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I have seen a country where hunger wears clean shoes in one room and no shoes at all in the next. I have seen children learn the shape of silence before they learn the shape of a pencil. I have seen mothers carry what can’t be carried, folded into grocery bags, folded into old sweaters, folded into the kind of hope that does not ask to be thanked. And I have seen this same wound from the prairie to the port city, from the reservation road to the far bright markets of the world — a long, long ledger of the taken, the overlooked, the counted only when it is time to count the dead. But listen: I do not say this to sharpen a blade. I say it because the heart still breaks before it learns how to hate. I say it because even now a hand can still reach across the dark without asking who deserves it. There are people in this world who have been made to feel invisible for so long they begin to disappear in daylight. There are people in this world who keep their dignity the way a match keeps its flame in a wind that should have blown it out. And I have looked into that wind. I have stood in it. I have seen the torn hem of the human family and I am telling you — we are not separate stories. We are one body learning, too slowly, how to stop bleeding on its own. So if there is any mercy left in us, let it be this: to see one another fully, to feed one another without shame, to grieve one another without distance, and to remember that a little kindness is not little to the person who is almost gone.
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May 23
May 23, 2026 at 6:22 PM UTC
South Dakota Interlude
I have seen a country where hunger wears clean shoes in one room and no shoes at all in the next. I have seen children learn the shape of silence before they learn the shape of a pencil. I have seen mothers carry what can’t be carried, folded into grocery bags, folded into old sweaters, folded into the kind of hope that does not ask to be thanked. And I have seen this same wound from the prairie to the port city, from the reservation road to the far bright markets of the world — a long, long ledger of the taken, the overlooked, the counted only when it is time to count the dead. But listen: I do not say this to sharpen a blade. I say it because the heart still breaks before it learns how to hate. I say it because even now a hand can still reach across the dark without asking who deserves it. There are people in this world who have been made to feel invisible for so long they begin to disappear in daylight. There are people in this world who keep their dignity the way a match keeps its flame in a wind that should have blown it out. And I have looked into that wind. I have stood in it. I have seen the torn hem of the human family and I am telling you — we are not separate stories. We are one body learning, too slowly, how to stop bleeding on its own. So if there is any mercy left in us, let it be this: to see one another fully, to feed one another without shame, to grieve one another without distance, and to remember that a little kindness is not little to the person who is almost gone.
Awakening - "Hunger Strike" (Christopher J. Cornell) https://tinyurl.com/HungerStrikeCheyenneRiver
Awakening
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May 23
May 23, 2026 at 6:22 PM UTC
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