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            |  To the editor: There's no 
			doubt that the outcome of our election will bring crushing 
			disappointments to many. Eight centuries ago the Jewish philosopher 
			Maimonides offered guidance for the anyone sorely disappointed. In 
			his "Guide for the Perplexed," Maimonides taught that evil has no 
			positive existence. Rather it is simply a lack of the good, and it 
			does not come from God.
 Modern psychologists recognize that emotional devastation is 
			sometimes the result of severe disappointment. Like Maimonides, 
			therapists recommend that those of us who are experiencing deep 
			disappointment should take time to reorient or recenter ourselves. 
			We can do that through moments of lamentation and quiet meditation. 
			After that, we can seek comfort in our relationships with friends, 
			even if it's by Zoom or by telephone. We can remember the good 
			times.
 
			
			 
            [to top of second column in this letter] | 
            
			 
            Like most of us, I sometimes struggled with deep 
			disappointments while growing up. Whenever that happened somebody 
			would remind me that "life goes on." It was good advice. From my 
			mother I learned to retreat calmly in order to consider carefully 
			the lessons I could draw from what had just happened. Then I could 
			think more clearly about the future. "Wait 'til next year" became my 
			bounce-back motto. I learned to let tough lessons drawn from my 
			disappointments shape my planning. Then I signaled to those around 
			me that my temporary retreat was over and that I was ready to move 
			on. I found that by living into the future with joy and renewed 
			optimism a person can resist inevitable, self-defeating temptations 
			to seek revenge or to collapse in despair.
 Maimonides' counsel remains relevant today. Whenever we are shaken 
			by disappointments we can benefit by taking the time necessary to 
			breathe, meditate, learn and plan. Then we can move forward with 
			renewed confidence -- always being guided by our better angels.
 
 Gary Davis
 [Posted 
			
			November 3, 
			2020]
             
            
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