Dee's Blog
www.takecourage.org
Fri 02/01/2008
The Dilemma of Those Who March to a More Progressive Drummer
Topic: Making Changes

Most anyone reading this blog is likely to identify to a degree with John Laurens.  Historians say he was an intensely idealistic young man for the Revolutionary War era. 

One of the facts that has been left out of traditional history books is that slaves were used in large numbers to fight in the War.  Some enlisted with the promise of being freed for their sacrifice--promises that were seldom kept! 

John Laurens believed that slaves should be freed before they ever fought.  His father, like many people of that day, said he believed that the slaves should be promised freedom that would be granted after the War, but not a moment sooner.  The general thinking was that slaves could not be trusted to persevere, to finish the war efforts, if their freedom was not contingent on such devotion.

So John abandoned that original plan, but not his passion.  We might say that he lowered his expectations, but not his more idealistic dreams.  Perhaps he just realized that his dreams were ahead of the time.  All of this is what survivors and activists, fighting for any social cause, are forced to do because of legal constraints, society's resistance, or family pressures, etc. 

John moved on.  He chose to apply his beliefs to the place where he held personal power.  It cost him a lot to take a stand, but it seems he thought the stand was worth the sacrifice.  We can only imagine how long it may have taken him to weigh the cost.

The young man convinced his father to specify his individual inheritance in many fine slaves, rather than land or money.  Of course, this gave him the privilege of freeing his slaves ultimately, refusing to consider or to treat them as property.  This meant that John sacrificed a fortune. 

Some of you sacrifice your time to make a difference in regard to sexual and domestic violence.  Some have the means to make financial sacrifices.  And do.  Others are willing to be ostracized in order to have a voice in resistant communities and institutions where the Good Old Boy/Girl System still exists.

Thanks to all who can identify in any way with John Laurens, for whatever reason.


Posted by Dee Ann Miller at 7:42 AM CST
Updated: Fri 02/01/2008 7:49 AM CST
Thu 01/31/2008
Making Music, Making Sense
Topic: music

It's beyond me.   I don't know how to explain to you what I want to say today, about the lightbulb that turned on in my head late last night and again this morning.  It's related to music.  It's also very MUCH related to the idea of collective memory, our subconscious, evolving thought, all of that ying-yang.

Last night in the middle of a lesson, using a book I've only used with this one rather advanced student, I saw something another student had been trying to TEACH me a few years ago.  Problem was, he half knew what he was talking about.  And like most of us as students, he believed that I, as his teacher would surely know more about it than he did.  He wanted me to help him understand the part he didn't understand.  I couldn't even grasp what he was asking me to do.  So I did what was safe, but not good teaching technique--I took him back to my own familiar territory.

The former student is now 88 years old and in a nursing home.  I'm  going to see him today, partly because I want and need to see him and partly because I can't wait to tell him what happened last night.  I'm hoping he's up to getting up to the piano today.  Maybe we can learn together!

Somehow, I think this is very much the way we sometimes wander through life, picking up pieces that later fit into the puzzle that we weren't even able to grasp earlier--back when we didn't even understand the question, much less the solution.

This morning, bright and early, I sat down at the keyboard and began playing familiar, rather simple tunes in new ways.  Because that's what my student from years earlier, the one I was supposed to be teaching, the one who had never had more than 2-3 lessons when he came to me, was trying to teach me. 

Isn't it amazing how life comes full circle?

 


Posted by Dee Ann Miller at 9:29 AM CST
Updated: Thu 01/31/2008 9:32 AM CST
Wed 01/30/2008
Collective Memory
Topic: coping

Collective memory is a term that refers to a group or family or people of shared experience who share common memories. 

African-American mothers, for instance, back in the days of slavery often had children who were the products of rape or sexual exploitation from their masters.  They were forced to bear the children and to raise the children, knowing that they were really a part of the mass production of people that would be used for the slave master's benefit.

The tragedy that is often forgotten is the on-going result of these horrible acts of terrorism and power abuse.  Those children that were a part of the very blood and sinew of those mothers, the victimized women often turned on.  They hated what their bodies had produced.  Especially if those children were treated, as they often were, by the masters with special privilege so that they were even brought into the master's home as special servants while their mothers remained victims.  What a price to pay!

