Daily Kos

DailyKos: Hope Already!

Mon Aug 06, 2007 at 08:27:17 AM PDT

Several diarists here on DailyKos have been read in recent days expressing sentiments of hope against and despite all that so many more authors have so richly and explicitly detailed as going wrong with our country right now.

And there sure is a lot going wrong with our country right now.

And, yet, I just have to say that I find such hope refreshing. For while anger at injustice is certainly justified, and when properly focused can spur one, and possibly others, to action, anger without hope ineffectually leads only to more anger. And anger is never added to anger. It only multiplies.

I also find hope fascinating, most of all when it persists in the face of so much that would destroy it. And from every direction we face it certainly seems these days that there's an awful lot of hope-busting missiles zeroing in on us.

Hope, to me, most of all is the refusal of being indifferent. As author and founder of the Small Planet Institute Frances Moore Lappé once wrote so well, "Hope is not for wimps; it is for the strong-hearted who can recognize how bad things are and yet not be deterred, not be paralyzed."

Hope is active and not passive. It requires living one step ahead of reality, imagining things as different from as they are now, believing in spite of the odds.

Hard work, to hope.

Hope is conceived from the union of imagination and indignation. It is the child of expectation and desire. And it gives life to the idea that every present is incomplete, and gives the lie to the belief that the way things are is the best and most natural outcome of all that has gone on before.

Dominant beliefs, held most strongly by those whose turn in power and those they lead, are typically at pains to suggest they are no more alterable by human hands than are the orbits of the earth. Hope is thus dismissed as naïveté, equated with ignorance of the "facts" and with denial of "reality". It is ridiculed as the drug of the powerless, and laughed off as the high of the truly hopeless.

But the past informs us that the dominant beliefs of one age themselves are often ridiculed in the next. History often proceeds by a process of reversal: momentum going in one direction is replaced by momentum in the opposite, each shift in momentum brought about by collective imagination and indignation.

And while history provides us many lessons, one endures: successful change comes from hope, not from indifference.

Yet too many in this country today remain utterly indifferent to politics. Tyrannized by their overscheduled lives, distracted by money and possessions, celebrity and sport, or preoccupied with simply keeping their heads and those of their children above water, too many Americans live believing the state of the world does not concern them.

Others, more and more still, have likely been overwhelmed into their indifference by the very state of the world. Quite forgivable, given the events of the past six years. It is quite natural, after all, to vacillate between the determination to act, and the desire to retreat into the comforts of fun, family and friends.

But indifference is a nonetheless a conscious act, whether a temporary neglect or a permanent abandonment of hope. It requires one hanging up their ideals, putting away their enthusiasms, quieting their questioning spirit, and closing the lid on their indignations. It says of the present world, "It's not for me to understand." It says, "I cannot change the way things are," even as one's private concerns, one's happiness, and one's life course will every day be affected by the way things are.

As Americans we live in a democracy, and indifference is fatal to its survival. The powerful, they haven't stopped hoping: in fact, what they're hoping most for is our indifference.

When we don't participate, when might we do it? And if we don't do it at all, what are we saying? What have we decided?

To stay right where we are.

While sometimes naïve, others uninformed, hope is at least a noble journey, though that is not to say the right path is always taken. Who knows if there is even a "right" path? That is the beauty of democracy: when citizens actively participate, the question of who and what is "right" gets sorted out over time.

We have only to hope.

Tags: activism (all tags) :: Previous Tag Versions

Permalink | 9 comments

  •  Tips For Hope? (8+ / 0-)

    Recommendations, of course, are most welcome, but I'd also love to hear your definition(s) of hope, and of the ways you find to keep up hope in our age where so many have lost it.

  •  Good for you, StrangeAnimals! (2+ / 0-)

    You're dead-on right. Without hope, we become...well, hopeless. Hopelessness leads to despair, and despair leads to inaction. We can't afford to indulge in any of these.

    To me, the word "hope" suggests good possibilities that can happen, IF we put out the effort to make them happen. They aren't a given. We have to reach out and grab them. It takes work--sometimes, a lot of work. How much more satisfying, then, when what we hope for comes to pass?

    Thanks so much for an inspiring diary!

    I do not want the peace which passeth understanding, I want the understanding which bringeth peace ~ Helen Keller

    by twilight falling on Mon Aug 06, 2007 at 08:30:40 AM PDT

  •  I hang on to hope (2+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    FrankieB, StrangeAnimals

    because despair leads to in action. I was taught by my parents that if you think you have a better way to do things your are required to work towards them.

    You are not allowed to bitch without trying to provide a solution. In order to live that you have to hold onto the idea that things can change, will change if you work towards it.

    But there is a flip side to this. You have to be indomitable in your efforts, but you can not divorce them from reality. It is that kind of disconnect that let the neo-cons lead us into Iraq. So in the end, you hope, you work, but you can't let your hope blind you to the real world.

    To that point, here is a quote from Niccolo Machiavelli

    "The Man who neglects the real for the ideal will learn how to accomplish his ruin, not his salvation"

    "And Love dares you to care for the people on the edge of the night" - Queen

    by Something the Dog Said on Mon Aug 06, 2007 at 08:34:06 AM PDT

    •  Thanks for the quote... (1+ / 0-)

      Recommended by:
      Something the Dog Said

      ...one of which I was not familiar, and will write down.

      You are correct that the only solution is in the constant search for one. But searches must not be wayward or aimless...we must use the compass provided by fact and reason to keep us pointed in the right direction.

      •  There is another from (1+ / 0-)

        Recommended by:
        StrangeAnimals

        Mark Twain that uses the same concept, but with a different spin;

        A Man that carries a cat by the tail learns something that he can learn in no other way.

        But it is not quite as "high minded" as old Niccolo's!

        Cheers,

        "And Love dares you to care for the people on the edge of the night" - Queen

        by Something the Dog Said on Mon Aug 06, 2007 at 08:42:38 AM PDT

        [ Parent ]

    •  Hope is only part of it (1+ / 0-)

      Recommended by:
      StrangeAnimals

      Hope is a great motivater, but it can be dangerous if we are always hoping for things that never happen.  That can lead to "giving up hope," and as you say, inaction.

      So I try to be careful about what I hope for. I don't hope for Democrats to win all elections; I don't hope for my representatives to agree with me on everything;  I don't hope to always get my way.  Those things can't happen in a democracy, by definition.

      We do what we can, and it makes a difference.  And we meet cool people along the way.  Not so bad?

      "I beseech you,... think it possible you may be mistaken." -- Cromwell/Bronowski

      by jockyoung on Mon Aug 06, 2007 at 10:10:30 AM PDT

      [ Parent ]

  •  It took me (1+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    StrangeAnimals

    all weekend but hope slowly returns.

    "Veto Proof" is DC Dem for "Stay the Course." khereva

    by FrankieB on Mon Aug 06, 2007 at 09:04:23 AM PDT

  •  Excellent (and scholarly) diary. thanks! (1+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    StrangeAnimals

    Recc'd

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