9.05.2009

In Defense Of My President

So, it's less than a year into the Obama presidency, and where do we stand?

The ultra right-wing, the Republican base, the twenty percent (or so) of Americans who believe Sarah Palin is a viable politician (and decent human being) are cowering in their bunkers, hands on their rifles, waiting nervously for the Socialist Elite to come storming into town, steal all their stuff and perform pot-fueled abortions on illegal immigrant lesbians using taxpayer money. It is, they are certain, Armageddon.

The ultra left-wing, meanwhile, the twenty percent (or so) of Americans who secretly long to be in the feared Socialist Elite, but only so they can inflict their fuel-efficient cars and organic vegetables onto an unsuspecting public, are becoming more and more outraged by the fact that it's nearly 2010 and the president STILL hasn't hung Dick Cheney for his war crimes. They are becoming disappointed in the man they assumed would steer the right-leaning country into a glorious era of peace, shared prosperity and unparalleled human rights.

In between: everybody else. Mostly, I think, they're feeling a little better about the economy and a little freaked out that the national debt is threatening to suffocate the financial lives of their future grandchildren, great-grandchildren or great-great-grandchildren.
I think they are hopeful that some big, necessary changes are around the corner to increase their quality of life and their quantity of life, and I think they are scared that those changes will have repercussions that nobody is prepared for. America voted for change. And we're getting it. And change scares the living daylights out of us.

Most people know I stand firmly on the left... especially on social issues, less so on fiscal ones, but generally I align with the Democrats even if I wish they were less wishy-washy. I share in some of the frustration that other liberals feel... worried that we are squandering this time we have in power... worried that we are not changing at as rapid of a clip as we should. I cringe, sometimes, at the compromises being made and the diluting of the message that the president rode to victory.

But when I stand back for a moment and try to look objectively at what's going on, I feel somewhat bolstered and reassured. I find myself standing in staunch defense of the president and his actions. Not because I agree with the outcome, but because I agree with the reasoning.

One of the things that made me livid during the eight years of GWB that the nation endured was his assumption that his presidential win, no matter how slight, was some sort of mandate from the masses. It was not. It was a psuedo-victory at best... an acknowledgment that just a smidge over (or under, as was the case in 2000) half of us thought he was the best man for the job. Bush acted as if he were representing all of us, as if he were given the reigns of leadership with our full approval and thumbs up. And he became a dictator. He did not lead with the will of the people in mind. He led with nothing but his own ideas (and Cheney's) to guide him. And he further split the poles of us apart while cementing his place as a terrible leader and a poor representative of democracy. He steamrolled his way through the presidency, and I hated him for it.

Now times have changed, the pendulum has swung enough to give my side the narrow (although impressively larger!) margin of victory and a liberal population held under the thumb of oppressive conservatism for nearly a decade snarled back to life and demanded a massive shift in direction to counteract the spiraling decline of the Bush era. In essence, now that we have the power, we want to do exactly what Bush did, except we want to do it for the right reasons. (Well, what we consider to be the right reasons (they totally are, though).)

But, despite the Democrats' victory, public opinion is not consistently on their side. Despite the fact that most Americans really would be helped by extending a public option for health care they still stand, somewhat unsurely, against it. While homosexual rights are the logical extension of the equality promised in our Declaration of Independence, a big contingent of Americans are still opposed to gay marriage. There is definitely righteous indignation in the voices of the left and I believe in what my ideology stands for... but this is a democracy, and for better or worse, that means public opinion is still supposed to hold sway over our elected, representative leaders. I hated Bush for dismissing the public in his decisions... I admire Obama for taking them into account, even when their views clash with his.

What will be gained by pushing forth an agenda that Americans are not ready for? The results of dictation, here, are never good. When an idea is foisted upon the public before the public is ready for it, it fails... and usually spectacularly. There is usually a violent and unproductive swing back to square one and progressiveness loses out in favor of tradition. When leaders bully their way through the American public, their agendas end up going one step forward and two steps back. Conservatives are feeling that right now. They are seeing the momentum of the last two years of Clinton and the first two years of Bush Jr. dwindled to stagnation punctuated by the loudest and silliest of their membership. All of the work they did making inroads into the public consciousness were lost as Bush elevated his concerns above that of the nation he was leading. He wasn't afraid to make an unpopular decision, but he should have been at least cognizant of WHY those decisions were unpopular.

The fact is, progress is being made, and although it's probably slower than we Dems would like to see, it's, in its way, remarkable. We're talking, on a national scale, about public health care. Everyone in the country is engaged in the debate... some of us are terrified, some of us are thrilled, some of us just think that, by God, we've got to try SOMETHING new. But this is the most viable conversation we've had about health care in my lifetime! And, yes, it's divisive. There's no way it won't be. But we're not dragging most of the country kicking and screaming into some new system... we're dipping our feet in slowly, mostly, trying to warm up, hoping not to have our toes eaten by sharks. If it seems like a small victory, think about where we were on the topic a year ago today. This is a massive undertaking. People won't accept a wholesale change without freaking out. They just won't. Right or wrong, that's the way it is.

