: with love,
or with fear. The whole world is holding its breath, waiting to see
which one we will choose.
So. Which will it be? Love, or fear? If you choose love, then you must
act today to tell every person in a position of power that you will not
allow our government to inflict more suffering in your name. After that,
you must sit down and ask yourself what you have been put on this earth
to love, and how you will let this one, great love of your life grow
bigger than you ever imagined. You and I need to have this conversation
with ourselves and with everyone we know. We need to figure out how to
pool our gifts, all our infinite blessings, and let them spill out over
the edges of our own, small lives.
There are people who will try to tell you that love is a luxury and that
life in all its miraculous beauty is less urgent right now than the need
to retaliate against the forces of evil. I am here to tell you that
unless we respond with love, we will certainly hand evil its great and
final victory. Go out, right now, and plant yourself in the middle of
that which you love most the thing within you that is most alive. Now
listen carefully, because as that love cracks your heart open, it will
tell you exactly what this broken world needs from you. This is your
holy work, and it cannot wait. Make it big this time. Make it so.
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