news&views Spring 2019 | Page 15

We’re working diligently to change things in our communities, our nations, our planet. We are passionate advocates for what needs to change, working tirelessly to restore hope to the future, to create a world in which more people discover their talents, learn and grow, and feel fully human. But the problems are proliferating. They are more complex, impenetrable, overwhelming. Exhaustion and occasional despair are common experiences. And so is the intensifying climate of fear and aggression, not just in the greater world, but in our relationships with each other. According to Wheatley perseverance is what keeps us going because we stay grounded and steadfast, which, in turn, enables us to stay the course so as not to get swept away by the negative currents of life’s experiences. In The Wisdom of No Escape, Pema Chödrön discusses the importance of perseverance to help us move through the darker moments of life. When we respond to problems by ignoring them, overeating, drinking, becoming discouraged, or succumbing to our wretchedness, we need perseverance to break these habitual responses. She writes, “When you are feeling heavy-hearted, when you find yourself in another dark place in which you’ve been countless times . . .” that is when you must persist. “Perseverance is a common human trait,” says Wheatley, “otherwise none of us would be here. All of us come from families and cultures in which people have persevered through much worse circumstances than our current challenges.” No matter what we face perseverance keeps us keeping on. Helen Keller once said, “We can do anything we want as long as we stick to it long enough.” If you’re going through hell keep going!” is attributed to Winston Churchill when he was faced with the enormous task of leadership during WWII. People who face the challenges of life, who never buckle under pressure, who keep on keeping on despite criticism, opposition and overwhelming obstacles, do so because of their determined resolve. Let us be assured that in this life we will be battered and bruised, criticized, attacked, opposed, demeaned, and we will struggle and fall. Pema Chödrön advises: When a big wave keeps coming at you and knocking you over, and “you find yourself lying on the bottom of the ocean with your face in the sand, with the sand going up your nose and into your mouth and your eyes and ears, you stand up and you walk. Then the next wave comes and knocks you down, and you stand up and keep walking; after a while, you’ll find that the waves appear to be smaller. If you keep lying there, you will drown. Even if you can’t seem to get rid of the sense of drowning, perseverance keeps you walking.” As Samuel Beckett writes in his novel The Unnamable, “. . . you must go on, I can’t go on, I’ll go on.” ● news&views SPRING 2019 | 15