So the president is moving slowly. He is making the attempt to sell his ideas to the public! What a novel concept that is. And yes, it drives me batty to see loony tunes folks shrieking at their congresspeople, but most of the town hall meeting attendees are not frightening psychopaths. Most of them just want to know what the hell is going on and how it might impact them. And while seeing the thousand page bill and hearing twice that many interpretations of it might not be altogether reassuring, I think there's a definite feeling of at least feeling connected to the process of legislating that we haven't had in an awfully long time. Listening to people unfortunately means compromise... And it means a watering down of the original potent message. But it also means bridges are built and a nation starts to be reconstituted after years of dissolution.

It's going to be slow and painful... moreso knowing we could just freaking do it because we've got the votes and even Al Franken for God's sake.

But that's a long term recipe for liberal disaster.

So I stand in defense of my president. I may not agree with his every move, but I think his motives are sound and his intelligence is immense. He's a strong enough leader to stand up for as many people as possible, even if that means, sometimes, disappointing his base in the short term. But I, for one, would rather put my trust in a man who doesn't cater to the far reaches of his side, but tries to tug the country, one battle at a time, in the right direction.

That's a foundation for long term success, not just for my party but for our country.

9.01.2009

Change

As the darkness of night closed in on Marshall, he sat on his bed, his head in his hands, and a sort of monolithic sorrow crushing his chest. He was certain, now, of his own stupidity, his absolute lack of grace. He had ruined everything and he was sure it was never going to be good again.

The sun set, and dark rolled in, and soon, Marshall was illuminated only by an orange glow of parking lot lights streaming in through the half-open slats of his blinds. A desk fan oscillated and hummed. Dogs barked outside. Every now and then, he could hear a couple pass by on the sidewalk or a car drive past. He felt sick. Isolated. Alone. He replayed the day’s events in his head, over and over, and with each successive viewing, the error seemed more obvious. It seemed more egregious. A cool breeze blew in through the window and jostled the blinds. There was a mild din of plastic on drywall as the treatment slapped around. He didn’t know what to do now. He felt paralyzed. Abandoned.

Nothing good, he decided, came from expressing emotion. Nothing good came from telling someone how you really feel. All it does, he decided, is shatter finely built illusions. All it does is force reality to come charging through like rhino. When people ask you how you’re doing, they don’t really care. Nobody wants to hear about your fears or your worries or your hopes or your dreams. That’s what therapists are for. People want the artifice of intimacy without really knowing a thing about one another. That’s what she had wanted. And he wrecked that. He wrecked it and he didn’t know how, of even if, it could be rebuilt.

At some level, of course, Marshall knew she knew. She had to know. She wasn’t stupid. She wasn’t blind. She saw him fawn over her, gush over her, leap to her defense, beg for time. She saw all of that. She knew he was in love. But she was lucky enough to not really know. She could believe anything she wanted. She had nothing but circumstantial evidence… just an idea of it, no proof. Before he felt the need to upend his guts and tell her, breathlessly, just how in love he was, she could claim blissful and beautiful ignorance. Her reality was constructed in such a way that she and Marshall could be friends and nothing more, because Marshall never made the demand of anything else. She was fine pretending at closeness, and assumed that he was too. But inside, he was dying. Inside, he was clamoring to expel the truth.

As he sat on his bed in the dark, he wondered why he did it. He couldn’t adequately explain it. His stomach had been in knots around her. His brain hemispheres fused together in awe and lovestruck idiocy whenever the two of them were together. He cherished those moments, like rare stamps in some collection of time. Those moments stood out to him, and he wanted more. She was clear in her boundaries, but it didn’t stop his ridiculous heart or his ridiculous head from wanting, so badly, to cross into her borders. He kept it in check. He convinced himself, for a while, having her affection in any way was enough. But it wasn’t. It wasn’t close. It only whet his appetite. Every minute with her called out for duplication, for exponential growth. Every blush of something more only made the gulf between his hope and his reality that much more pronounced. He began to loathe the situation, the limits, the constraints and he hated himself for being cowed into action by his own asinine feelings.

He laid down then, on top of his blankets, in his clothes and tried to sleep, but he failed miserably in the attempt...

As night fell, Meredith was laying on her bed, struggling with a headache and pressing down on her eyes with her forearm draped across her face. She was sad and she was tired and she was angry that she wasn’t going to get to sleep tonight. She wished, somehow, she could go back and erase the last few hours, or that, at the very least, she could get a do-over. With her eyes shut so tightly, all she could see was the look of heartbreak on his face as he whispered “I love you,” and she responded with, “No you don’t.”

