Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Naveen Agarwal, Ph.D.'s avatar

Hi Laura - I really enjoyed this essay. Having left my country of birth, India, more than 30 years ago, I now call US my home. I think where we live does not matter as much as where we feel we belong. And we belong where we build deep, meaningful relationships. In the end, we don’t defend a piece of land, we defend our relationships. That is how I look at my home in the US now. Yes there is a lot of ugliness we need to confront. How we deal with that is up to us. Best.

Expand full comment
TanzPunk's avatar

I was out with a group of old and new friends in Porto yesterday, and inevitably our conversation turned toward discussing the current geopolitical landscape. Our group of friends includes people from France, Spain, Poland, Ukraine, Russia, Brazil, UK, US, Romania, and many other countries. One thing we pretty much all agree on is that, for now at least, we have chosen to live in one of the relatively safest places we can be. Even so, we talked a lot about the uncertainty of the future, preparedness, and the urgency of forming strong communities to be resilient in the coming collapse. Portugal has a history of being a place of refuge in wartime.

I want to point out something that really stands out to me in my conversations with the Ukrainians and Russians who are old enough to have lived through the collapse of the USSR as adults or older teens: they confirm that the kinds of things happening in the US now are very much like what happened in the lead-up to the collapse of the USSR. I knew it already from my knowledge of history, but it does hit different to actually hear it directly from the mouth of a Russian or Ukrainian who has lived experience.

Expand full comment
26 more comments...

No posts