Month: March 2021 (Page 2 of 2)

A Look Back at Rev. Gretchen’s Pandemic Letters to the Congregation

As you process the anniversary of the pandemic and all that came with it, it can be helpful to look back on the past year. We invite you to explore our “Looking Back at 2020” timeline and revisit some of Rev. Gretchen’s letters from the past year:

Vital Signs (March 27, 2020)
“Wherever you are, and however you’re doing, you are not alone. We are all in this together. After a couple of weeks of increasing intensity, things got even more real yesterday with Larimer County’s (and then soon after the Governor’s) instruction to shelter in place…We are in this together. We are all trying to figure out what life means now, how we can connect in meaningful ways – what courageous love looks like now.”

How Far Out Can You Go (April 3, 2020)
“It’s somewhat of a spiritual cliche to talk about “one day at a time,” but in these times, I’ve found it to be a life-saving mantra.  Some days, I’ve found it’s more like one hour at a time… So for this week, I’d invite you to think about how far out you can go in your thinking without compromising your connection to life in its fullest sense. How far out you can imagine before you lose sight of joy or gratitude.  And then just stay in that place.”

Four Ways to Respond Now (June 5, 2020)
“In this time of great uncertainty, the risk for all of us is that we become so overwhelmed we hunker down and just focus on our own survival. This is understandable, and even biological in some ways. And yet by our faith, we know that our survival must be forged in a path build on our collective survival, healing that comes not just for some, but for all.”

About the School News (August 5, 2020)
“I know, we’ve been pushed into our collective corners to struggle and grieve and deal and fail and try to make sense of what makes no sense – all by ourselves. But that’s not the real truth. The real truth is that you have community and companions and people who love you and who are rooting for you and your family. Some of them you’ve already met, and know well; a bunch of others you haven’t met yet.”

Whatever You’re Feeling, It’s Okay (November 25, 2020)
“It’s ok if it feels harder than you thought it would. It’s ok if you’re struggling. It’s ok if you’re scared. Just because it’s not new doesn’t make the trauma any less real. This IS a collective trauma we are experiencing. And what we know about trauma is you will feel it in your body. It’s normal to feel tired or wired, zoned out or super tuned in, nauseous or without an appetite. It’s normal to seek comfort in the most basic ways. Wherever you are, however you are responding, whatever is happening in your body, and in your heart, it’s ok, it’s right, and it’s enough.”

Acknowledging 2020 (January 20, 2021)
“Remember the full journey. The ignorance in which we lived for the first few months of the year. The shock and confusion as we moved into quarantine. The realization that this was not ending any time soon. The persistence of political polarization even amid a pandemic. The infuriating injustice of George Floyd’s death, then Breonna Taylor’s death. The systemic racism that remains at the root of our country. The ash falling from the sky as our beloved forests burned. The impossibility of online schooling while also full-time working from home. The long stretches of time without seeing those we love. The absence of hugs, and handshakes, and singing together. Acknowledge the whole journey.”

Marking One Year of the Pandemic

This Sunday, March 14th, we will mark the one-year anniversary of switching to online services (and online everything!). But we’re doing so much more than that.

One year ago, everything changed. Uncertainty, fear, and grief crashed over us as the country shut down. Now, a year later, we are still in the same place… sort of. With vaccine distribution underway, it can feel like we should be moving on – we’re in the final stretch, after all. But anniversaries have a way of pushing everything to the surface. As I spoke about in a December sermon, we need to move through the stress cycle, rather than just pushing through before we’re done processing.

We need to acknowledge the ambiguity of this moment. It’s okay not to know whether to consider your experience growth or survival. It’s okay to celebrate the creativity we brought to this impossible and uncertain reality AND to acknowledge the deaths, the illness, the birthdays that didn’t get celebrated, the new babies that have not been held by their extended families, the memorials that have been put off, the isolation, the year of childhood caught on pause.

It’s healthy to honor the new ways we have cultivated connection and how we’ve expanded our capacity to care. It’s also okay to be scared of what comes next. We have instructed our bodies that separateness means safety. How will we remember the ease of togetherness? What does safety mean now?

Transformation is still happening – this is a moment to pause and consider, but not everything needs to be worked out right now! You are not behind! It’s ok to still be processing each of the major events of this last year. It’s ok to still be in the grief, the confusion, the getting by. We ARE still getting by. 

Yet, we have persisted and adapted. We have shown up for each other. Without a place to GO to church, we have learned anew what it means to BE the church. And this is the way forward. How we will be the embodiment of our mission every day, how we will live our values every day, how we will be in this together every day. This is the move to celebration – it is a move of wonder, awe, curiosity, and amazement.