Psychologists sometimes wonder if the collective memories that were shared, but often not even processed, among the slave women victims were passed on into the culture as unspoken attitudes or psychological damage effecting many of the heirs, in bits and pieces.  Thereby effecting African-American culture in ways that are needing  to be further explored.  If only we could open up the channels of communication more for the survivors, several generations removed.

Not just in African-American culture.  For all Americans would have remnants of such stories roaming around in our larger collective memories or behaviors that have effected us because of others' memories.  Because we need to re-write the narratives into a reality that allows us to overcome the effects of collusion throughout our culture.  And throughout our religious institutions, as well.

Gets me thinking.


Posted by Dee Ann Miller at 4:44 PM CST
Updated: Wed 01/30/2008 5:47 PM CST
Tue 01/29/2008
A Marathon Test
Mood:  crushed out
Topic: coping

Nothing ever prepares us for a sudden death.  There is no good time to schedule it if we even could.  It's always a wake-up call, and it certainly was for our family.

Nancy was only 3 years older than me.  She basically dropped dead last week, leaving our three grandsons with only one grandmother now.  That would be me.  

Ron and I did our best, these past few days, to be there for the grandsons, especially.   I wept with them, and snuggled the younger ones in my arms longer than usual.  They all seemed to feel a part of my skin and vice versa. 

Yet I can never fill Nancy's shoes and don't expect to.  She was the one who loved parties, elaborate birthday cakes, giving expensive presents, and crafts.  I'm the one who loves museums, games, simplicity, and music.

My tendency to over-function (the equivalent of "increasing") is finding it's limits more and more, as I age.  Nancy and I shared that tendency.  Her death reminds me of how quickly I could be taken out of the picture and just how quickly life could go on without me as others are forced to assume new ways of functioning and coping. 

After 9 days away from home, at a very inconvenient time to leave, I feel as if life has pulled me apart.  Or crushed me down to almost nothing.

In reality, it boiled me down so that I can see what I'm really made of.  To see my strengths and vulnerabilities.  My abilities and limitations.   To re-evaluate so many things.   Most of all to treasure the routine that grounds me spiritually and emotionally and keeps me on stable ground.   It feels so good to be home again, to have my space, to be able to take care of myself, to stabilize my own blood pressure, knowing that the still small voice within me, the voice that comes from my very soul, the voice that was there before I was born or even created, the voice that is a part of every one of us, that voice of God as I understand God to be, has helped me to find my way through this latest storm. 

More than anything else it has reminded me that taking care of myself and teaching others to do the same is the first essential of life. 

Because of the storm, I will learn and grow.  Not just survive. 


Posted by Dee Ann Miller at 8:18 AM CST
Fri 01/25/2008
Taking a break
Dee is taking a few days off from the blog due to a death in the family.  She hopes to return to posting by the end of the month. 

Posted by Dee Ann Miller at 12:01 AM CST
Thu 01/24/2008
Getting the Narrative Down
Topic: spirituality

Back in 1924, Rockefeller had a dream that the era of the Revolution would be honored with the establishment of a national park at Williamsburg. For years, the era was glorified in the same way the history books had written the narrative.

Problem was that the narrative was found to be wanting as historians found the courage to challenge it. So in the 1970’s, the truth about slavery began to be interspersed with the traditional narrative. With much public resistance, as you might expect.

At one point, even a mock auction was carried out. One time only. Not again because the players themselves, both black and white, were so overcome with powerful emotions that it was evident that it would be too difficult for the actors. Perhaps too difficult to even find actors.

So, if we cannot revisit a scene, even knowing full well that it is just a re-enactment, how can we possibly convey unspeakable horrors. I’m not sure we can. And this brings up another question: If we can’t convey the horrors fully, is there a possibility of ever changing our understanding of the past?  Or re-write the narrative so that it reflects the truth, in both spirit and fact.


Posted by Dee Ann Miller at 12:01 AM CST
Wed 01/23/2008
The Problem with Ancestor Worship
Topic: Power

So we have glorified George Washington while declaring the Africans who worship their ancestors to be “heathen.”  I find that interesting.

How does this compare to the way we have arranged our religious beliefs into rigid black and white thinking, leaving no room for ambiguity? Would this be part of the reason that so many in the church cannot tolerate the thought of questioning traditions or upholding high moral standards for leaders? Is this why evil is so often suppressed in our institutions today?


