Monthly Archives: February 2017

Memory

February 18, 2017

Our ship had docked in the harbor of the most beautiful island of our journey through the Aegean Sea.  Symi is tiny and hilly, with white and yellow houses rising up the steep hillside from the blue harbor. I wanted so much to swim in that blue sea, but doing so was unlikely. There seemed to be no beaches. So when our trip leader Alexander asked if anyone wanted to swim, I said yes eagerly. You, of course, did not want to swim, not sharing my passion, but you waited while I rushed back to our cabin to put on a swimsuit and sundress, and to grab a towel. I hurried back to the deck, and we joined another couple to descend the gangplank and thread our way along the narrow sidewalk around the harbor. Small shops formed a wall to our left, with the sea to our right.

Alexander turned a corner, leaving the curve of the harbor, and soon stopped by some benches.  He pointed to the sea. “There you go!” he exclaimed. I was dubious. The harbor was very close by, and I worried about the pollution from the ships. But the other couple had laid down their towels on one of the benches and were descending the steps cut into the stone wall and splashing into the sea. You sat down on another bench. My desire to swim conquered my worries and leaving my towel and sundress next to you, I held onto the cold chain next to the stone steps and carefully reached for each slimy step with my bare feet, taking care not to strike my misshapen second toe against the rocks.

At last I threw myself backwards into the cold sea with a whoop of joy. You smiled and waved at me. Behind you the white houses climbed the hills, and the sun shone in the blue sky.

I think of that moment now, as I descend the steps in this hotel in San Miguel de Allende, where the sun shines in the blue sky and the white and blue and yellow houses climb the hillsides. I remember that afternoon swimming in the Aegean Sea off the island of Symi, and I remember your smile.

The Night Shelter

Fifteen degrees above zero
A foot of snow on the ground

And the shelter wings through the night

Like the red eye bound from LA to New York

Or the transatlantic flight to London,

Heavy with sleep and dreams.

Here sleeps the Korean taxi driver,
And the Latino construction worker,

The woman with the broken ribs who flinches in her sleep,

The pregnant girl curled next to her lover, and

The man with eyes wide open who steadily talks to god

As if god could hear.

In the gray dawn one by one they will awake,
Look for coffee,

Find bathrooms,

Brush their teeth,

Pack up their bedding,

And prepare to land

In yet another day.

February 14, 2006

This is What Democracy Looks Like

This is What Democracy Looks Like

500,000 people… or thereabouts. And I was one of them.

Saturday, January 21st, 2017, Washington DC: the day after the presidential inauguration of Donald Trump, the day of the Women’s March on Washington and 670 Sister Marches worldwide.

Chartered buses dropped off passengers. Cars lined up at Metro station parking lots. And masses of people filled the Metro cars. Women and men, many wearing pink pussy-hats. People using walkers and canes. Grandmothers, teenagers, children. People of all shades of black and brown and white. Many of them carried handmade signs, ranging from lewd to amusing to clever.

Women’s Rights are Human Rights
My Body My Business

Free Melania

It must be bad, even the introverts are here

You have awakened the dragon

Despite being jammed into Metro cars, the mood was buoyant and behavior civil.

From the stations of Metro Center and Judicial Square, L’Enfant Plaza and Federal South West, the people streamed, climbing escalators that had been turned off for safety’s sake. They filled Third Street leading up to Independence, the site of the rally stage. They filled all the surrounding streets, waiting for the march planned to take them west on Independence, then north on 14th Street, and west again to the Ellipse, close to the White House. As more people arrived,
the crowds were packed closer and closer together. From time to time, the call went out, “Medic! Medic!” and the crowd squeezed together to allow room for an ambulance to get past.

On Seventh Street where I stood, young men and women climbed trees for a better view and sat on the walls around the Hirshhorn Museum.

Large screens had been set up to broadcast the speakers and singers at the rally, but it was difficult for the crowd to see, and the sound system could not carry to the massive crowd. For the most part, the crowd stood patiently for over four hours, though every now and then a group would begin to shout, “We want to march!”

About two o’clock, the word began trickling out that the crowd was too large for the original march route. “To the Mall!” some called, and the people began an exodus. Marchers filled the Mall and moved onto Constitution Avenue and toward the White House. They gathered in front of the Old Post Office Building, now the site of the Trump Hotel, shouted slogans and booed, and piled their signs on the sidewalk.

It was late evening before the last of the people left.

When I talk to people who were there, what do they say about the day?

Amazing

Exhilarating

Exhausting

Joyful

Hopeful

Energizing

And we will need that energy for the road ahead.