“Do we REALLY have to ‘go high’ when they go low?” Stephen Colbert asked the originator of the phrase, First Lady Michelle Obama.
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“I totally understand going high when somebody goes low,” he told her, “but the bar is so low that staying at your own altitude still means higher. Do I actually have to go up here or can I just be normal? Do I have to be a saint? Because down here, I’m pissed off!”
She responded, “For me, going high is not losing the urgency or the passion or the rage, especially when you are justified in it. Going high means finding the purpose in your rage. Rage without reason, without a plan, without direction, is just more rage. And we’ve been living in a lot of rage.”
Mrs. Obama said she feels there’s no choice but to “go high” — “because the opposite is unsustainable. If going low worked,” she added, “we’d do it. It might be a quick fix, but it doesn’t fix anything over the long term. I’m trying to push us to think about solutions that will actually unite us and get us focused on the real problem. That’s what I mean when I say ‘go high.’”
Obama concluded. “So yes, go high. America, please, go high.”
Every day teaching kids, I’m reaching for the mountaintop. Every day writing and reflecting through writing, I’m searching for purpose inside my rage. Every day playing music, I’m hoping to release the beauty hidden inside all the ugliness.
Today, I had the grand pleasure of visiting my old school in company with 16 alums about to graduate high school and their parents. After a lovely lunch and catch-up chatter, we invited the kids into the music room where we had set up the xylophones they used to play. It took me two minutes to teach them a blues melody (Milt Jackson’s Blues Legacy) and each also got a chance to solo. No one hesitated and all played something musically coherent and swingin’. Then the parents came in, I chose three soloists and we performed. All were mightily impressed.
I then taught them a new four-phrase melody (Mo Betta Blues) in front of the parents which they learned in 40 seconds. This time instead of solos, each had a duet musical conversation with a partner in the G-pentatonic scale with me supporting them on the piano. Again, eloquent dialogues with great listening and responding and the parents again suitably impressed. Then the kids sat across from the parents and each in turn spoke about something they learned at The San Francisco School that helped frame their high school years and that they hope to take with them into the future. Some mentioned the fearlessness and confidence they just displayed in their spontaneous solos in these musical examples and others mentioned kindness and empathy. A perfect opening for me to shamelessly hold up my new book, The Humanitarian Musician, and credit the school for being the culture that allowed these ideals to grow and flourish. And given the kids’ testimonies, they clearly worked.
Then came the obligatory group photo and without asking permission or introducing it, I just started playing Side By Side and the kids spontaneously put their arms around each other and started singing. Yeah!
So there it was— the high mountain we all have climbed and all of us so happily admiring the view. Our refusal to go low and follow the dregs of society down into their hellholes. Our antidote to mindless rage and our determination to keep walking upward with purpose and perseverance.
I think Michelle Obama would be proud.