Posted by Dee Ann Miller at 12:01 AM CST
Tue 01/22/2008
Liberty for All?
Topic: Power

Only denial would allow people to fight for universal freedom while raffling off human “property” that held no hope for liberty and no hope for the pursuit of happiness. People who rejoiced and mourned in the same breath each time they brought a new child into the world. For the child was born with sorrowful future. Most surely facing human rights violations that would make anybody, with even a halfway pure heart, cringe.

Not only were slave masters like Washington living in denial, so were their biographers. Yes, even our teachers who never seemed to think it important to teach us the origins of slavery. Nor to point out that it existed long before the Revolutionary War.

Not that they necessarily knew themselves that people were debating the slavery issue back then, even as some suggested that the abolishment of slavery be clearly written into the Constitution. Truth is, I seriously doubt any of my history teachers knew this fact. Somehow history managed to teach us that nobody questioned slavery until the 1800’s.

Certainly nobody told us that people in England were clucking their tongues and some even laughing at the blatant hypocrisy that was exhibited by the idealists who were insisting on “freedom for all.”


Posted by Dee Ann Miller at 12:01 AM CST
Updated: Thu 01/17/2008 10:01 PM CST
Mon 01/21/2008
The Essence of Change
Topic: Making Changes
All change creates fear.  All change that involves creating liberty for all is born out of obvious suffering of the oppressed and a giving up of past beliefs that no longer can be ethically  justified as serving a larger good.  Not necessarily outright war, but at least an internal emotional struggle on the domestic front, whether in government, homes, churches, or other institutions.

Posted by Dee Ann Miller at 12:01 AM CST
Sun 01/20/2008
Beyond Mere Tolerance
Topic: Aliens

Recently I had opportunity to see a documentary "The Street of Dreams" about race relations in Omaha, NE.  First in a museum, later on PBS.  It was especially interesting since I live in the Omaha metro and have worked 24th Street (the one highlighted), as a psychiatric nurse.  It is a street that once thrived and prospered as a culturally and economically strong area.  That was 50 years ago.  Before major social upheaval occurred because of a variety of poor choices on the part of the city's leaders, as well as some of the citizens in the 24th Street area.  It was a study that should send all viewers into serious introspection about the complex social and moral issues.

The film was especially interesting since I am in this process of writing about both the international Jewish community and the slave problem in the early days of this nation, long before either Jews or African-Americans came in mass to this metro area.  What the two groups had in common, as they flooded this area about a century ago, was that they were fleeing in mass numbers from oppression.  What they found here was a community that intially received them.  A place of refuge. 

There was limited discrimination and unrest here locally until they became a perceived threat to the well-being of Caucasians who'd always taken for granted their "right" to not compete vigorously for jobs.  It was only when the two groups--Jews and "niggers"--were considered a threat to the status quo that prejudiced really started to grow. 

Most interesting and enlightening was the fact that, in our nation, the problems seem to multiply on the domestic front following each war.  It happens when the job market is squeezed with returning soldiers, and each time (roughly every two decades on the average) the prejudices and oppression is increased in favor of the dominant group. 

This is not unlike what happened to women after World War II.  Having learned skills that were "no longer needed, thank you," the women suddenly found jobs hard to find.  Out of that was born the women's movement that has created many positive changes, as well as challenges, in our society. 

This may seem far afield from the issues that brought you to this site.  Truth is, it's very related.  Discrimination, for whatever reason, increases only when the dominant group or the group in power perceives people with increased courage to be a threat.  When the group or individual is considered to be only a small threat, tolerance is usually the best that can be hoped for.  Tolerance alone does not produce change, however. 

When the perceived threat increases to a panic (often occurring when the oppressed have managed to become sufficiently frustrated so that they find ways to be heard or noticed, whether functional or not)....then the shunning and open spite hits record levels, with increased attempts to even legalize discriminatory practices or block laws that would decrease discrimination. 

If you have had the courage to speak out, challenging the way people understand violence or the myriad of it's related issues, then this likely makes a lot of sense to you.  If not, someday it may.   The trick is to learn to embrace the struggles as a part of being spiritually alive.


Posted by Dee Ann Miller at 12:01 AM CST
Updated: Tue 01/15/2008 1:46 PM CST

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