Would we bother doing anything if we just accepted our lot? What
would be the point? Nothing to be gained. We'd probably be happier. With
realistic to no expectations. No need to dream. No need for fiction. No
need for an imagination. Or the future. Just the here and now. No
coulds or woulds, or the impossible, or improbable or odd or strange.
Listening
to a friend's questioning of why people don't accept their lot I
became aware of why I didn't. Mainly because otherwise I might not leave the
sofa. With everything that was either hard or scary, if I didn't think
there was some chance that things would get better why would I bother? I
said to him, something along the lines of 'acceptance kills hope'. He agreed whoelheartedly and delightedly recounted a scene in
the play Separate Tables
by Terence Rattigan, where Major Pollack ask Miss Cooper about her lost
love. 'Any hope?' he asks. She replies, cheerfully, 'No, none at all.'
He asks why she's so cheerful about it and she tells him that there no
point in being any other way. She says, 'I've settled for the situation
you see, and its surprising how cheerful one can be when one give up
hope.'
Could I be happier if I stopped hoping? My
friend reminded me of the proverb 'What can't be cured must be endured.'
But I amended it in my head to the less pithy: 'What can't be cured for
now must be endured until....' Or otherwise we would continue to live
with polio, small pox and cancer. At one time none of these could be
cured and if simply endured would not be eradicated as they have been
and are being.
Marching in today's demonstration in
the rain, in flip flops, with my rainbow PEACE flag over one shoulder
and umbrella over the other, through Parliament Square to Downing
Street, there was plenty of time to think. There was a background wash
and sound-track of anti-war banners, Peace banners, placards saying
'Welfare not Warfare', chanting:
One, two, three, four - we don't want another war
Five, six, seven, eight - stop the killing, stop the hate
A
French news camera appears in my face and I am asked by the cameraman,
why I'm marching. I point to my flag. For Peace, I tell him. Peace as a
process that doesn't just happen over night or can be brought about by
bombs. He asks me what I thought of the death of Alan Henning. I
said that it was shocking, as every death is shocking, and that nothing
is solved by bombs. Peace is a process. A long one.
So I don't accept that we fight fire with fire so we're all end up burnt. And it can't be an eye for an eye until we're all blind. We just can't teach peace through war.
So.
I hope for better. I march for better. I try to do better.
And hope.
'Everything that is done in the world is done by hope.'
Martin Luther
52 Quotes on War and Peace
Luther, M. (1848) Table Talk or Familiar Discourse of Martin Luther (translated by W. Hazlitt), David Bogue, London
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