- it does not feel enough to call or donate money
- and I only have a little to give
- but I have been asking myself what can I do what can I do
- and so many have shrugged in pain and said nothing, nothing, it doesn’t make a difference and I call
- my legislator but he does nothing, so I dance in anger and wonder
- why bother why bother why bother
- if I’m just
- screaming into a void and i should have
- paid attention sooner and this is what it takes
- for you to care?
- but this is what so many count on—
- the exhaustion, the fatigue, the long haul
- that banality of evil
- so I have been thinking that
- it does make a difference if I am
- a person paying attention
- who calls
- even if I call and my legislator does nothing, I still called
- and can keep calling
- and even if it doesn’t change any policy
- I can still vote
- and even if I can only vote once every two years
- and the legislator doesn’t get voted out
- it is still something,
- a ritual to resist
- the exhaustion, the fatigue
- to keep moving.
- I know this from swimming, from dancing, from grief to not let
- emotion go stagnant.
- and even still, I can read
- which will mean
- a person is paying attention
- and I have time
- to be informed
- and this is something.
- and I have time
- to write
- and this is something.
- and perhaps it is enough that
- my doing something is an act against not doing something
- an action against the exhaustion, the fatigue, the hopelessness.
- doing something is
- doing something.
- even if it is just engaging with my own ignorance
- and taking the time to educate myself
- on my own complicity in unjust systems and maybe
- doing something is not about changing minds
- because I resist the idea of being a missionary
- I am not in the business of changing minds
- I don’t need to change minds
- actually I cannot change minds.
- and maybe I should not be thinking that an action is not making a difference just because a legislator does not care or that I did not change anyone’s mind
- but rather
- how has this action altered my subconscious because I believe
- we are all connected.
- but still I see the news and I think it is
- not enough not enough not enough but
- what can I do what can I do what can I do
- and I want to shut it off but those
- screaming children cannot shut it off
- and I wonder
- is there something to be gained by letting myself feel this pain and grief?
- —yes:
- empathy
- in an age where it is easier to harden, to shrug “they are right there is nothing I can do, nothing I do makes a difference”
- is it an act of resistance to stay soft?
- to repeat to repeat to repeat
- even as so many say
- it does nothing it does nothing it does nothing!
- but—
- to resist the hardness and the apathy
- is to
- do something.
- yes, it is
- doing something.
- I have to believe that even if my calls do not
- make a difference to my legislator,
- they make a difference in my own
- subconscious.
- that somehow
- it does something in my body,
- if only to resist the
- exhaustion, the fatigue of nothingness.
- and perhaps even that somehow
- it does something in our body,
- our collective subconscious,
- building an allergic reaction, a massive
- intolerance of injustice, when we stay
- sensitive,
- soft, when we just keep doing
- something.
- I do not know for sure but
- it is doing something
- in my being, in my
- soul, in my
- body.
- yes,
- it is
- doing something.
**
imperfect thoughts, so much more i wish i could say
**
read what’s happening here, here, and here.
find your legislators here.
2 replies on ““but there’s nothing i can do, it doesn’t make a difference””
oh I love this.
❤