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Christine Kerr's avatar

I suppose if you grew up in tornado country, that would probably be one of the most frightening things you could think of from an early age, finding a way to live with with it without letting it rule your life (living in constant fear).

I was born in 1952, in an area of California that was fairly stable as far as weather and environment. The worst we ever got was an occasional earthquake that rocked your equilibrium, sometimes causing nausea. Some brick buildings might fall but not often unless they were built in the 1800s.

I think as a comparison, we lived in a town that bordered the Sacramento River. Until levees became more reliably engineered there were annual floods, however, I never experienced a devastating one, only on a few streets or older sections of town. The most dangerous thing I had to deal with, and I never dealt with by choice, was undertow in the river.

My brother taught me if I wanted to swim in the river, I had to learn the rules. If you ever got caught in the undertow, you MUST relax and let it carry you until it ran its course. If you tried to fight it, it would keep you under the water. Someone every year died from the undertow, from drunk teenagers to people driving off levee roads with no side rails. It was disconcerting when someone you knew was drowned by swiftly flowing currents. It seemed so baseless to me.

I found the 1960’s to be an exciting time as a child, experiencing new things such as TV, transistor radios, space travel, Barbie Dolls, and pointy brassieres. Fashion, Art, and Music changed, bringing forward new eclectic styles, abstract art, moody music, and the promise of freedom from “the establishment.” But also traditional guard rails were torn down, and exposed one to more exploratory, challenging lifestyles. To me it was like a fast spinning Ferris Wheel with no guard rails.

But with all eras, changes are inevitable because we as humans for the most part are changeable, emerging beings and are constantly looking for “somethings” to change. Or creating new things from old techniques. Or reinventing old things with new techniques. At least this is the way I see it, people look into crystal balls or bubbling cauldrons seeking answers and new possibilities.

I see this as a transitional era, and the sky is the limit, balance is a state of mind, and fear is a willingness to deny that we create our own world.

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Joel Lambeth's avatar

Growth up in the 80s was pretty much the same, different symptoms but the same storm. Cold war, nuclear sabre rattling, AIDS, famine, stock market collapse, etc.

I too have been looking for balance, but I've been trying to place that I am comfortable with somewhere between awareness and ignorance. Where is the point where I know enough without knowing too much?

We need to be able to exist within this cyclone from one day to the next, somewhere between furious anger and blasé complacency, for our own safety and sanity.

That's where I feel that the dance truly lies...

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