Like a wedding after a whirlwind romance, the inauguration of our 44th president captured the country's heart--and the world's: a ceremony of promise and hope.
All new relationships start with hope. To a country with a debilitated economy and fractured expectations nothing is needed more at the moment the torch is passed from one administration to another than this positive emotion.
Hope!
And change.
Things will change. Change is constant. Change comes from making choices, or not making them. Things will change. We hope it will be positive.
And here is where hope is tested.
When the emotional high fades, and real life resumes as it always does, differences that seemed easily surmounted stand out starkly. Change--what must change and how--is clarified. Disagreements arise. Ideologies diverge. Goodwill dissipates. Hope fades.
And without hope we lose ourselves.
Many have already stated what they believe are the most critical issues the president faces: global warming, terrorism, the economy, education . . . Yes, all of those and more are critical. But Barack Obama must keep alive the flame of hope he's fanned--the expectation that we can come together and overcome differences to move forward with positive change requires nothing less than hope.
United we stand.
Together we can.
I hope.
~~~~~
We gather because we have chosen hope over fear, unity of purpose over conflict and discord. ~Barack Obama
Comments
I'm proud of the job he did on day one. I'm looking forward to more! For me, hope is strong. Hope is even stronger watching him keep his promises - from day one!
Peace - D
Love the photo. How do you do that so well so often? You really must be paying attention.
Barry
That perches in the soul,
And sings the tune--without the words,
And never stops at all"
As long as he continues to hum that tune, and as long as we citizens continue to supply the words, we will move forward in a positive way.
Very good points and I love the photo.
I hope!
By the way - GREAT ADVISE about running that marathon! It gives me hope! In 16 weeks I will NEVER have to run again!
Your photographs are like music, although I'd have to think a bit to tell you why.
Anyway, you know that photography takes a lot of kanoodling time, time to wander and look and see and think, don't ever feel rushed. Even if you're peeling potatoes, with your sensibility, you are working on something (not the potatoes, although they would be nice mashed with lots of butter and salt and . . .).
Alice