Campaigns

#50ACTSOFLOVE Campaign

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“Well darkness has a hunger that’s insatiable,
and lightness has a call that’s hard to hear.”
Indigo Girls, Closer to Fine

50actsoflove square

This is my response to the Orlando shootings as a Christian and as a human being. I’m making a campaign in response to the deadly act of violence committed against  49 people at the Pulse Orlando night club in the early morning hours of Sunday, June 12, in Orldando, FL. How do you respond to such hatred? Such violence? Such darkness? You light it up. You light it up with love.

Light Up The Darkness With Love!

Let’s start a movement of people committed to honoring the lives of the people senselessly killed at the Pulse with 50 acts of love. Our acts of love will also honor those injured and can help support them and add to their healing, especially if you are close enough to give blood, hold a hand or be a listing ear.

Many of us are far from Orlando and lack ways to directly respond to Sunday morning’s violence and death, but the world where we live also needs our love. Communities across America and across the world produce mass shooters, hurting people, broken people, pain and darkness. Let’s light it up with our love.

We hurt with the victims of senseless hate and violence. We stand with our beautiful LGBTQ neighbors, friends and family against the hatred and violence that too often targets them. They deserve better and they deserve our support. We stand with our innocent Muslim friends, family and neighbors who now may be targeted for more hatred after the shooting. More hate is not the answer. 

Please feel free to share this graphic, use this graphic, spread it far and wide. Let’s all shine some light on the darkness!

Ideas for getting started with #50ACTSOFLOVE…

  1. give blood

  2. donate to a charity

  3. volunteer at a local school

  4. reach out to a long lost friend

  5. say something encouraging to someone

  6. help your child with their homework

  7. mow a neighbor’s yard

  8. pick up some neighborhood litter

  9. start recycling at home

  10. volunteer at a local food bank

  11. sit with a grieving friend or family member

  12. post a few positive articles on Facebook

  13. tell someone you love them

  14. send a greeting card to your grandparents

  15. find ways to support (too often homeless) LGBTQ teens

  16. find a local battered women’s shelter and donate time/money

  17. carry an extra $5 bill for the next street beggar who asks

  18. ask if your employer will match your charitable donation

  19. learn more about your Muslim friends and neighbors

  20. learn more about your LGBTQ friends and neighbors

  21. offer an apology you’ve been avoiding

  22. tell someone they’re beautiful today

  23. compliment a coworker on their job

  24. say thank you and mean it

  25. hold the door for someone at the coffee shop

Let’s open up our hearts, minds and imaginations to the potential of spreading love to everyone within our reach. Respond to the hate with love. Shine your light on the darkness. Believe in us.

AMDG, Todd

Why Campaigns Matter

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me its on us imageI have to admit that I have not always been a big campaigner.

I guess I’m missing the activist gene, because it just doesn’t come naturally to me. My genetic code seems heavier with apathy and procrastination. But, you know what? When I stop and pay attention I have to say, campaigns do matter.

We talk a lot about civility here at this blog, and I’m not at all apathetic about our need for civil discourse. As a person of faith I am convinced that our kindness, our gentleness and our support of all people’s value and dignity are at the core of being who God has made us to be, in both our words and our actions. Campaigns often help bring important things into focus and remind us of how we are to do life, how we are to do life well.

Someone just today on my Facebook feed shared something from the campaign to get us to stop using the word “retarded” as a humiliating insult or degradation of someone or something. I agree and I shared it along. I hate the word. It sounds and feels like a hit from a baseball bat. We need to do the same with the word “gay,” just like we need to stop using “hit like a girl” and various male and female genitalia as descriptions of negative and inadequate human attributes or behaviors.

Why does it matter? Isn’t this just all “political correctness” gone too far? I’m really done with the idea that we can use speech to offend, hurt and degrade, and then cry “political correctness” when we are held accountable for the destructive qualities of our verbal choices. I’ll tell you why the words we use matter:

1) Words have meaning, history and power. We cannot simply use a hurtful word and claim innocence by the fact that we have decided what it means for ourselves regardless of the word’s meaning and influence in the lives of other people. Retarded is a great example. The word has been used to degrade, hurt and humiliate people for years. It has, as many words do, both denotation and connotation. We do not have the right to ignore it’s negative impact on people around us.
2) We cannot use a word as an insult without insulting that to which the word refers. “That’s so gay” is an insult to gay people. “Hit like a girl” is an insult to girls, not a scientific measurement or expression of applied force. Using phrases like “He’s a real douche” or “Don’t be a dick” attaches negative meaning to things which are not in themselves negative. Feminine hygiene and male genitalia are not bad things. Our thoughtless words and actions can lead us to unintended consequences of meaning and perpetuation of hurtful meanings.
3) We have an obligation to listen and care. When our neighbors are injured by our words and/or actions, we have an obligation to care. There is no healthy philosophical, religious or spiritual system which separates one person’s well being from the well being of the world and people around her/him. We are connected. We should care.

Also…

  • Joining a campaign doesn’t fix the problem. We don’t signal our participation with an anti-bullying campaign believing that to be the solution to bullying. What we hope is that within the sphere our friends and family we might increase the conversation and awareness of a problem, and thus we would hope to participate in concrete steps toward a solution.
  • Joining a campaign does mean you’re thinking about something. Thinking is a good thing.
  • Joining a campaign does mean you’re listening. Listening is polite.
  • Joining a campaign does encourage campaign creators. That’s just neighborly.

Here are a few campaigns I’ve valued over the years and in recent months. I was excited to have had a chance to run in a local ONE Campaign 5k earlier this year and I just got my “It’s On Us” t-shirt a few weeks back. I believe that these kinds of campaigns are hopeful and reflect a lot of positive thinking and action in our world. I just might be becoming an activist…

Spread the Word to End the Word (retarded)

It’s On Us (combatting sexual violence)

He For She (solidarity for gender equality)

Hollaback! (you know, stopping street harassment)

I Choose (anti-bullying)

Human Rights Campaign (civil rights and equality)

The ONE Campaign (ending poverty)

Let’s keep it real. Endorse and support the campaigns you believe in, and let’s make the world a better, shinier, happier place for having supported us through the years of our lives.

AMDG, Todd