Gravitas. Ah, there’s a word worthy of our attention. Defined primarily as “seriousness and importance of manner, causing feelings of respect and trust in others,” gravitas is a quality that is hard-earned. The relation to “gravity” means your authority is given a certain weight that inspires others to take you more seriously. “Gravity” in turn is closely aligned with “grave,” both as “seriously important” and the “resting home of the dead.” The moment death enters the picture, our “have a nice day” default takes a sharp turn and demands a pause from business as usual. “Grave” in turn aligns with “grief,” the emotional response proper to reminders of our mortality and loss. Not only the physical loss of loved ones, but loss in all its myriad faces— lost love, lost youth, loss of a place one holds dear, a job, a quality of being once cherished that has gone into hiding. When one looks loss and mortality straight in the eye without flinching, gravitas appears.
Our once exuberant sunny nation, where we love the superficial happiness of cotton candy, the cute cat videos, the Club Med getaways, the technicolor musicals where people are singing and dancing on the streets, is now entering a new phase. We are coming to understand how the whole infrastructure of life as entertainment is built on a privileged class (middle to upper) of white-skinned people (mostly “Christian” straight men) assuming the world is built for their pleasure, in ways so invisible that they’re incapable of seeing who pays for it all. The system depends on people of color, women, poor people, people of different religions and sexual persuasions, co-existing in a world not built for them, but depending on their labor, their compliance, their vote, their cultural uplift. And once again, if there’s any hidden lesson in the madness of the unfathomable horrors perpetuated by people the American public voted in to take democracy down, it is to show us that the privilege of powerful rich men leads to the Epstein files, the doctrines of white supremacy and patriarchy leads to murdering white people in Minnesota who question it.
Lest I be misunderstood, let me say this as clearly as I can. The awakening into the needed gravitas in our national character is for the white folks. Black people and people of color in our country have known this forever and in fact, it is their gravitas, that blend of deep grief and yet still joy, that touches us all listening to the Blues or Count Basie or John Coltrane, inspires us watching the extraordinary energy and determination in all athletic endeavors, rings out a voice rich in tone in the speeches of Martin Luther King, Malcolm X, Jesse Jackson, Fannie Lou Hamer, Jasmine Crockett and countless others as they speak truth from the depth of the belly.
Slowly I see signs everywhere of gravitas side-by-side with the funny signs, frogs, ukeleles at the No Kings Rallies. Humor is not excluded from genuine gravitas (think of Louis Armstrong and Dizzy Gillespie and Trevor Noah), but has a different weight when it is so aligned. It is a needed shift in our national character, one so present in countries that have directly suffered wars and invasions and gives a different feel to those cultures and their people. It shows up in music in the Irish laments, the Spanish flamenco, the Portuguese Fado, the Bulgarian women singing, the Greek Rembetika music, Korean string Gugak music and hundreds more styles worldwide that allow grief, lament and sorrow to be voiced.
All this was inspired by a small section in a novel I’m listening to by Indian author Kiran Desai, the Loneliness of Sonia and Sunny. Here is the passage:
To be a citizen of a troubled nation gave a person gravitas. To be holding out against a cruel new world gave a person gravitas. To be wounded, yet fighting on against the barbarians, gave one gravitas. To be exiled, abandoned by the one you love (or the nation you once loved) gave one gravitas. Whether it happened in a personal relationship between couples or under a dictatorship run on fear, these things changed you.
How well that describes where we are. Struggling through each day in a troubled nation, a cruel, barbaric, purposely fearful new world and feeling exiled from the country we thought we knew. Those willing to look it in the face are gifted with this growing gravitas and it’s not easy, but it makes us more true, more authentic, more trustworthy. Descending to the depths of grief allows us to ascend higher in the firmament of joy. We’ve lived in the middle neutral zone shopping at the mall for too long and our time has come.
Our time has come.
