Things kind of feel like they are in a holding pattern right
now. Joe Biden is president-elect, but not quite everyone is fully accepting
that, and he won’t take power for another two months no matter what. Good news
is rampant with treatments and vaccines for COVID-19, but cases are rising quickly
at the same time. It is difficult to know just where the country stands on,
well, anything.
I am certainly not here to pretend that I have any answers
to these issues. What will happen in any political transition probably has as
much to do with how the Senate runoffs go in Georgia than who works in the Oval
Office and although that light at the end of the pandemic tunnel is shining
brighter, it is still difficult to put a timeline on when we will reach it.
That does not mean, however, that this can’t be a time of learning. And the
biggest lesson we should learn is to not overreact.
In the political arena, vast importance (and probably
rightfully so) was placed on the outcome of the presidential election. But
should it really get all the importance? Even with Biden in power, Democratic
control of the Senate is far from assured, making sweeping changes much more
difficult to achieve. So yes, there were significant differences that had to be
weighed between Trump and Biden, but it was still far from the only piece of
the political puzzle.
In the pandemic arena, we have been on a push-and-pull cycle
since March. The economy took a vast dip, has seen a good rate of recovery
since, yet remains far from a complete comeback, and now things feel less
stable than they have in months with rising infection numbers and renewed fears
of possible lockdown measures.
That knife’s edge feels much sharper for some than others.
Let’s not forget there are many who returned to work and now feel that sharp
pang of fear that the current situation could push them out of work again. Let’s
not forget that there are still substantial numbers of people who have been
complete without work through these months.
It is tough to tell someone not to overreact when they live
with such fear. But we do not make good choices when they are based in fear.
Even when it feels like there are no good choices, we must make calculated
decisions to make our present the best we can while taking what steps we can to
help ensure the future.
It is a little easier to tell someone not to overreact when
they are gambling on where these situations will take us, though. After all,
when you take a nine-month view of where we have been this year, we can easily
see times when our guesses as to what was coming were right, and we can even
more easily see when our guesses were very, very wrong.
Definite answers have been more difficult to come by than
ever this year. We must keep doing the best we can in the situation we are in.
This does not mean simply throwing up our hands and taking the trip without any
navigation, but it does mean making attempts to not be ruled by in-the-moment
emotion and to accept that there are forces beyond us that make an ultimate
answer impossible to determine.
So here is to wishing you comfort in these uncertain times.
No comments:
Post a Comment