He did love her. She knew it. She didn’t want to know it and she certainly didn’t want to admit it, but it was doubtless. There was a polished sheen to the way he treated her… there was, in his words and his actions, a sort of barely contained admiration that both flattered and frustrated her. She knew. She could even pinpoint when his affection changed, when it grew it something unwieldy and larger than life. She saw the difference. He struggled with it, she could tell. And she wanted, badly, to somehow put him at ease. But she didn’t know what to say. The idea of it scared her to death. The idea that things could sour, that the status quo, a good status quo, might change made her sick to her stomach. So she ignored it and prayed that he would latch his attention on to somebody else. The idea of that made her queasy too. She liked things exactly how they were, but nothing stays the same for very long. Today she felt like she was watching a distant tornado, admiring it from her roof before realizing with dawning horror that it was headed straight for her. Now things had changed, and badly, and he was hurt and she was hurt and she didn’t know how to soothe any of it.

It wasn’t exactly that she wasn’t interested. She was. As much as she gagged at the idea of a soul mate, he was awfully close to that ideal, and she felt better with him than she did without. For Meredith, that was about as high of praise as any potential mate could get. But she squirmed, sometimes, at the idea of it as well. She would imagine the awkwardness of a first real date, a first real kiss… she would cringe at the thought of actual intimacy with someone she genuinely cared about because it just left so much room for things to go awry. She couldn’t bear the thought of losing him, so she kept up as many walls as possible and expunged any romantic notion of him from her head. Every now and then, her heart would twinge as she felt the flush of his kindness, of his compassion, of thoughtfulness she didn’t believe she’d ever be the recipient of. And she would crumble, a little, and try desperately not to let on.

Now, as the moon rose and she downed a cocktail of too many aspirin and too much Diet Coke, she was struck by just how off the rails it had all gone. She wished, then, that she could cry, because it seemed like other people in similar situations always felt better after a good cry. But she couldn’t do it. She didn’t even know what muscle to flex. She felt sad enough, certainly, but it just sat on her shoulders, heavy and damp, and she slumped back onto her bed and covered up her eyes again and pictured him, standing there, trembling with emotion and rejected wholesale by the girl he adored. If it had been anyone else she would have chastised their weakness, she would have mocked how much they cared. But she could feel it from it, waves of heat like the warmth of a campfire, and it was sincere and it was directed at her. She wanted, at that moment, to wrap her arms tightly around him and press her lips against his and tell him, madly, that she loved him too. She imagined it, and it seemed strained. It wasn’t her, and it wasn’t the response she could ever muster no matter how deeply she felt for him. It was too much, too theatrical… too showy. She did love him. If she was honest, she had to admit it, but she’d never love him in the same way he loved her. He’d never believe it because she’d never be able to show him. She convinced herself that, bad as this was, it was better in the long run.

But the long run seemed awfully far off on the horizon, and the here and now sucked. She hated knowing how badly he felt and she hated, even more, how badly she felt, herself. She tried, again, to picture the two of them, together, actually together, holding hands or sharing popcorn or driving late at night to faraway, star spackled beaches, content in a lovely silence and happy just to be with one another. And all of it fit. She didn’t retch, she didn’t recoil. The kissing, the sex, the gangly retro-teenage awkwardness of a burgeoning relationship was surmountable. It would, she was certain, be enjoyable at some point, even if it took some getting used to. So why did she balk at it? Why was her reaction so harsh and so cold and so damning? She knew why.

To let him in, to open that door and start something new would mean a drastic change. And Meredith saw all of the potential pitfalls... whatever he had to offer, she couldn't see the benefits being worth the trouble. She was angry at herself for admitting that, but she was, at her core, a brutally honest girl. She struggled with the loss and desperately searched reason to find a decent way out... but she couldn't think of anything to do or anything to say to assuage the situation.

She let out a soft painful moan and tried to sleep. She couldn't do it. Her brain wouldn't shut the hell up.

At around three in the morning, both Marshall and Meredith were bleary-eyed and wild with insomnia. Both of them thought fondly of the other, and then coldly, and then angrily and back to fondly again. Both of them felt bound by arbitrary rules, bound by some unwritten etiquette, bound by limitations and expectations they had set for themselves, and they were suffering because of it. Both of them felt hollow, out of sorts with the circumstances and lost in some sickening, confusing sea. Both of them wanted nothing more than to call the other, to hear the voice on the other end of the line and say, without hesitation or fear or anxiety that they loved one another. Both of them wanted that vocal embrace, that reassurance that despite a wretched day, things between them would be just fine.

Both of them stared at their telephones, paralyzed by the moment, and unable to act. They were certain things had changed forever.