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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsThe Death of Trumpcare and the Exhale of 24 Million People
http://johnpavlovitz.com/2017/03/25/the-death-of-trumpcare-and-the-exhale-of-24-million-people/The Death of Trumpcare and the Exhale of 24 Million People
March 25, 2017 / John Pavlovitz
Yesterday I heard a beautiful sound. It was the sound of 24 million people exhaling.
24 million people of every political affiliation,
from every blue and red state,
from every religious tradition,
of every pigmentation,
of every age,
of every orientation.
24 million people who had been holding their breath through a terrifying, protracted waiting, breaking the silence together with a noise that sounded like life. It was relief and hope and possibility; a much-needed measure of peace in a season marked by so little of it. For a moment there was a welcome pause to breathe deeply together.
And not only the 24 millionbut those who love them, live with them, rely on them, find joy and purpose in their presence, those who have co-written their stories, those they lose sleep over. They too exhaled fully, knowing that the road will be a bit less fraught with terrible things than it might have been, the path a little more straight and level than it could have become.
And they were joined by a nonpartisan multitude of strangers whose names the 24 million will never know, but who believe their lives are worth fighting for; that they and their spouses and children and fathers and grandkids all deserve to breathe easier. Their chests contracted and they too exhaled fully because this is what empathy does: it recognizes kinship, it grieves with anothers grief, rejoices with their rejoicingit breathes with their breathing.
This is why the death of legislation that would have meant suffering for so many, should be cause for celebration for us allbecause ultimately these are not political battles, they are not about platform and talking points and party lines. This is not about who gets to claim credit or affix their names to laws or who gets to be the hero. Those things are all far too small, they are not deserving of our efforts here, they are a wasteful distraction born out of the lie that we are all in competition.
No, this death is an affirmation of our shared humanity, the unflinching declaration that anothers life is worth as much as my life, that anothers child is as precious as mine, that everyone is doing the very best they can here, that we have no idea how anothers shoes fit. It is the acknowledgement that we share this same space and this same air, and that when I speak on behalf of another I am making the greatest use of the breath within my lungs. This compassionate response to the sick and the vulnerable is the beautiful, beating heart of the Golden Rulethat I strive to afford another the blessing and goodness and mercy I would desire for myself. And so we breath deeply together.
This is not the end. We all know the difficult work ahead, but that work is worthy of our time and our discord and fatigue, and so we will do it together. But right now we rest in this moment, we hold gratitude for those who are feeling reassured in their circumstance, we celebrate on behalf of people we love and those well never meet who should be celebrated because they are living.
And together, in the face of a fear that can tend to take your very breath awaywe all exhale.
still_one
(92,168 posts)do
Hoyt
(54,770 posts)Last edited Sat Mar 25, 2017, 11:45 AM - Edit history (1)
Insurers will be skittish and won't invest long-term. ACA is definitely in a death-spiral now. I can't imagine how really sick people, who are covered by the ACA, feel with all this uncertainty.
still_one
(92,168 posts)Last edited Sat Mar 25, 2017, 01:50 PM - Edit history (1)
try to hurt people.
It is actually incredulous to me. This SOB ran on a campaign of racism, sexism, and hate, and 23-25% still voted for him.
babylonsister
(171,057 posts)janterry
(4,429 posts)every day that we preserve our benefits and liberties, is another day closer to the mid-term elections OR trumps political demise (impeachment, please .
I won't fully exhale until the Democrats regain control of something (anything!). But today, for sure, I'm feeling a lot better.
KewlKat
(5,624 posts)midterm elections. Someone better have a plan for those fights/elections ahead. We have some special elections very soon as well, but noone in the dems is talking about them.
Greybnk48
(10,167 posts)one is a Physical Therapist, and two are CNA's at nursing homes and hospice care. That would have meant also losing their health care benefits through work.
We also have a relative, and a close friend, both who would be dead within a year or so without Medicaid. So some of those sighs of relief were coming from our neck of the woods.
flamingdem
(39,313 posts)It was pretty dark there for a while, now it feels that most of us are united in understanding what it means to care for one another in terms of health. Even a few deplorables have learned.
Nothing like having the ability to put yourself in another person's shoes, something lacking in the majority of Republicans.