The courage to be brave when it matters most requires a lifetime
of small decisions that set us on a path of self-awareness,
attentiveness, and willingness to risk failure for what
we believe is right.
— Mariann Edgar Budd, Episcopal bishop of Washington
•••
Today I want to embody courage—
not only of the man who stood before
the oncoming tanks in Tiananmen Square,
or the girl who, after being shot in the head
and surviving, continues to advocate for
the education of girls,
or health care workers who faced
a killer virus in the early scary days of a
pandemic. I want to take on the mantle
of a redwood that has climbed inch by inch,
year by year into the sky, despite boring
insects and long-lasting drought and fire.
I wish to be as brave as a mother elephant
who turns herself into a pachyderm tank,
charging at bulls to protect her calf, or
salmon swimming upstream to their deaths,
possible prey to eagles and bears, determined
to reproduce in the waters where they were born.
I want to be as hardy as dandelions that push
through minute cracks in concrete, determined
to find the sun, anchored in the most unforgiving
places. Let me throw my head back and bask,
not thinking about heavy feet or tires, but living—
joyously, meaningfully, outrageously—
without thought of how the end might come.












