“Once you label me, you negate me.” – Soren Kierkegaard

As
I’m opening tab after tab online about governors, medical marijuana, and
judges, I feel cornered. I can’t escape becoming labeled. Democrat, republican,
hell-bound, idiot, commie, fascist, failure. I don’t want a new label. All I want is a way to escape the
absurdity of throwing myself into a corner of the political rink and screaming obscenities at the others. Even
my favorite distraction, TV, has failed me. Political commercials run around
the clock. And what would normally be a relaxing evening run outside turns into
a game of dodging picketers at street corners.
While
this chaotic political mess is happening around me, I notice the truth behind
Danish philosopher Kierkegaard’s wise words: “Once you label me, you negate me.” That’s exactly what I've found to be true as I talk with my friends about
this election. Once they find out who I’m considering voting for, I’m
automatically labeled. I am no longer
Lynn Walsh, your friend, but am Lynn Walsh, the one who single-handedly will
destroy democracy as we know it. Politics have become our poison, and I
don’t want to become one of those mindless drones who is so sold out to her
party that I stop looking at people as humans and instead see a potential vote.
But
after hours of research, and quite a few frustrated screams over the
shallowness of our politicians and voters alike, I finally bubbled in the
corresponding circles next to my favorite candidates. I can finally look
forward to watching Breaking Bad reruns without dramatic political commercials
popping up every five minutes, and that alone might have made this struggle
worthwhile.
Great insights. I think we have all felt this way from time to time as we try and make sense of the political process.
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