I don't know what will happen tomorrow. No one really does. Because no matter what any polls suggest right now, uncertainty is the only certainty. What I do know is this: four years ago, everything was in turmoil. Everything was precarious. The housing market had crashed, the economy had crashed, people were despairing everywhere. Obama offered hope, and while the ascension from those seemingly bottomless depths has been slow, the climb has been a steady one. And it is hope that sustained us.
This campaign has been endless and ugly. I truly fear for the future. I fear a backsliding, an undoing of all the good that has been done. I worry about my rights as a woman and the rights of my daughters to govern their own bodies and to love whomever it is they choose to love. I worry about the earth's health, and the health of all the people on it. I need hope that our movement as a country, as people, will be forward.
Below is the letter I wrote to the girls so they might never forget the importance of that historic moment. And lest I ever forget the pride, the excitement, and, most importantly, the hope I felt for my country that day just over four years ago:
January 19, 2009
Dear Kicky and Esmée,
I just put you down to sleep after a
long day off from work and school. Your Daddy is at the theatre at
one of the inauguration events, and I am here, listening to the
sounds of the house as you fall asleep.
I know you both understand what is
happening tomorrow, though I also know you are too little still to
understand how very important this day is. Your father and I debated
for a long time about whether or not we should take you down to the
Mall to witness the swearing in of our 44th president, Mr.
Barack Obama. And it was with a heavy heart, and more than a little
hesitation, that I finally told your father to accept the ticket that
had been offered to him and made the decision that we girls would
stay home to watch Obama address this nation as President for the
very first time.
On the news, the streets that we drive
every day are filled with people. There is a line trailing two blocks
long out of Ben’s Chili Bowl on U Street. The Mall is crawling with
people who will sleep in the cold all night just to be closer to him
tomorrow. Esmée, when you go to school on Wednesday, you will be
only blocks away from where the Obama girls eat and play and sleep.
People have traveled here (our home, the place where we live!)
from all over this country, all over this world, just to take part in
this moment in history.
I can’t help but worry that I am
depriving you of an experience of a lifetime, that some day I may
truly wish I had risked the crowds and suffered the cold with you, so
that you could also be a part of history. That this will be one of my
big regrets. We live so close. We could almost walk. But I only want
you warm and safe. And as your mommy, that trumps everything, right?
What I need to remind myself is that
you are a part of this moment in history. You, my two bright
eyed, curly-haired angels, are Martin Luther King Jr.’s
dream realized. You too are products of the civil rights struggle
which has ultimately led to this moment. You too are proof that this
world can change.
Your grandfather, who passed away
before you were born, was a young man back when Rosa Parks sat in the
front of the bus. Around the same time he was one of the first black
lifeguards at an all white east coast beach. When he proposed to your
Nonna (and she said yes) it was with the understanding that they
might both lose their jobs. That their love for each other would
threaten friendships and family ties. They risked everything to be
together. And the result was more than twenty-five years of marriage,
your Auntie B, and your Daddy.
And, thankfully, their courage, and the
courage of countless others was not in vain. By the time your father
and I fell in love, the world had shifted on its axis. Changed.
Now, when I look around your classrooms
at the myriad of colors (at the faces in all their beautiful shades
of brown and peach and cream), my heart thrills at your curiosity
about each others' differences and your simultaneous ability to
transcend them. You are dumbfounded by our fascination with this,
can’t understand why a brown-skinned man in the White House is such
an anomaly. You are seemingly incapable of prejudice. Racial bias is,
at least for now, a bitter relic of your ancestors’ pasts.
Tomorrow, we will watch our future
unfold on TV, safe and warm inside. You may or may not remember the
details of this day, but I will try to remember them for you.
Whether we are there or not, you are
a part of history, little ones. You are the proof. Yes we
can, he says. And I believe -- I have to believe for you
-- he is telling the truth.
On this day and every day, I love
you…to the bottom of the ocean and back to the top,
Mommy
5 comments:
Wow. Another thoughtful, stirring blog post. My hopes for my daughter and granddaughter's future are the same as you hold for your daughters. My fears echo yours. Let us hope tomorrow is a good day for all of us. Thanks, Tammy.
Trying desperately not to SOB at my computer as I read. Beautiful & moving! I too remember that election night and inauguartion so vividly and rejoiced that my child would be raised to see this as normal. Love it! And today I PRAY that we will move FORWARD, not back. Blessings, dear Tammy!
Trying desperately not to SOB at my computer as I read. Beautiful & moving! I too remember that election night and inauguartion so vividly and rejoiced that my child would be raised to see this as normal. Love it! And today I PRAY that we will move FORWARD, not back. Blessings, dear Tammy!
Thank you for reminding me what that hope felt like 4 years ago!
Thanks, all. All we can do now is vote and wait :)
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