I’m trying to set up a community for parents trying to parent in the midst of unprecedented and horrific historic events and apparently I had the exact same idea eight years ago because I just found my notes for it. Back then I was calling it “Parenting for Hope” and this time around I called it “Safe Space for Parents.”
I never got Parenting for Hope off the ground because I couldn’t figure out how to do it. In real life groups for parents are notoriously difficult to make happen. I’d always have parents begging me for classes or groups and I’d set them up and no one would come because people have soccer and have to make dinner and there’s homework to supervise, etc. etc. This time I thought it’d be easier because it’s virtual but so far only one and a half takers.
It may be the format, which is tricky if you’re used to Facebook but also if people could get used to it, it allows for a lot more intimacy.
I don’t know. I can’t really move it to the more FB type community space I have with my courses because I can only have one community there and I’ve left it a general community.
Anyway.
I’d like it to happen. I think the way forward is finding each other. But maybe everyone should just go to a nice little Reddit sub. Who knows?
I feel like I’m walking a mental health tightrope but also that I’ve gotten much better at balancing given that I’ve been therapizing through this kind of mess for a long time now.
I was thinking about that when M was talking about her feelings about voting. She was 12 when tr*mp was first elected. For her, politics have never worked; they’ve never been about her. In fact, they’ve actively pushed against her. Gen Z has watched their wants, wishes, and needs been shoved aside over and over again, even by the party that ostensibly represents her.
I don’t know what those Gen Z kids are going to do. They’re some of the most progressive interesting people and they’ve also got more than their fair share of trad wives and proud boys.
I just don’t know.
But then who does know?
This is basically the largest exposure response prevention program ever. Anxiety craves certainty the only thing we can be certain of is that it’s going to suck and be chaotic and that people will suffer. But how much? And when? And in what particular way? And how are we supposed to handle it?
One of the things that I know people have to face is the reality that most of us will NOT be hiding Ann Frank in our attic. We tell ourselves that we would be those people but statistically, most of us will not. And so one of the things that crumbles is our idea of ourselves as heroes; we are forced to face our own selfish humanity. That’s what survival sometimes looks like.
In the camps, survival could explicitly depend on one’s willingness to steal someone else’s bread crust. The best book I’ve read about this is This Way to the Gas, Ladies and Gentlemen by Tadeusz Borowiski. I think I found that book (at the Village Bookstore, natch) when I was 15 or 16?
My dad, like lots of Jewish men his age, was obsessed with WWII so my limited Judaism was entirely defined by anti-semitism. We never went to temple, we only celebrated a slapdash version of Hanukkah but by god, we saw those pictures and got lectured about the pogroms. Judaism wasn’t about being Jewish for me; it was about being hated.
So I knew about the holocaust but that book, Borowski’s book, was the one that really and truly brought it home for me. (Note: Borwoski wasn’t Jewish. He was in the camps because he was a political resister.)
Anyway. I think about survivor’s guilt a lot. In my line of work I see it come up so often. For adoptees who were adopted into safer families; for adult children whose lives turned out better than their parents’; for siblings who outgrew their family dysfunction. On and on and on. We are meant to grow but sometimes growing means pushing past and not stepping back to lend a hand because the hand is not welcome or the hand isn’t asking for help; it’s trying to pull you back down.
This moving forward anyway is not the same thing as actively pulling the ladder up behind you but it can feel like it. A lot (A LOT) of people stay stuck because growth would be a betrayal and it would mean ostracism. (Ask me how I know.)
This is some of what I’ve been hearing over the last 8+ years — this collapse not just of people’s feelings of safety and security but also their sense of who they would be in such situations. They thought they’d be on the front lines or giving away all of their cash or opening their homes to strangers and they’ve discovered that’s not, actually, who they are. And that is another kind of loss. That’s another way people are demoralized.
What’s that meme that went around for awhile? People did not watch enough Twilight Zone and it shows. Maybe we’re not going to join the other lottery participants in throwing stones at the winner but we’re also probably not going to be throwing our bodies between the crowd and the victim. Instead we discover the best we’ll do is slink off to the back of the crowd and then write a strongly worded email to our representative.
I have no judgment here — I really don’t because I see everyone is just kinda trying to keep their head above water, especially those who are actively parenting (thus my want to create a safe space). I think it takes all kind of effort and that finding our way is a process and there is need in the revolution for strongly worded emails, too. I’m just saying that some of the deep sadness I am witnessing (and feeling) is this recognition that most of us will not be heroes on the level of Malala (that’s what exceptional means, folks).
Oh well. Need to head into a full day of counseling! And so I will stop here.


