A few weeks ago, my 11 year-old grandson and I went to our local Dollar General store. As he’s wont to do, he dashed around the store looking for treasures for me to buy for him.
One such treasure was a Rubik’s cube. I pointed out that he already had one, and he informed me that it was misplaced. So, I told him to put it in my cart.
Soon after, the kid was searching for images of flags around the world and happily maneuvering the cube to re-create the images of flags.
“Look Grandma-it’s Belize!”
“Look Grandma-it’s Italy!”
“Look Grandma-it’s Turkey!”
I love his creative, curious spirit.
My Dad, Babe, served in the Korean War. From him, I learned to always respect the flag. He took pride in displaying the American flag in front of our house. He kept it in pristine condition (like he did with virtually every single thing).
Mr. NOA and I were recently on our way in our trusty Tacoma to a medical appointment (no worries, all is well) about 45 minutes away. A house on a corner featured a tRump flag. Two, actually. I instinctively shook my head in frustration upon seeing this particular flag in someone’s yard. Then my eye caught another (tRump) flag on the other side of the yard. Only this one was horribly tattered. It had sun damage and almost appeared to have been the victim of a toddler with a pair of scissors.
Upon pointing it out to Mr. NOA (unfortunately I wasn’t swift enough to capture the image of this forlorn flag), he said “it’s tattered, just like our country is now”. True that, as they say.
I remember a phrase Kamala Harris said often during her ill-fated presidential campaign: it’s a crying shame. She said it about many different things, but often it was about the economic struggles faced by low to mid-income hard-working American families. That really resonated with me, because I felt she was speaking from her heart. She knew that if there was to be a second tRump administration, things would certainly get worse for Americans.
Indeed, things have gotten much, much worse here in the good old U.S.A. On so many levels.
The overwhelm I feel about it all threatens to render me helpless. I think acknowledging that is helpful. As is giving myself permission to retreat from it all from time to time, in an effort to retain my sanity.
Not completely retreat, mind you. I care too much about the future of this country and my fellow citizens for that.
I’ve been doing itty bitty things here and there to stay engaged in the resistance to this evil regime. Like sending postcards to the White House, expressing my disgust of this administration’s willfull resistance to the rule of law. I’ve made calls and sent emails to my state senators, urging them to do the right thing and oppose this administration. Mr. NOA and I attended a rally last weekend in a nearby town, holding signs we made for the occasion. It lifted my spirits to be amongst the 25 or so other folks expressing collective outrage at what is happening to our country.

We plan on attending the next rally, scheduled for the first Saturday in May. My hope is that even more people will join us; perhaps some of the folks driving past us during the first rally who enthusiastically honked their horns and gave us “thumbs ups”.
It seems to me that if every one of us who is against what is happening to democracy in America right now does what they can, what they feel able to do with whatever time/energy/skills they possess, we have a chance at getting this ship turned around and on a better path for us all.
I’ve been on a classic rock and protest song kick lately, so I’ll leave you with this gem.
Our community has had two such protests in the last month. We were out of town for the first, but I participated in the second. Both were well attended.
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Excellent!
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Cheers to you…and thank you for all of this, Rhonda. We’ve gotta stick together! ❤️
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Thanks, Vicki! And yes, we sure do need to stick together.
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You betcha! Sending hugs! ❤️
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I’ve seen a few tattered flags outside of houses that have tRump signs around the house, too. I don’t know what to make of it. I’m glad you were able to go to a protest rally. Around here they seem to be weekly at the Tesla dealership and that makes me happy.
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I was just reading an article on NPR this morning about a guy who has made six figures on making anti-Elon stickers. Crazy!
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My kids went through a Rubik’s cube phase, pretty fun, they even went to a contest with timed competitions–and were WAY out of their depth, with kids completing the cubes in mere seconds. But still fun. I’m astounded by the flags and signs gloating that tRump won. First of all, we know. Second, unless you’re a political insider who is already very wealthy, nothing about this administration is doing you any good! But it’s the state-sanctioned meanness that confounds me. This administration has made it not just OK but a good thing to be selfish, greedy, and cruel. They’re going around telling people that empathy is a bad thing. I am a Catholic and if there’s a positive to the Pope’s death it’s that everyone around the world came together for a few days, understanding that empathy is everything. I really pray that our secular world leaders can figure that out before it’s too late!
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Yes, there is truly nothing good about what this adminstration is doing. Not for anyone other than the super wealthy. I pray every day that good will prevail over this evil.
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