Photo: Pam White
This morning I read the article in the New Yorker about Ray Kachel and Occupy Wall Street. I thought about gifted, desperate people like Ray. The photograph of him is arresting, haunting. He is looking straight into the camera. There is both a challenge and a softness in his eyes. His story is horrific. His story is common. I want to be angry. I don’t want to be angry. I want to do something immediate and helpful. I don’t want to do anything. I am powerless. I have choices.
One choice I am pretty clear about: I don’t want to be in Zuccotti Park. I don’t want to visit, I don’t want to feel what it is to camp on tarps, to be hungry and wet, and surrounded by sounds and humans over which I have no control.
Another choice: I want to show up, in my way. To shine a light. To do my best today. Even when I am not sure what to do, there can be a grace in that. Maybe to just sit with my despair, my confusion and my love.
Yesterday I also read Jon Katz’s eloquent post about animal rights. Another light shining. More grace.
postscript: This week in The Journal, I am writing another ragged little memoir. The working title is The Beast. You can subscribe to The Journal here. (As always, you can unsubscribe at any time.)