I follow Little Cuter's advice. I keep a low profile around the issue of sensible gun legislation.
I write to you, I've got a button on my purse, I post on Facebook and Twitter, but only those who are connected to me are in that loop. To the outside world, Pam Simon and Pat Maisch and Roxanna Green are the faces of January 8th, and that's just fine with me.
As Little Cuter's wisdom continues,
there are crazy people on the other side of this issue... .and they have guns!
It's a hard space to occupy, this niche between having something to say and keeping myself safe. Although I laugh about feeling like the safest person on the planet (after all, what's the likelihood of some other disaster befalling one short Jewish girl from New York?), I cannot discount my child's discontent.... because what was the likelihood that I'd encounter bullets in front of a grocery store on that sunny Saturday morning?
I lend my presence when I am feeling brave. I spoke at the No More Names Bus Tour at Christina-Taylor's church and at the Safeway when Gabby and Mark announced the formation of
Americans for Responsible Solutions . I didn't testify before Congress and a gaggle of news cameras, and I didn't take a front and center spot at any number of other, more publicized events. I felt an equal mix of guilt and relief each time.
I wish I were brave enough to put myself out there. I wish I didn't carry the sorrow and the newly-ripped-off-bandaid feeling on my heart every time I tell the story in public. I wish, I wish, but I have my own reality and, after three years, it's more comfortable than it used to be. I'm able to attend but stay out of the limelight, to show my support without making that support a matter for strangers to judge.
This morning allowed me to be wallpaper at an event announcing the creation of
Everytown.org, the marriage of Michael Bloomberg's Mayors Against Illegal Guns and Moms Demand Action. It's a perfect combination of money and savvy and enthusiasm and numbers, and it promises to be a loud and well funded voice in opposition to
Washington Gun Interests which is, I am sure, a fully tested slogan. Pam Simon and Jocelyn Straus and Gabby's rabbi, Stephanie Aron, took the podium, along with others, some of them gun owners
who love the sport of shooting, all of whom want sensible federal and local legislation regarding the purchase of weaponry.
It was sunny and hot and the cameras were everywhere. The microphones were nestled on the dais, leaving just enough room for the speeches to rest. Several reporters recognized and greeted me and wanted to talk after the event; they were gracious when I declined.
I have nothing new to say. I have no hope that I can change anyone's mind on the subject. I can change those who are in office, and I am supporting candidates who share my views on the necessity for legislation to regulate the proliferation of dangerous weapons and who are interested in increasing access to mental health treatment for those in need. I don't need to retell the story of watching the light go out of a little girl's eyes; at this point it's shock value and of no use to me at all.
I'd much rather share Christina's love of life, of family, of America ... and I'm
doing that. GRIN leaves me with a full heart, rather than an achy one. I am making a difference, and I don't have to wait to see the results. They are not dependent on changing intransigent minds. My rewards are built into my actions... which, now that I think about it, is the perfect segue to ask you to click on over to
Everytown's home page and sign your name. The reward is built into the action.
Plus, if you sign up on the homepage, you'll be redirected to a picture of me holding a flag that Amster made for the bus tour last summer. I admit to a moment of flabbergasted astonishment when I showed up on my monitor. Everytown called yesterday and asked permission to use the photo, but I didn't know that it was going to be given such prominence.
My name is not attached to the picture. I'm just a 60-something woman with well-polished nails holding a paper American flag. That's the kind of anonymity-cum-making-a-statement that appeals to me.