Much of my belief about my relationship with the world, including my relationship with the electoral process, is grounded in a deep belief that the actions of one person, including myself, matter but that i am unlikely to know or observe the outcome. It's a sense of being mindful about my actions but not being attached to the observable results.
I struggle with the "not doing enough" sense -- in almost every aspect of my life, including civic and community participation. That struggle means i am particularly sensitive to other's anger regarding the results of the US election. I'll be trying my best to balance in that anger that i see here and know others in my daily life will be expressing.
There's a struggle in being open to change and renewal, and being open to the wrong influences. The struggle of how one knows one's leadings are good, right, and from the right source is addressed in one of Thoreau's works. The Society of Friends had to address it early on in the context of James Naylor's acting out, and the question surely drives the stories humans have told each other throughout the ages. It's uncomfortable, and many go to texts and tradition and authority to resolve that discomfort. It's not the path i take, which means that self examination, alone and in community, needs to be continual.
There's a balance though: to be caught up in self doubt is to paralyze. One needs to connect with one's convictions and move forward with courage, not deaf to correction, but not swayed with every voice either.
Today i'll struggle with guilt about the past, and try to remind myself it's the present and going forward i need to attend to with right action.
I may question my work, again, consuming and demanding this week. But i will also remind myself there's a balance of time and season, and remind my guilt that i participate in community so that we can share the work of changing the world.