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Returning to Politics
ack in the day
It occurs to me that
these two items may not be
entirely unrelated. As C.J.
stands on the brink of entry
into the wider, public
world (I know, I know, it's
only kindergarten Actually, that's not quite it. I always think about what the world is like, partly because that's my job. But lately I find myself, more and more, wanting to do something about it. This is not a new feeling. In college in the 1970s, which is to say in the shadow of the '60s, I did my share of marching, petitioning, and arguing. But at some point it began to feel as if political activism was an all-or-nothing kind of calling, and that if were to choose the activist road, other roads might be closed to me. Newspaper work, for one. There's a funny tension in this business, in which we're called to care deeply about righting wrongs and bringing injustices to light, and yet we're asked to keep our political affiliations to ourselves. We don't march, we don't petition, we don't argue � at least, not too loudly, and not at public meetings. But isn't not marching a political act, too? Still, it wasn't just my job that kept me home. I was busy, I was distracted, and, perhaps most important, I was increasingly skeptical that marches or petitions or arguments could really change the world. And so, gradually but definitely, politics became something that other people did, something that was disconnected from daily life, something Out There. And yet, as we said all those times, the personal is political. A truth repeated often enough becomes a slogan, then a cliche. Yet it can still be true. Why, then, is it so hard to hang on to this slippery fact? Politics is not just something Out There; it's what we do in our homes, how we take care of our families and do our work and talk to our friends, the choices we make and don't make in every aspect of our daily lives. The personal is political, and the political is personal, too. If remembering this were just my problem, I would keep it to myself � or, at most, sheepishly confess to friends that I wish I could find a way to resolve the conflict between wanting to do Something That Matters and wanting to make sure C.J. is ready for kindergarten. But I don't think it's just me. Many of us, I find, outside of a small and committed core of people who have devoted their lives to activism, have slowly and sadly come to feel divorced from politics. Somehow we just don't take it personally anymore.
Sure, we vote
But when it comes to
tackling problems that
aren't directly connected to
our daily lives or to addressing
the underlying
forces that are causing
some of these problems, we
feel small and overwhelmed.
Global corporations,
millionaire politicians,
and the many deeply
intertwined connections
among them Maybe just wanting to is a place to start. The desire to act isn't everything, of course, but it is the seed of action.
This story ran in the Boston Globe Magazine on 7/13/2003.
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