The savior and the nurturer
/Celebrate small, everyday acts of nurturing. Tell stories about them.
As long as we idolize heroes, we will unknowingly perpetuate the need for hardship and violence that give rise to them.
I say this not to diminish acts of heroism; life will naturally give us reasons to need them, and thank goodness for them.
And, we humans artificially manufacture many of the situations that give rise to the need for saviorism, as well. Create a problem, sell the solution. Let things fall apart, swoop in to fix it. Poof, instant heroism.
Why are so wed to the story of tragedy and the hero?
Maybe, in part, because it’s romanticized—we see and hear stories of it all the time. We love the story of the lone savior swooping in at the last minute to save the day.
Maybe, because it’s dramatic—and the drama of the adrenaline rush can be seductive.
Maybe, because of who it elevates—the lone wolf, the solo savior, the One—all reasonable role models in a fragmented, isolated society. If we continue to hope for a hero, we don’t have to do the mundane work of nurturing, maintaining, caring for, repairing, healing.
Maybe, because it’s good PR.
It’s time to elevate new narratives: stories that render the ordinary extraordinary; of reverence toward countless minuscule daily acts that affirm and nurture life—the ones that make life worth living.
We need nurturers as much as we need saviors.
Maybe, when we can continually celebrate and uplift the nurturers, we’ll find we need fewer saviors.
Maybe when we tell story after story of small acts of caregiving, we’ll have less that needs saving—and more that is thriving.
Small acts of kindness, to ourselves and others, are every bit as crucial as sweeping episodes of heroism.
We need firefighters to come in and stop the blaze with a deluge of water.
AND, we need those who plant new seeds, water them consistently, nourish them, and help them grow. We need nurturers who create conditions for life to thrive.
We need this for ourselves, and for our planet.
Not as big + dramatic, perhaps, but still a matter of life and death. Growth does not happen without the right conditions.
Celebrate small kindnesses. Elevate a caregiver. Create legends about tiny, joyful things. Live that kind of legend.
What’s a tiny story of nurturing you witnessed or embodied? Tell me in the comments, I’d love to know!