This newsletter is my part of an ongoing conversation among colleagues who’ve had a rough week. I share two or three pieces of the puzzle that feel are most important, hazard a guess about what to expect next, and offer at least one useful thing to do.
Hi friends,
As the list of losses grows, I’ve noticed myself getting quieter. I haven’t had as much to say on Bluesky. It’s harder for me to send text messages. Conversations that have always delighted me are just a little harder to sustain. It all just takes more deliberate effort.
And some parts of my life just don’t feel worth the effort anymore. I have no more patience for leaders who aren’t leading, and for professional spaces that are failing to respond to the moment. In some cases, calling people out and walking away feels right. This week, I’ve been energized by being reminded that solidarity also means showing up despite frustration and disappointments – for wading into conflict and staying there. As Mariame Kaba says, “everything worthwhile is done with other people.”
I don’t know which leaders and which spaces are failing you right now, but I’m sorry they are. What’s keeping me going is a balance. It’s not just keeping track of everything I want to fight against; it’s also appreciating all the people I’m fighting alongside, and staying focused on everything we’re fighting for.
This was week 9, let’s get into it:
I don’t yet have a strong sense of what next week will bring. At least one court case I’ve written about previously is under a temporary injunction that will be expiring or updated. I find the Litigation Tracker to be very useful for reviewing updates all in one format, in one place, across legal suits. Looking a little farther ahead, the high-stakes Wisconsin Supreme Court election is on April 1, and the Supreme Court itself has set an April 4 deadline for an emergency appeal to revive the executive order attempting to restrict birthright citizenship.
My favorite technique for coping with anxiety is to redefine some parameters. I am better able to cope with icy dread when I limit the problem space to things I can reasonably understand and influence in the near-term future. I can’t rewrite it any tighter without losing precision, but yes, it is accurate to translate it as, “Reel it in, babe.”
It is strategic to focus on items immediately within your control. The most urgent topic for me, and everyone I know planning conferences and academic fellowships right now, is international travel.

Modern science is international. Competitive career pathways rely on our ability to travel to whatever training and professional development opportunities, conferences, and field work are required, wherever they may occur. And transiting the United States is no longer reliably safe for many of us.
The most important thing we can each do is to come up to speed on legal rights and responsibilities at US borders as well as within 100 miles of them. Educate yourself, know your rights, and talk about them with your community. Validate legitimate concerns first, and then combat misunderstandings and misinformation together. Another prudent step is to review recommendations for securing your devices and data. What other steps do you think should we take?
If you’re an event organizer, can you get creative about your range of options? Depending on your specific context and timeline, you might consider changing your venue, offering registration refunds, reinvesting in virtual attendance and accessibility, or providing laptops for those who may not safely travel with their own. What else?
Free yourself from the need to find a single, perfect solution. You don’t need to figure this out alone, and simply creating space to talk about needs and worries is an important part of the work. We cannot promise that everything will be alright, but we can do our best to look out for each other.
Take care of yourselves this weekend, okay? We need you.
Liz