The path forward will not always be clear and easy. There is so much to sort through in our minds, hearts, and bodies. We need to tune inward, lean on each other, and make space to discern – rather than merely decide – what comes next. What gives me the most hope – what I am celebrating at this anniversary – is that through the struggle, and the mess, the uncertainty of it all, we are growing, and we are learning, and we are in it together.

In partnership,

Rev. Gretchen

P.S. Be sure to check out our reflection questions and look back at the year below!

As we prepare for the one-year anniversary of switching to online services, we’re taking inspiration from NPR’s #TheMoment, which asks listeners where they were and what they were thinking when they realized a shift was happening.

We’ll be posing questions for reflection around the tremendous (ongoing) transition, we’ve experienced over the past year. To start off our collective reflection/mourning/celebration:

1. When did you realize things were changing in a profound way? How did you feel?

2. What is one way you’ve adapted this past year?

Click here to share your answers with us!

We will also be posing daily reflection questions on our Foothills Online Facebook Group – Click HERE and request to join!

Sermon: Tough Love Saves Us All by Rev. Gretchen Haley

Sermon Text (scroll down to find a video of the sermon):

When my partner and I were first together, our parents used to talk about us with their straight friends and co-workers by making sure they knew that we were “just like everyone else.”

“You know,” they’d say, “they pay their taxes.” 

This desire to point to our sameness, how we were just like them, was motivated by love, and it was an attempt to activate love. They were trying to overcome what they imagined or knew for sure their friends were thinking, trying to address whatever fears they might have, or image that came to mind when they thought about LESBIANS. If we were more the same than we were different, then we would be less scary, less “other,” more human. 

The Unitarian Universalist minister and historian Mark Morrison Reed talks about the central task of the religious community as revealing the bonds that bind each to all – the connectedness and the relationship across everyone everywhere that compels us to act on one another’s behalf.  This is the impulse behind this claim that we are basically the same. It is a way to invoke relatedness, and the duty to care, or at least the duty not to cause harm. 

Twenty years later, our parents don’t do this too much anymore. They and a bunch of others making the same argument seem to have convinced sufficient numbers of straight people that the “gay agenda” was often as boring as the straight one…I mean…we do pay our taxes.

And this works relatively fine for those of us who successfully pass or code switch our way in the straight community, those of us whose gender expression perfectly lines up with the societal expectations for the gender we were assigned at birth, those of us who are monogamous, aiming for marriage, and/or parenthood, those of us who are white, and who are citizens…you probably get my point.

When the bonds that bind each to all are grounded only in the ways that we are alike, or the idea that we must “like” each other –someone’s always going to remain outside the circle; someone is always going to be the definition of “regular human,”and someone else is always going to be…irregular.  Maybe even, sub-human, or “undermensch” as the so-called “scientific” field eugenics called it, or undermenschen as the Nazis came to apply it in their philosophy, picking up directly from the Jim Crow laws of the US. 

In her book, Caste, Isabel Wilkerson delves deeply into this history – if you haven’t yet found your place in our Common Conversation, check out foothillsuu.org/caste. In an accessible, compelling narrative, Wilkerson offers a framework to understand how we have found ourselves caught in a culture that ranks one another’s humanness based upon a certain sameness, a culture where some are perpetually assessed to be insufficiently human, and so therefore outside the circle of care, or love. 

Relying on sameness to determine a duty to care or the presence of love is not unusual, of course. It’s actually the norm.  Despite political or religious slogans affirming justice for all, as non-violence expert and activist Kazu Haga writes, “when we say ‘all,’ do we really mean all? Usually what we mean to say is that we are fighting for justice for all of our people, the people we like, the people on our side.  And too often, justice for our people comes at the expense of those people. When we are able to defeat those people, then our people will have justice.”

I think we all do this.  Intentionally, unintentionally, consciously or subconsciously. We’re trained through our culture, and rewarded in our politics – maybe now more than ever before – to set these limits around who we actually mean when we say “all.”  

I caught myself in this mindset earlier this week when I was working on vaccine equity. I felt that one of the groups was working against the goals that I felt were critical, and so, I wanted to shut them out. If they could be defeated, then our OUR people would win. I felt pretty righteous about my outrage for a while, and my strategy for success. Until I heard myself talking to a friend about it on the phone, and suddenly, I was like….hmm. maybe there’s another way…   

I feel some shame admitting this, especially assuming that any of those partners might be hearing or reading this, and wondering if I mean them. I want to just say – I’m being vague on purpose. Because the point is – my impulse was sincerely wrong. And it goes against a core commitment of our Universalist faith –that when we say all, we actually mean all

Universalism, as a religious tradition, started off as a theological claim about life after death. Our religious forebears asserted that there was no way that an all-loving God would damn any of God’s own people to eternal punishment and torment.

