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Jennie's avatar

Lori, thank you for sharing your story. I’ve noticed that crises never seem to take a number and wait their turn, but rather descend on us all at once. Grief is a hard road, and often there doesn’t seem to be anything under our feet at all as we move forward. There is a road, of course, and it’s firm and real … and often it’s our community that keeps our feet firmly on it.

My mother died unexpectedly, and my father’s cancer took him 6 months later. Within the next 2 years, we lost my in-laws, two aunts, and an uncle. Our own community is less tight than it used to be, and my community of friends is scattered across three continents, but they gave so much of themselves and they shared our grief in a way that made it slightly less heavy.

I’ll never forget the old classmate, who had had many losses of his own, who reached out to me on one of the worst days and, for lack of a better phrase, held grief with me for an evening. This is another role that a strong community can play as we feel our way forward.

Thank you for introducing John to us. He sounds like a lovely man, and I’m holding everyone who cared for him in the Light today.

Jennie,

Thousand Islands, Ontario

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Quentin's avatar

I can’t remember how I came to this particular ‘Stack, (Is that what we call these?) but your observation “care within our communities is itself a form of resistance to authoritarianism — that it strengthens the fabric that keeps us human when the wider systems around us are fraying” is spot on. Timely and motivational.

It reminds me that even if I don’t live in an attractive, close-knit, rural community, that community is possible —necessary even if we mean to maintain our humanity in this current landscape. Thank you.

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