Dear Reader,
I hope my blogging over the past 8 months has shown you an interesting perspective on the politics around us. Although I do not always claim to be unique, I can promise that every post came with deep thought, consideration, and questioning of my opinions. This year in my English and history classes has been a great intellectual journey for me, much of which has been charted in this blog. As I write my final post of the year, I want to leave you with one final thought:
Everyone has reasons for believing what they believe. Understanding those reasons is not the same as abandoning your own beliefs. On the contrary, it can make your own beliefs stronger.
I started off the year in English class discussing the book The Things They Carried, by Tim O'Brien. My class learned about the unique power of stories to communicate actions, thoughts, and feelings. We discovered that we chart our own lives in terms of stories, even though our lives do not always follow a series of coherent events, and that the narratives we use to describe our lives can define us.
In reading The Poisonwood Bible, by Barbara Kingsolver, we saw the dangers of failing to understanding the stories and perspectives of another, in this case those of the Africans the Price family encounters. From Azar Nafisi's novel Reading Lolita in Tehran we learned, just as Nafisi's students did, that reading the literature of lives far from us can teach us much about our own. And in Shakespeare's Hamlet, we saw how failing to see past a ghost and its craving for revenge can drive a man to madness.
But outside of literature is where I have come to see the truth of my above statement. The political world, especially here in the US, has become in many ways a more polarized place than when I began blogging. Every issue, from the national debt to the killing of Osama Bin Laden, has come with two stories: the Democratic one and the Republican one. Americans can watch their favorite news channel, read their favorite newspaper, talk to their favorite people, and never hear the other story. When those two stories are forced to collide, collide they do. There has been little cooperation and understanding across the aisle, and it has left every American worse off.
Worst of all, we have lost respect for others' beliefs. We think only our reasons are valid, and that others are somehow faulty.
This is not acceptable. The United States is one of the most cosmopolitan nations in the world, with an infinite number of stories making up the patchwork we call America. Our greatest strength comes in our variety of perspectives. If we chose to learn from them, we could learn so much. But instead, we choose to force these stories into a simplistic narrative, preferring a series of 30-second sound bites over a true discussion.
So I challenge you to this: start up a conversation. A controversial one. Talk about religion, politics, morals, values. This will force you to put your beliefs to the test, to find out where you truly stand, not just where it is easiest to stand. You will learn something about yourself by learning something about another. Do not plan on changing your beliefs - if you have good reason to believe them - but do not swear it off either.
On a billboard in my English and social studies classroom, there hangs a bumper sticker. It asks, "If you can't change your mind, are you sure you still have one?" As I continue my educational journey, starting with Harvard University in the fall, I hope to further solidify and understand my beliefs, and I hope to change my mind again and again.
Thank you for reading my perspective, and thank you even more for commenting with your own.
Always,
Daniel
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