The idea was inconsistent with love in an ultimate sense. Universalism was a claim that whatever destiny any of us is meant for, all of us are meant for.

In the 20th century, this after-life affirmation became instead a claim, and a commitment we make about this life.  An affirmation that as Dr. Martin Luther King Jr said, “we are caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied in a single garment of destiny.” Whatever lines we may consciously or subconsciously seek to draw between us and them, enemy and friend, good or bad, worthy or unworthy –there is no escaping or undoing how interconnected we are, how interdependent.

No matter how different or disagreeable, no one is less or more human than any other of us. 

No one.

The outcome of this theological claim is what King described as the Beloved Community.  BeLOVEd as in fueled by and held together by the promises of love. Not just any love, but agape love. Whereas other types of love are directed at particular individuals –romantic love, or the love of friends, King described agape as the sort of love that “makes no distinction between a friend and enemy …it is an overflowing love that is purely spontaneous, unmotivated, groundless and creative…the love of God operating in the human heart….” 

King went so far to call it “disinterested love” because it is the sort of love that doesn’t care whether it is loved back.   It is the love that will “go to any lengths to restore community.”

It’s helpful to remember that we are not always responsible for generating this love. Instead, our work is just to show up on its behalf, and further its reach.  It’s helpful to remember this when we encounter people who are distinctly difficult to love, that while we need not generate love that is unconditional and universal, it is there nonetheless.

Including for us. 

Maybe the fact that this is way harder than it sounds explains why – while we can glimpse pieces of Beloved Community, and these glimpses in their beauty compels us to keep moving forward – it is resoundingly a vision for the future. 

King was doing the life-saving work of moral imagination, the sort of work that moves us out of the limitations of what is into the infinite beauty of the possible. 

Imagine: In the Beloved Community, all people share in the wealth of the earth, and all people care for the earth. There is no hunger, or poverty, or homelessness. There’s no racism or other prejudice, and there is no war.  

Which is not the same as saying there is no conflict; King understood that conflicts are inevitable in human communities that embrace rather than shun differences.  It’s just that these conflicts are resolved through a commitment to non-violence, and grounded in a mutual respect for one another’s dignity. 

Which again, is not the same as mutual agreement, or liking each other, or even spending time together.  As Kazu Haga reminds us “… the Beloved Community is a big place, so we have can have love for people, and they can live all the way over there in Beloved Community.”

I appreciate this reminder for many reasons –first, it affirms the role of boundaries in Beloved Community (that Sean and Elaine talked about last Sunday),and, in affirming Beloved Community’s bigness, it reminds us that in the Beloved Community, there’s enough of everything for everyone. 

It’s a big tent with big resources with big love.

In the Beloved Community, no one hoards resources, and power is shared – we practice power with rather than power over; and there is no need to compete for some small slice of pie that is already stingy and insufficient – we can lift each other up, ensuring that each person, and each community has what they need. 

This is one of the most radical ideas embedded in the vision of Beloved Community, because it stands in direct contrast to 21st century capitalism where we are taught there’s never enough, that you need to hustle to get what you need, and if you don’t have what you need, that’s on you.    

I’ve seen this too in the work for vaccine equity. 

Each organization is so accustomed to needing to compete for funding to meet the needs of their community, the idea that we could work together for a common good requires trusting that there will be enough for everyone – enough vaccines, enough funding support, enough acknowledgment of the labor and expertise and care to go around. 

Given the realities of funding, the bureaucracy of government, and the overwhelming number and loud presence of white people in Northern Colorado, I get why these communities who serve people of color and immigrants would be doubtful and suspicious, and always wondering if they should instead pull out of collaboration and instead look out for themselves. They haven’t done this, but I get why they would.

The system we have created rewards competition and isolation, and the loudest and fastest movers get the attention from those who hold power-over and without any idea or model for power-with….It’s not really any one person’s fault, I want to be clear – it is the system that we have all inherited, the system we are caught in. In this system – this slow, messy, non-hierarchical emergent collaboration seeking to creatively meet our shared needs means it’s really unclear, for example, who will sign a Memo of Understanding, or receive funds with the appropriate 501c3. And to be clear – we want that memo of understanding, and the funds to the c3s – because that is the only way to move through the system as it currently exists!

