Responding to the Storming of our Capitol
“The sea does not reward those who are too anxious, too greedy, or too impatient. One should lie empty, open, choiceless as a beach - waiting for a gift from the sea.”—Anne Morrow Lindbergh.
It is so painful to think about and even to respond to the events in our Capitol yesterday on Epiphany, January 6th. First it is disbelief that it is happening in my country we so love.
I go to the safest place in our house, our bedroom, and lie down. Then the fear that lives in my body about having the covid virus before we can get the vaccine transfers to the stability and safety of our country. A group of men and women without masks carrying metal pipes, chemical irritants, and other weapons are breaking windows and doors to enter the sacred halls of our country, where our Congress is meeting to certify the presidential election.
All the tasks I have ahead of me for the day have lost energy. My entire energy goes to fear. Our daughter, who has been in tears, soon calls. We share news. We are powerless. We both decide to have some soul food while we try to recenter. Popcorn.
Will our government be overturned and taken over by people like those we see on television? They tell reporters this is only the beginning. They will be back. I see anger and fear in their faces. We both are sharing fear. They are mirroring my fear.
Preparing for the Epiphany service that night slows down my fear. I sit quietly in St. Mark’s for over an hour before the service. Slowly, I become less anxious. I honestly believe it is the prayers of so many people who have worshiped there in the past that calm my soul. I simply have put myself in a place where so many before me have gone to meet God. Their prayers, their love begins to heal me.
Family Systems dynamics teach us that if during any conflict in a relationship with others, if we can maintain a state of having the least anxiety or be a non-anxious presence, we will make our best contribution to hold any tensions from growing and eventually solve the difficulty. I know of few who can remain non-anxious, for it is not a human trait. Staying less anxious, however, is a real possibility.
If we can be the least anxious presence in any situation, we can keep the arteries in our body from tightening up and taking minutes, weeks off our lifespan and pushing us to become more fearful, maybe even violent. If we can go to the place inside or outside of our body where an inner and outer presence leads us to become calmer, we can become a vessel to become a part of the relationship or situation that can lead to solving solutions at any situation we are encountering.
This is my only offering for the day. Go to a place of healing for you in the past where you have met God and perhaps where so many before you have done the same. Sit, just sit and be enveloped by a presence that goes by the name of love. It may not be in a place of worship.
It may be by the sea where the rhythm of the waves or the stillness of the sea slows down your anxious heart. It may be a walk where the trees photosynthesize your energy back to love, back to a presence attributed to Julian of Norwich where, “all shall be well, and all manner of things shall be well.” This may give you the strength to meet the day, strength to reach out to others, strength to become the less anxious presence who can hold the people of your family, your community, your country, together in love.
Joanna. joannaseibert.com