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Gary Herstein's avatar

Two thoughts, related only in that you touched on subjects that brought them to my mind.

" ... an incurious lot ... "

Upwards of 30 years ago -- I believe I was still working on my MA, so just the far side of 30 years -- I went to a party with a good friend and native Chicagoan. Let's call him "Tom." I've no idea how it came up in conversation, but I mentioned to Tom how reluctant I was to talk about what I did, by which I mean that I studied philosophy. The typical reaction of revulsion, the curled upper lip, the "why would you do that" sneer. Tom snorted and dismissed my reluctance as silly paranoia.

Later that evening, the question actually did come up, and I responded honestly. The woman asking the question was the living caricature of the response: the curled upper lip, the sneering voice. She literally said, "why would you do that?" Though it was not, of course, an actual question, I nevertheless responded with a calmness and gentility that I have long since outgrown. Tom was there, witnessing the entire event. On our way out, he apologized to me. (I'm too old now to waste time on patience. My response these days would likely leave the person wishing I'd merely doused them with gasoline, lit them on fire, then pissed on them to put out the flames.)

The other thought, about what it means to be an American, reminds me that I must and will admit that I am a patriot. I have, unlike many who would pin that label on their shirt, actually served my country in uniform. (And my right hand to any goD you do or do not believe in, if you say "thank you for your service," I will fucking hunt you down and force you to suffer my company through dinner, at least. Many veterans do not, in point of fact, appreciate being told that. It is simultaneously too little and too much. We didn't do it for you.)

But I am a patriot. I consider myself still bound by the oath I took. I carry a copy of the Declaration and the Constitution with me whenever I leave the house. The past few years have been very difficult for me.

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Jack Cluth's avatar

For me, it's a trip to the Oregon Coast. My two favorite places are Manzanita and Oceanside, but it can be just about anywhere I can watch the waves hitting the beach. I can sit for hours and lose myself in the waves. I get lost in the realization that the waves are washing up in the same way they were thousands of years ago and that they will be thousands of years from now, assuming we and future generations don't thoroughly screw the pooch.

There's something about the motion and the sound that grounds me. I feel very small and yet part of it. I realize I'm but one small part of the world, but that I do have a part in it, and that no matter what happens the ocean will be here waiting for me when I return.

I grew up in a landlocked state- Minnesota- and I didn't see the ocean until I was 23, but when I did I felt the kinship instantly. It's stayed with me ever since.

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