It’s just that – in the end, however, this slow, messy and hard to document type of collaboration for the common good across deep differences and divides, the work of inviting folks out to tea and dinner and beers – the work of building the relationship that endures – this is the work that it actually takes to build the Beloved Community.

It is agape love not in the generic idealistic sense, but agape love in the particular. Where you have to find ways to overcome your instinct to defeat the person who annoys you or who seems like they are actively working against you or who you just don’t get – and instead find an authentic way to widen the circle so it includes them too. 

And by you, I obviously mean, me.

The term Beloved Community was actually coined by philosopher Josiah Royce in the early twentieth century. He spoke of Beloved Community as that community worthy of our ultimate loyalty – what he called, the loyalty of loyalties. Unlike partial communities that seek to put limits around love or duty, the Beloved Community is that community that keeps drawing the circle wider and wider still. 

It is a loyalty that is based not in our sameness, but to the Love that holds us across our differences. To call this Love holy, to pledge our allegiance to it. 

Which in turn requires critical awareness of our own tribe, and our own trauma

Our own tribe so that we can be aware of our implicit bias, that is, the hierarchy we hold deep in our brains and our bones for who is more, or less, our people; and in turn, perhaps, more or less human. 

And then, our own trauma. We need to be aware of the struggles we carry from our own lifetimes, and those we inherit from past generations.  We need to know when we are acting out of our wounds, rather than our hope; we need to know, so that we can heal – backwards, and forwards -and together. 

Grounding our understanding of Beloved Community in Royce’s original ideas of loyalty reminds us that the heart of Beloved Community is not a belief in an idea, but a steadfast, unshakable commitment –  a tough love.

Martin Luther King Jr was very clear that Beloved Community is possible in this life, but it is only possible when a critical mass of people make this commitment, based on an understanding of what it means to be loyal to this love.    

This commitment is what drives the proposal for an 8th principle – because our principles are the covenant we make as Unitarian Universalists – our promises to ourselves, to one another, and to life itself.   The 8th principle says: we commit our loyalty to the building of the Beloved Community, and our loyalty to the love that binds us each to all, the love that meets us across all of our beautiful diversity. 

I wish I could say that making the commitment to the tough love of Beloved Community is is the hard part.  Like the vote we’ll have in May is the end, when really it’s just the beginning. 

Because the hardest part is what comes next.  When we live as if all actually means all, “there is no easier way.”  “…the work of justice often asks us to do impossible, hard, terrifying things.” 

It asks us to risk things that actually matter, especially our own comfort, our sense of order, or control. It asks us to risk our own safety, our privilege, our hearts.

But the good news is that along with the hardest part also comes the sweetest part – because in following the hardest part we also more often get to to see, and we get to know the beauty. The goodness. We get to glimpse the promise of true Beloved Community, and the freedom that is based in a love that is unconditional, transformational, and universal. 

The tough love that saves us all. 

May it be so, and amen.

Songs That Reflect Our State of Mind…

[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]Last week we asked you to share a song that reflected your current state of mind. Here is what you shared with us:

 

  • “Ain’t Misbehaving” by Fats Waller
  • “Anticipation”
  • “Blue Boat Home”
  • “Comfortably Numb” by Pink Floyd
  • “Crazy” by Gnarls Barkley
  • “Happy” by Pharrell Williams
  • “Heartlight” by Neil Diamond
  • “I am” by Satsang
  • “Mitten Man” https://youtu.be/Esa6j-RW2TA
  • “Ode to Joy” by Ludwig van Beethoven
  • “Oh Happy Day”
  • “Oh, What a Beautiful Morning”
  • “On the Road Again” by Willie Nelson (Got my second Moderna shot last week!😁)
  • “Party Up” (“Y’all gonna make me lose my mind up in here, up in here”) by DMX
  • “Peaceful, Easy Feeling” by The Eagles
  • “Qué Será Será” by Doris Day
  • “Remembering a Beginning” by Elephant Revival
  • “Ring of Fire” by Johnny Cash
  • “Sailing” by Christopher Cross
  • “She Works Hard for the Money” by Donna Summers
  • “Staying Alive” by The BeeGees
  • “Sunshine on my Shoulder” by John Denver
  • “The Four Seasons” by Vivaldi
  • “The Play” by Peter Mayer
  • “Three Little Birds” by Bob Marley
  • “Time After Time” by Cyndi Lauper
  • “Under Pressure” by Queen and David Bowie
  • “What the World Needs Now”
  • “White Sandy Beach of Hawaii” by Israel Kamakawiwoʻole
  • “Working for the Weekend”

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Foothills Works to Make Vaccine Access More Equitable

If you’ve been overwhelmed, frustrated, joyful, confused (or any other emotion) during the vaccine rollout, you aren’t alone. Like when the pandemic first began and everything was messy and uncertain, we’ve heard many of the same emotions expressed during this final push to defeat Covid-19 and all that’s come with it. 

