Article 711J8 American protest is getting more playful. That doesn’t mean we’re not serious | Cas Holman

American protest is getting more playful. That doesn’t mean we’re not serious | Cas Holman

by
Cas Holman
from US news | The Guardian on (#711J8)

Play makes us more agile and resilient. Bring on the frog costumes and naked cyclists

When Donald Trump declared Portland, Oregon, a hellhole" overtaken by the Radical Left's reign of terror", Portlanders took to the streets not as an angry mob, but as frogs. They showed up in inflatable costumes by the dozens. Clowns came out dancing. Naked cyclists rode among unicycles, chiming bike bells and honking rubber horns. A band of gray-haired banjo players incited not a riot but a folk-song singalong. It seemed that the more absurd the accusation, the sillier the response.

As the attacks on democracy and mischaracterizations of millions of Americans become more extreme, the reasons for outrage grow. Reading the news is infuriating. But while anger can temporarily mobilize us, it is exhausting and disempowering in the long term. Constant rage doesn't feel good to most of us. As we buckle into this new normal of uncertainty, I'm glad to see we're showing up with creativity, humor, music, all tools that are central to who we are and how we cope. The administration's performance of power and control are being met not with protest: but with play.

Cas Holman is a Brooklyn-based designer, inventor, and author of Playful: How Play Shifts Our Thinking, Inspires Connection, and Sparks Creativity

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