As we get ready to close the book on 2016 once and
for all, let us take a moment to be grateful that we’re still here and able to
hear or read these words – or in my case, express them in the best way I know
how. Together, we took a lot of hits and a few Ls and lost many soldiers along
the way yet we still march forward to the beat with the optimism that 2017 will
be a better year for each of us.
For example:
Too many icons of our childhoods died. At one point,
it seemed like we were all moving from one funeral service to another and the
dry cleaners were making a killing on our black suits and dresses but I’m not
just talking about our family members. We can fill in the blank RIP (_______)
and that may not be enough space or time to honor those who lived life to the
fullest or were taken away way too soon, such as the babies in Little Rock; my
stepdad-in-law; our church mother Sis. Jackson and mentor Deacon Reed; my
counselor from elementary school Mrs. Weeks; Maurice
White from Earth, Wind, & Fire; Prince; Harambe; Antolin Scalia; Zsa Zsa
Gabor; Willy Wonka; David Bowie; Muhammad Ali; Craig Sager; America as we know
it; and countless others.
If you wish to be funny, the botched demolition of
the Broadway Bridge does count.
What saddens me (other than President Obama’s last
few weeks in the White House) is how this year began with such promise and went
down the crapper so quickly. Then again, I did work nonstop for four consecutive
months covering a sick co-worker’s illness so I know how pitiful this year has
become with the missed holidays and life moments as well as delayed vacation
time.
I
may not like my job, but I like having my job.
But 2016 wasn’t all the doomsday gloom that we
remember it to be: My wife got a much
better car back in January; Caeli had a wonderful first birthday party; the
church’s food ministry went live in April; and I am a step closer to selling
barbecue full-time instead of sacrificing family time by working the night
shift to provide for them. Once the legalities are taken care of, I hope to
move enough meat to offset some of the overtime from the swamp and perhaps even
enter a tournament or two!
While none of us want to imagine what a Trump
presidency is going to look like beginning January 20, it is part of the
reality we have to deal with for the next four years. I just hope and pray that
our leaders have the gumption to be held accountable by the people instead of
the dollars and think tanks that inevitably influence their decision-making
abilities – and for those who voted for their skin folk instead of their
spiritual/fiscal kinfolks, I learned religion (to them) only matters if it is
of the right-wing variety that wishes a return to packing the rest of us into
cans of sardines and mackerel so they can be the only fish in the sea. I also
discovered an app to identify racists:
Facebook.
Just
so y’all know: When I post pro-black
items and factoids and uplifting historical content it does not mean I am anti-white;
I’m pretty freaking far from that. American history and
most things of significance have been skewed to favor those who have been able
to tell the story with a certain slant, and it is only recently when some
truths are finding their way to the surface inconveniencing a populace who has
believed for far too long in a solely Eurocentric world where the privilege
really isn’t what it is cracked up to be. Keep in mind that he who wins gets to
tell the stories no matter how inaccurate they turn out to be later.
What did 2016 actually bring us?
Conservative backlash with a vengeance (Van Jones
called it whitelash), a newfound idolatry of the almighty dollar bill, and the
byproducts of what happens when protected rights are weakened – and let’s not
include having to jump through hoops to see justice within the legal system. How
a jury in South Carolina could not convict Michael Slager for murdering Walter
Scott on video camera is beyond me, but this is the America we’ve come to
expect. Ditto for what happens when the Voting Rights Act are parceled out by
the Supreme Court piece by piece even beyond the gerrymandering from 2010. To
me, it seems like the Republican Party is leading us down a path similar to the
apartheid regime of South Africa [where the white minority runs the country].
2016 also brought us a heightened awareness of
mental illness and the value of breaking away from stress. Many of you may have
noticed that I don’t post with the same frequency as I did earlier in the year
– the reason was I needed some mental days (rather: weeks) to bounce back to
being myself. The stress of overwork and being pulled in hundreds of different
directions simultaneously plus my own stupidity have been the combined cause of
losing it at work, a visit to a professional counselor, and otherwise living on
autopilot.
Through it all, I am grateful that those who are
reading or listening to these words are still with me in one capacity or
another. Thanks to my amazing wife and toddler daughter for putting up with me
all year long through the ups and downs of the journey; my friends, family, and
neighbors for not forsaking me when I was at my lowest; the swamp for keeping
me employed when the Keefe coffee alone wasn’t enough; our church family for
being there for each other; and for even those who found me outside of their
world or I don’t see enough, I’m glad you’re still around.
God bless, I’m out.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Keep your comments civil and clean. If you have to hide behind anonymous or some false identity, then you're part of the problem with comment sections. Grow up and stand up for your words/actions.