The Antidote to Depression is Fighting Oppression

I don’t know about you, but I have been suffering from moderate to heavy depression of late. Some of it is personal, the restimulation of some childhood trauma. Some of it is SAD, seasonal affective disorder. Some of it is age. I’m 81 years old and I haven’t figured out death yet. But most of it is coming from the current political shituation in the United States and the world. It’s as if my head is wrapped in an imprisoning cloud of toxicity that blinds me from seeing anything positive. I do all the right things. I’ve long understood that the best antidote to depression is fighting oppression. I struggle to find enough energy to continuing our only hope, organizing. Thanks in part to a need to contradict my depressive tendencies, I’ve been an activist for 50 years. I’m known among friends as an optimist. But I think we, the people of the world, are in real trouble. Existentialism grew out of Hiroshima, and this is an existential moment. 

Here are some of the factors contributing to the severity of the crisis:

  1. The speed with which the fascists moved.
  2. The viciousness of their attacks the people.
  3. Too many people are normalizing the terror.
  4. The weakness of the left.
    1. Rampant sectarianism
    1. Little real unity
  5. The complicity of the neoliberal class like Newsom
  6. This may be the biggest: the weaponization of white supremacy. The KKK is in control of the fucking country. Look how long they ran the South. 
  7. Epstein and the vast complicity with pedophilia. 
  8. The continuing war on Gaza despite agreements
  9. The broad threat of mass violence against the 99% 

So now is the part where I’m supposed to talk about what to do. We don’t have a choice. Keep Truckin. Here’s an inspiring slogan. The harder we fight the less worse it will get. 

As I write this, I’m thinking maybe we should give ourselves a break. We can hibernate with our friends and family this season and see if we can recharge our batteries. I hate Christmas. I hate Santa Claus and his white judgement of what’s naughty and nice, the patron saint of bribery. But I happened upon this Xmas album by Andrew Sykes. “They Detained Santa” got me. 

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