Despair is not an option. The phrase in an article by David Remnick, editor of the New Yorker, made a strong impact upon me. He mentioned it in relation to Trump and then referenced it at the beginning of the war in Gaza. I find it profound. I find it inspirational. I find it gives direction in instances when we feel there is none. One thing we can say about the near future of the United States is to expect the unexpected. When what we fear happens, what are we to do? Be complacent? Be angry? Do nothing? None of these alternatives are constructive, none will get us out of our morass. And if despair is not an option we shall have to fight. I don’t mean take up arms, or be violent in any way, I mean not take things laying down, I mean not give in to hopelessness and instead going forward armed by the values and principles we hold dear: the values that speak to and for our democratic society, the openness and inclusiveness it implies, the freedom of speech and of religion, the separation of church and state, the right to vote without hindrances. But if we’re going to do all that, we need to prepare ourselves, develop the inner fortitude, acquire additional knowledge, recognize and rely upon the inner resources available to us in order to endure whatever we may have to so as to eventually prevail over the long journey ahead. No, despair is not an option because if it were, it would imperil our success. There’s a line from Leonard Cohen, the poet and singer, “the light gets in through the cracks.” So we shall find the crack that fits our voice and we shall be the candle in the darkness. I don’t know how many candles it will take, nor how long it will be for it all to be lit, but I do know there are very many of us.