Today’s
insight is a bit different, and perhaps obvious: but it came to me with
absolute clarity on Wednesday afternoon, as I said some last-class things to my
English Capstone students.
I was
talking to them about some of the skills and strengths that I think our shared
passion for writing, reading, creating, teaching, talking about, and working
with stories can help us find and hone and bring out into the world. I started
with one that I find especially key, and about which I’ve written
in this space quite a bit: empathy.
And I used the example of Tuesday night’s disheartening North Carolina vote,
which made same-sex marriage illegal in the state’s constitution; it would be
impossible, I argued on Wednesday, for someone to empathize genuinely and fully
with a person being affected by that law and still vote for it.
I didn’t
know it at the time, but President Obama was at almost the exact same moment
talking in an interview about how his personal evolution has led him to support
the legality of same-sex marriage. That’s a very good thing, but as I had
looked out into my group of graduating English seniors, my insight was even
better: that I didn’t have the slightest doubt that every one of them are
capable of that empathy, that in fact it’s a core part of who they are. Partly
that’s because of their specific skills and interests, maybe; but mostly it’s
because they’re young, and folks in this generation have that kind of empathy,
across seemingly divided communities, very consistently and impressively. I’m
proud of my President, but prouder still of my students.
Special
post this weekend,
Ben
PS. What
do you think? And with the series finishing, any insights you want to share?
5/11 Memory Day nominees: A tie between Irving
Berlin, the Russian immigrant who in the course of his 20th
century-spanning life created some of the most enduring and powerful American songs; and Richard Feynman, the Nobel
Prize-winning physicist who was also one of America’s most talented
and charismatic
public figures and educators.
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