Border Incident #1
With the Rio Grande River between us
by Vicki Robin
One of the articles in The Foundations Of Peace (IC#4) Autumn 1983, Page 17
Copyright (c)1983, 1997 by Context Institute
I LOOK ACROSS the shallow, muddy waters of the Rio Grande River into Mexico.
Right here, in this spot, it looks exactly like the US of A. Our blended
skies are a uniform, intense blue. On both sides, grasses and pebbly beaches
meet the flowing water. A Mexican boy rides by on a horse and waves to me.
We are so much closer in reality than, for example, a Montana rancher and
I are at this moment. My allegiance, however, leans subtly northward, giving
concreteness to an imaginary line called the border. In the patchwork thought
system I've seamed together out of inherited scraps of pleasing ideas and
fearful sensings, I fancy myself to be kin with that rancher and only distantly
related to this boy just 100 yards away. Affections are like that - each
layer of attachment a border between me and you, us and them. What use is
space travel if it's merely fear of strangers writ large across the solar
system, the galaxy, the universe. In infinity we'd just find, as Pogo says,
that we have met the enemy and it is us. Yet, in this moment, there are
no borders - and I wave back.
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