How can I (or anyone) take action, to help my fellow countrymen/women, in a positive way?
First of all we need to be honest. And that is really, really hard.
Racism is alive and well in the United States. I don’t have to tell you that. Just turn on the television.
Someone asked me, at a socially distanced barbeque, what percentage of Americans I thought are actually racist. I quickly pulled out a 99% and I included myself in that number. The person who asked the question-along with my husband-did not agree with me.
Maybe I should use the word biased and not racist. Everyone has some bias. Not our fault. It’s in our politics. In our growing up years. In our society. Inherently. We don’t even notice it.
There lies the rub. We don’t even notice it.
We need to notice it. In order to create change we need to take notice and start questioning.
Not too long ago there were only white males in power or positions of authority. We (white people) didn’t even think about it. Until we did. And made changes.
I will share a story from my beloved father’s own mouth. He wasn’t telling me out of pride.
My mother, a bright lady, was a Registered Nurse. She skipped a grade in elementary school, graduated high school and was soon in the nursing program at a Rhode Island hospital. She loved her job and her nursing friends. I can still remember one evening, while I was upstairs in bed, hearing them while they laughed and smoked. I think that is probably the first time I also became aware of someone who was gay. One of Mom’s nurse friends.
Mom worked on the first heart/lung machine in Rhode Island. She also taught others. Pretty cool stuff.
My Dad was always so very proud of her. Almost to his dying day, if he was at a Drs. appointment-hers or his, he always mentioned that she was a nurse.
In the 1960s, when my parents married, three kids quickly arrived on the scene.
So, back then, life gets a bit tricky. And my mom was going to have to quit or cut back hours.
Dad told me, that a male Doctor from the hospital actually called him on the telephone. Asking if Mom could still work. Dad nicely and respectfully told the Doctor that they had a growing family.
When I was listening to my Dad tell this story I was sort of shocked. My stomach kind of lurched. I felt terrible for my mom (although she did work as a nurse part-time for years before going full-time again) -that the decision was not really hers.
I appreciated my father sharing that with me across their dining room table. I also appreciated that in the 1950s and 1960s things looked a whole lot different for women.
Did my Dad’s views change as he got older? Of course, they did.
Why?
Because people took notice and things changed for women.
But how many years had passed before someone noticed?
Now is the time for all of us to pay attention and listen.
Most importantly it is time to take notice.