Thank you to all the women marching today for literally taking steps to change our country. I hope the sound of your synchronized steps shake Washington awake. My heart beats in time with your footsteps. You are my heroes!
I wrote this two years ago and it still rings true:
This sticker came in the mail after I donated to Planned Parenthood. Immediately upon receiving it, I was picking at the peel, tossing on my boots, and grabbing at my keys. I felt so proud; so empowered; so ready to take action, even if it was just a car sticker.
But suddenly, my body went stiff. I hesitated at the door's threshold. My worry was not "oh it's a lease.” It was: “Wait. What if I get attacked? What if someone sees this on my car and smashes a window in? What if they pop my tires to demonstrate their disagreement? What if they pop my nasal septum in order to demonstrate their hatred of me and of women? What if I am shot on spot for my feminism? What if I am putting a target on my already endangered body? What if it this is what they call 'asking for it'? What am I risking here to show my feminism?"
For five days, the sticker sat staring at me from the coffee table, sometimes whispering, "Save yourself, sister; I've had my heart bombed by a thousand thugs for speaking out. Hide your tongue." And sometimes it said, "Do it; you have to; lick the envelope and commit to this message. Braver women have done much more." Out of cowardice, I debated. I put a dirty dish of comfort on top and forgot about it for a bit.
Maybe it would have been my my first thought if it were a different time. A time with a president who unflinchingly labeled himself a feminist and who acted like one; a time when organizations like Planned Parenthood were not in danger of being cut; a time when our country was not about to be led by a man who openly incites violence to smother opposing views, who is caught on camera bragging about the diurnal details of his routine of sexual assault, a man who would like to not only put up a wall but capture and rerelease "illegal" people as if they were an enemy species, a man built of money but devoid of integrity. Tomorrow our president?
Unfortunately, the time is now. And my first thought was, "what if I am assaulted for having this in my car's back window?" And I'm not saying that is our impending president's fault. He did not plant that idea in my brain; no of course not.
But there have been studies done about the potent power of authority. Stanley Milgram's experiment in 1963 found that many participants were willing to administer supposed electric shocks to others when instructed to do so by a man in a white coat. Sixty-five percent of participants were willing to administer the highest voltage of shock when encouraged by the authority figure (simplepsychology.org). It seems easier to do horrible things when you are told to do so by someone who is powerful; powerful and hateful.
It's hard to see a president with such aggressive, divisive, and misogynistic beliefs and not feel afraid that people will follow suit. That some little boy will watch him boisterously interrupt the person he's debating with and not carry that with him somehow- interrupt his friend in school the next day with a mirroring hand gesture or rude phrase. Or begin assigning numbers to women's bodies according to assessed quality; or talking about how they'll let you do anything if you're the captain of the football team. Or ostracizing the person wearing the hijab. Or laughing at that classmate with disabilities. Or assuming a deficit because of a pigment in skin. Or all of the above. This is not normal; this is not okay.
So many of you will say we are whining; that we are being over sensitive or crying about not getting our choice. And that is likely because you are in a position of privilege or you do not understand the potential for harm that this man and his administration embody. That you are charmed by his money; or that you are impressed by his "honesty". That's your opinion. That's your experience.
But I hope you can still listen. And hear us people who are terrified and angry and feel betrayed by the America we thought we knew. I hope that you can hear the feet of thousands of women marching to the beat of "this is not normal; we will not accept this; no, this is not okay."
I hope you hear the coins from the bottom of my pocketbook drop in the belly of Planned Parenthood's piggy bank. I hope you can hear the throbbing music from the LGBTQ activists dancing outside of Pence's place. I hope you hear the silence in the absence of voices at the inauguration from all of those absent performers that turned down the invitation.
I hope you hear me when I say our president genuinely scares me; when I say I am not afraid of what you think I am afraid of. Let me tell you, don't assume you know. Any day, anytime, I would be glad to Macarena in a porter potty filled with people who are transexual than occupy even the world's most spacious bathroom, 1,460 (please let the days of these four years fly) stalls down from our president elect. No thank you.
Please listen when I say I have taught the sons and daughters of moms and dads who hoped the grass was greener on this side but whose cards are not green; they are human beings who contribute to this country in ways you will never understand unless you listen. Escucha.
Listen. I will listen to you. I will listen to him. But each time I do, I am only more disgusted. I am sick. This is not normal. This is not okay for America or for any country or any person. We need to chant the mantra; refuse desensitization. It's not okay. It will not be four years from now. And I hope we can prove that then.
For now, I am here. I am here if you need to cry or scream or yell or rant or panic attack or pray. I am here and I am scared and I am angry and I am one of many who are stubborn and strong and set in our beliefs. And we will keep being here. So get ready for us.
Thank you so much to all of the incredible women marching around the country on Saturday to remind everyone of the rights of minorities who make up so much of who we are. You are so brave and so important and inspiring and I admire you so much. A huge shoutout to Amanda, my feminist mentor, for her dedication to the cause in Washington; I am so proud of you.
I'm sorry that I will not be there beside you. I'm sorry that I only have a sticker on my vehicle and a rant on my Facebook. But my heart beats in time with your stomps.
Thank you to everyone everywhere who is speaking out and marching on. You are what gives me hope about this country. You are what inspired me to press this sticker onto the cold pane this rainy evening.