Yesterday a friend on social media challenged me to “only post positive messages for one whole day.”
It felt like part social media campaign, part enthusiastic dare, and part gentle personal scolding.
I hear a similar sentiment expressed to many people in a myriad of ways expressing the same concern: you’re producing too much negativity here.
Most people mean well, and believe me I do understand the sentiment—but honestly I don’t know what “positive” means to some people anymore. It seems like something is being lost in translation
To many people, positive seems to mean: to only speak happy words, to only focus on pleasant things, to never be combative or angry or grieving, to say nothing critical or confrontational about anyone.
It means pictures of babies and puppies and happy people on vacation—not of families in cages or deplorable detention centers or dying wildlife.
It means videos of cats in funny clothes—not of young unarmed black men being beaten by police in traffic stops.
It means beaming-smile selfies and feel good platitudes and perfectly framed food porn.
The request that a person “be positive” seems to require that they avoid providing information in a way that could derail the emotional state of others.
We all have a natural empathy saturation point; a threshold we reach where the bad news is too much to absorb, and with so much to be burdened by these days, the desire to escape some of it is natural and understandable—but it’s also a sure sign of our privilege that we think we can.
The very idea that we can have the option of escaping terrible news or sidestepping difficult conversations or limiting disturbing information, is itself confirmation that we are buffered from a good deal of struggle. That we can tire of a story or an issue—likely means we have no real personal stake in it.
Many people don’t have the option of avoiding negativity today.
They don’t have the privilege of not coming off as combative.
They don’t have the luxury of not fighting.
They can’t decide not to live with urgency in this day, because there is no other way to live in order to survive it.
There aren’t a lot of migrants or Muslims or people without healthcare or survivors of sexual assault or parents of transgender or teens saying, “Can you give me more puppy videos and less truthful news about our how broken our nation is?”
To me, activism is pure positivity.
It is passionately affirming humanity by taking note of the places it is most endangered and assailed.
It’s being for someone enough to advocate for them when they are vulnerable and marginalized and invisible.
Being positive means being fully engaged in real life.
I’m all for looking for the good in people, for leaning into the hope, for staying optimistic about the future, for boosting encouragement, for cultivating joy, for taking time to enjoy meaningful moments with people you love, and even sharing puppy photos—but that has nothing to do with editing what I share so that it feels more pleasant or palatable to people who are shielded from danger enough to be annoyed by its news.
Yes, please give people funny videos and heartwarming images and stuff to make them laugh and breathe and rest. The world needs these things.
But, as often as we share beautifully crafted Instagram images, we need to make sure we’re showing people the completely unfiltered reality, as well. The world needs this, too.
If being positive means to not call out abject racism;
if it means not to advocate for migrant families in cages;
if it means to silently ignore human rights atrocities;
if it means allowing my LGBTQ friends to have their rights eroded;
if it means to make peace with bigotry in the highest levels of our Government;
if it means abiding Muslims being vilified;
if it means to allow legislative violence to go unopposed;
if it means standing by while fellow Christians pervert the message of Jesus;
if it means to avoid unpleasant conversations about the things that burden my heart because they make other people uncomfortable
—then I guess I won’t be positive today.
Actually, I’m positive about that.
—
Originally Published on JohnPavlovitz.com
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