One of the areas of greatest concern around the vaccine rollout is the lack of access and resources in BOPOC and immigrant communities. So I want to provide an update on our work to increase equity in vaccine distribution.

Since mid-February, I have been convening conversations amongst Latinx community-based service providers and activists (La Familia, Alianza Norco, La Cocina, BIPOC Alliance, Fuerza Latina, ISAAC, and Mujeres de Colores/Betty Aragon), Salud (specifically Leah Schulz, who is heading up their equity efforts), the Health District (James Stewart and MJ Jorgensen), PSD (Claudia Menendez), and with the County (Sergio Torres who they hired for Latinx COVID outreach). BIPOC Alliance used our conversations as a jumping-off point to convene a conversation among Black community leaders this week.

From these conversations, we have addressed the lack of trust and understanding about the vaccine among BIPOC communities, the real barriers to access, and the struggle for effective coordinated communication. We’ve also been building relationships where none existed or where there has been historical tension. It’s been a slog at times, and the perspectives represented are very diverse, but I think there’s some really incredible movement happening as a result. 

Hotlines
To start, we have initiated a proposal that will fund additional hours for an immigrant/Spanish-language-focused hotline that directly signs people up for vaccines at Salud. (This has been way harder than you might think, but we’re optimistic about the progress we’re making!). We’re working on a parallel version of the hotline for the Black community. This will be an outreach and educational effort supported by training through the Health District (where the attendees are all paid equitably!) and Salud. Foothills will also continue providing the kind of direct support for signing up that our Program Coordinator Amy Gage and our volunteers have already been tirelessly working to provide for our community.

These hotlines will be supported by community-based organizations that have agreed to actively educate and sign people up in their regular interactions. In turn, we are seeking funding for their labor and partnership at a flat fee. 

Mobile Clinics
We are also establishing two types of mobile clinics that will start next week. One is a large-scale, recurring mobile clinic that will be overseen by Salud but staffed and informed by La Familia, La Cocina, Fuerza Latina, and New Eyes Village. These will happen across the community on a schedule – at Aztlan Center, at schools, at the Senior Center, etc. The sign-ups through the hotlines discussed above will feed into these clinics. 

The second type of clinic is small-scale, micro-sites, overseen by the Health District. Foothills is currently exploring the possibility of piloting this at our next food bank and then using other mobile food banks to have similar micro clinics. These micro clinics will also be happening at the Murphy Center, at the mobile home parks, and likely at Holy Family.

Community Outreach
Finally, we are launching a large-scale communications campaign to build community trust in and support for the vaccine. BIPOC Alliance will oversee and run this campaign, and health providers along with the County will provide up-to-date information. BIPOC Alliance will also work in partnership with the County to ensure everything they are doing is culturally attuned to reach into our local immigrant and BIPOC communities. We are also seeking funding to support this effort.

Funding
On Friday, I submitted a proposal (co-signed by all of the above providers) to United Way, Bohemian, and the Health District. I have already received encouraging affirmation from all three organizations. We will be contributing to this funding effort through our share the plate giving in the second half of our Tough Love series, which begins March 14th. 

Why This Is Our Work
First, this work is our work because we have uniquely established relationships across all these organizations without any particular stake. We aren’t receiving money from this proposal in any way. (We’ve already committed $5,000 to this effort.) We have a history of trusting collaboration that we can use to help build bridges that are otherwise really difficult to establish. This is really important when we need to move this quickly in such a complex system. 

Second, it’s our work because our community’s ability to quickly sign-up and receive vaccines results from our privilege and is a manifestation of white supremacy. We had the relationships and the resources to move quickly and get our mostly-white community in for vaccines. Our community largely has technology and flexibility in hours, as well as access to transportation. As a result, those eligible in our community have mostly been vaccinated, while many Latinx and Black community members of the same age-range are only just now getting access to vaccines.

And so it’s our work because we have the chance to help address this inequity that many of us have benefited from directly. We can risk giving away our resources of time and energy, and leadership to bring compensation and recognition into the community and to re-center the conversation towards the needs of those who remain marginalized and overlooked.

Finally, it’s our work because we believe none of us are free until all of us are free. And in this moment, none of us are free until the most vulnerable among us get access to the vaccine. 

In partnership,

Rev. Gretchen

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