
Dignity for All
On Saturdays,
I meet with a small group of politically engaged people,
holding signs aimed at sparking awareness.
My sign reads:
“Dignity for All.”
On the other side:
“Condemn Violence.”
I think—
who wouldn’t want that?
And yet, week after week,
people slow their cars way down
to lock eyes with me,
with raised middle fingers.
It’s startling—
rage, hatred, ill will—
aimed at something pure.
I am noticing how this climate
mirrors my experience with my family of origin.
There’s a crusader energy to it—
a kind of moral conquest
that regards disagreement as betrayal, assault
Difference read as defiance- calling for colonization.
merciless persecution, destruction and punishment.
In my family system,
my sensitivity and limits were read the same way—
not as difference,
but as defiance.
That dogmatic logic breeds persecution.
Cruelty and harshness justified
when a person’s innate differences
are judged as willful disobedience.
When rage is sanctified,
violating others is deemed righteous.
Making cruelty not only permissible,
but earned.
I can’t accept
that disappointing or disagreeing with another
should unleash war.
When I see the faces of people twist in hate over “digitnity for all”,
I feel the echo of that pattern from home.
Banishing me became
the right thing to do.
My absence became
a victory.
I struggle to conceive
how that is in service to wholesome love.
Families have complex loyalties;
I might almost accept
the division from my mother.
But to actively extend that division
to my children, who easily could have been spared—
to model for them that banishment is virtue—
feels unconscionable.
Devastating.
Gathering and communicating in ways which insidiously and consistently diminish me to my boys.
People can deny
what they’ve done or not done, said or not said, and even their motives,
but the impact on my mind and body
is undeniable. The impact on my teen boys- immeasurable.
I begged—
for repair,
for shared reckoning,
for the simple act of staying
in relationship
through difficulty.
When I finally stepped away
to protect myself,
the story became
that I had opted out.
That lie became their shield—
their justification,
their victory narrative.
Children should not be divided
from their parents.
I shouldn’t have been divided.
My children shouldn’t have been divided.
This is the family pattern—
the cycle refusing to be broken.
Some might point to me
as the common denominator, the CAUSE
I was groomed for environments
that would keep me afraid.
Conditioned to take
my rightful lesser place
among those who feel disrespected
by my limits.
I’m trying to stay curious
What happens inside people
when connection is hinged
to reverence?
What are we protecting
when we turn on one another
in the name of being right?
How does moral certainty
slide so easily into crusade—
into colonization,
persecution,
and violent conquest?
The price my sons pay
is high.
For this victory.
Preservation of power.
And a cautionary tale
to anyone else
who might dare
to deviate.








