Taken from A Hopeful Act in a Perilous time
Pam Houston's Dedication
When
I was four years old my father broke my femur. I believe he meant to kill me,
and for the next fourteen years it became my mother's job to try to keep him
from getting another chance. Needless to say, my childhood home was nervous at
best and terrifying at worst, and it turned me into a woman who always takes
notice when a man threatens a woman's life.
My father said to me
often, “Pam, one of these days you are
going to wake up and realize you spend your whole life lying in the gutter with
someone else’s foot on your neck.” It was the closest thing he had to a world
view. Looked at a certain way my entire life has been dedicated to making his
words untrue.
Maybe its because I grew
up in my father’s house that I can see
Trump so clearly for what he is. A desperately insecure bully, with no moral
center--no center of any kind really--who feels momentarily powerful only when
he is able to break those unlucky enough to step into his path.
Trump has already vowed to
destroy (or threatens by his very being) every single thing about my life that I
value: the remaining wilderness, diversity of all kinds, education, art, animal
rights, choice, affordable health care, compassion, tolerance, honesty, hard
work, kindness, peace. I have not lived well these 54 years just to end up with
a sociopathic narcissist’s foot on my
neck.
So I dedicate my No-Trump
Vote to my four year-old self, smiling bravely for the camera in her 3/4 body
cast, and for every little girl who lays awake at night in her room afraid, and
to Hillary Clinton, who has dedicated much of her life to the betterment of
girls and women, and who each day puts on her bulletproof vest and stands up for
us all.
#DedicateYourNoTrumpVote
To Dedicate Your
No-Trump Vote, Click Here
PAM HOUSTON is the author
of two novels, Contents May Have Shiftedand Sight Hound, two
collections of short stories, Cowboys Are My Weakness and Waltzing the
Cat, and a collection of essays, A Little More About Me, all
published by W.W. Norton. Her stories have been selected for volumes of The O.
Henry Awards, The 2013 Pushcart Prize, and Best American Short Stories of the
Century. She teaches in the Low Rez MFA program at the Institute of American
Indian Arts, is Professor of English at UC Davis, and directs the literary
nonprofit Writing By Writers. She lives at 9,000 feet above sea level near the
headwaters of the Rio Grande and is at work on a book about that
place.