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Where Were You When the aradigm Shifted – Part II
… on the morning of inauguration, thousands of folks stood patiently, obediently, and quietly in line waiting for our gates to open, clutching
our precious purple tickets. Every once in a while someone would start a chant of “O-BA-MA!” or “Fire it up, ready to go!” But the chants would die out in 10-20 seconds from lack of response.
Instead what we found in our section was a sense of entitlement. “I’ve
been here since 5 am and you cannot cut in front of me”… “I’m going to
call my brother about this…he’s an agent!” Some people started to get
claustrophobic and paranoid: “I gotta get out of here…what if someone
does something crazy?”
But also, out of this chaos, community began to emerge. A young guy
from California discovered that the logjam of people emerging from the
metro was trying to get past us but getting stuck. He suggested we open
a channel for them to pass through so we could also move. He enlisted
help and 8 or 10 of us coached a line of pedestrians past our section.
“Come on through! Watch your step…Single file…Keep moving!” we urged.
This spontaneous grassroots effort shifted the energy and made it flow,
made us active instead of passive, and helped others in need.
…Where do we plan to go from here? Will we stand like cows at the
inauguration gate, comfortable in our privilege and level of
entitlement while getting nowhere? Will we watch Obama from afar and
criticize him for not enough change fast enough?
Will we withdraw into our cocoons, hypnotizing ourselves with cable TV and Facebook, smug in our electoral success?
The Obamas are in the (White) house. What will we create together? How
will we transform chaos into community? Who dares to stop us now? -
Peggy Hong
Standing next to the Washington Monument, shivering my ass off and grinning like an idiot. J. Jason Groschopf
I was in my car, listening to Obama’s speech on NPR. The light was red
at Halyard & North and a young man was waiting for the bus, so I
cranked my radio, rolled down the window and said you gotta listen to
this! He came to the car. The light changed and I asked where he was
going. He told me and I said get in the car, I’d take him. We sat
there, side by side, total strangers – a young black man and middle
aged white lady, holding hands and listening to the speech. My tears
were flowing freely! When we got to his house, he hugged and thanked me
and got out of the car. What an amazing experience! (I think it took a
lot of courage on his part to get into a stranger’s car and trust that
I’d take him to his destination – I sure wouldn’t have!) Sally
Nordstrom
Great hope is the bane of great change. If all we do is hope for
change, then change will surely not come. But if we work for change,
then the change has already begun. What we witness today is a president
who will open the door for us; but who cannot usher in change single
handily. We, collectively are the change agents, if we choose to use
this opportunity to do so. Let’s resolve to do so and make our country
and our community a better place for all. Michael Soika, Executive
Director, YMCA-Urban Campus
I watched the inauguration with 60 bilingual sixth grade students.
Usually when we watch movies they spend their time chatting and goofing
off and the teachers get really annoyed. But when Obama was on the
television they were completely silent and focused. Many of them are
really hoping that Obama will help them become citizens so that they
have the opportunity to go to college. I was amazed, proud, and hopeful
for them and our country. Melissa Tempel
I was at work at Marquette Libraries and watched the inauguration on TV
with co-workers who all brought treats. I was happy to be celebrating
my first election I could vote in which Bush was not sworn in, hopeful
that the next four years will bring promising change, yet sad that
religion was still so present throughout the Inauguration. Carolyn
Weber
“Unity to the highest power” was how one black celebrity described her
experience among the grand throng that assembled for the Inauguration
ceremony in the mall at Washington DC. Peace was the order of the day
and no arrests were reported, proving that humanity has the power to
manifest great goodwill and could be less shy about doing so. It was a
great day for the nation and the world. Tess Reiss
Inauguration day 2009. I had no idea how moved I was going to be until
I woke up, turned on the radio, realized what day it was and started to
cry. I think being the member of a race that has been an opressor is
damaging for the soul. As a white person I find it so healing to see my
country prove that it really is the great nation that we all want it to
be. Regardless of race Obama’s speech was great, I think we really
might have chosen the best leader to get us through the hard times to
come! Sarah Moore
When President Obama was sworn into office, I was sitting on the edge
of a barricade that had found its way into the midst of the packed
crowds on the far side of the reflecting pond. As I was balancing
precariously on the edge of the barricade, and listening to President
Obama repeat his vows, I thought of how that day, in just one day how
far we had come and how far we had to go. During that day, we came
across people who were open and willing to work together to make it
into the ticketed area for inauguration as well as people who found
everything to be negative because they were not getting what they had
felt they were entitled to. I learned a lot that day about the power of
joy and entitlement. Those who were negative had a sense of entitlement
and privilege that they deserved to have certain expectations met, and
when they were not met, they were not open to being creative and
working with the situation. Those who refused to be overwhelmed by
their own self-importance were able to enter joyously into all of the
situations that they encountered and understood that they were blessed.
This, I think, is what we are faced with in this new administration. A
choice. Each of us individually. A choice of whether or not we want to
confront our internal weaknesses and external challenges with
self-important expectation or with a humble joy that anything given and
received is a blessing. We have a hard few years ahead of us, and we
must, individually and collectively choose each other. President Obama
is one person, and he appears to have made that choice. But we must
also choose the same – active reflective deliberate action – in order
for the world to turn. Marcia
My first political act as a new resident of Mayagüez was to watch the
inauguration with about 100 students and a few faculty and staff in the
student center at the University of Puerto Rico-Mayagüez. I stayed long
enough to watch the helicopter whisk the Bushes out of town – just to
make sure. The next day, I had my students read aloud excerpts from
Obama’s speech that were directly related to engineering (energy,
technology, etc.). I suggested there has never been a more exciting
time to be an engineer in Puerto Rico, that they could lead the
movement to achieve complete energy and resource self-sufficiency for
the island. Chris Papadopoulos
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