Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

Follow Us:
Top Stories

Inge’s American future

Opinion

Inge Schlegel

This is part of a series of interviews by Debilyn Molineaux, project director for AmericanFuture.US. The project's mission is to help everyday Americans to imagine a better future for themselves, and together we’ll write the next chapter of the United States of America.

This interview took place on Oct. 31, 2023. Inge is a personal, longtime friend living near a national park we both love. Over the years, we’ve communicated primarily on Facebook and it was refreshing to reconnect via a Zoom call. The interview has been lightly edited for clarity.


Debilyn Molineaux: How far into the future will we travel today to visit your life?

Inge Schlegel: Five years.

DM: OK, that takes us to 2028. Where are you?

IS: Same location as now, in California. I’ll be 72 then.

DM: As you observe yourself in 2028, what are you most proud of?

IS: I’m really proud of living a good, decent life. I’m proud of making it, without accumulating any more enemies.

DM: Any more enemies?

IS: Yes, I’ve learned to shut up when I know it’s not going to go anywhere in a conversation. I used to post a lot of political things and I lost a lot of friends. That was really painful.

DM: Ah, that is really hard. Is there anything else you are proud of when you are 72?

IS: I have a really large group of great friends, which is such a gift. And it didn’t happen by itself. But it’s very enriching because my friends live all over the place. I have a handful of best friends I could call anytime. I’m proud that I have so many resources.

DM: As you observe yourself in 2028, how will you spend your day?

IS: I will still be walking with the dogs, going outdoors, enjoying my surroundings. Healthwise, I hope I am the same size ... height-wise. I’m still exercising, keeping pace with the natural way of things. Not sure if I’m doing some type of work. I might be. I may be studying to recertify my nursing work, that is every five years. I keep a routine – I like to get up early. Make tea or coffee, walk the dog. I’ve cultivated these habits that work for me, I meet my spiritual needs with meditation and reading scripture. I use the Halo app, or something like this. I enjoy looking and exploring other spiritual avenues. I like to take many different classes, like The Daily Om. I don’t get bored.

I stay interested in what’s going on in the world, a healthy balance of C-SPAN and hearings, getting news from many sources. I may be teaching somewhere, about current events. I’m planning another trip because I enjoy traveling. I’m figuring out how to manage with limited resources.

I love spending time in my garden! I have a lot of self-care and other interests like gold-panning and target shooting.

DM: In 2028, how will you feel, most of the time?

IS: I feel pretty energetic. My number one feeling is gratefulness. When I have a grateful heart, I can remember five things every day and then the bad things don’t overwhelm me as much. It’s just part of me now and I’ve decreased the use of anti-anxiety meds. I feel playful and amused. I like watching comics such as Johnny Carson and Robin Williams.

DM: In five years, what will be your three priority values?

IS: Maintaining my health – mentally, physically – so I can maintain my independence as much as possible. Sharing kindness, being there for other people. Having fun.

DM: What does the community that supports your future need to include?

IS: I need space or physical areas to be active and meet other people, like cafés and parks. I’ll need commuting and transportation options to get around. And I’ll need class options. There are a lot available online already. Some in-person classes would be nice.

DM: Is there anything you can do today or in the near future to influence or co-create the community that will support you in 2028?

IS: I nurture my community all the time, but there is a Sierra hiking senior group – I’d like to be part of that.

Here's my invitation to you, and all Americans. Spend five minutes every day thinking about your future self, feeling those feelings, and include a sense of awe and wonder. This is based on neuroscience research that shows we subconsciously create what we focus on. So the choice is ours: We can actually co-create the future we prefer instead of choosing from the dystopian options presented to us. You can find a self-interview and others’ stories at AmericanFuture.us.

Read More

A Baseball Team Caught Between Two Countries — a Visa Shift and a Shutdown

The Tucson baseball team playing against the Águilas de Mexicali in the border city of Mexicali. Photo courtesy of the Tucson baseball team

A Baseball Team Caught Between Two Countries — a Visa Shift and a Shutdown

NOGALES, SONORA, MEXICO — What was meant to be a historic first for America’s pastime — a Mexican Pacific League baseball franchise anchored north of the border — has become a bureaucratic curveball.

The newly relocated Tucson, Arizona, baseball team — formerly the Mayos de Navojoa from Sonora, Mexico — has yet to fulfill a long-held dream shared by fans on both sides of the border: bringing professional Mexican winter baseball to U.S. soil.

Keep ReadingShow less
From Bob Dylan to Kendrick Lamar: How Protest Music Still Shapes America in 2025
Bob Dylan | Xavier Badosa | Flickr

From Bob Dylan to Kendrick Lamar: How Protest Music Still Shapes America in 2025

Pop music has always been more than entertainment. Reflects society’s struggles, dreams, and contradictions.

Across the last fifty years, artists from Bob Dylan to Kendrick Lamar have given voice to war and peace, protest and resilience, identity and equality, economic struggle and hope. Their lyrics, written for a moment in time, echo with startling relevance in 2025.

Keep ReadingShow less
Don’t Be a Working Class Hero — Just Imagine!

John Lennon’s “Imagine” comforts, but his forgotten songs like “Working Class Hero” and “Gimme Some Truth” confront power — and that’s why they’ve been buried.

Getty Images, New York Times Co.

Don’t Be a Working Class Hero — Just Imagine!

Everyone knows John Lennon’s “Imagine.”

It floats through Times Square on New Year’s Eve, plays during Olympic ceremonies, and fills the air at corporate galas meant to celebrate “unity.” Its melody is tender, its message is simple, and its premise is seductive: If only we could imagine a world without possessions, borders, or religion, we would live in peace.

Keep ReadingShow less
The Elephant in the Room’ Is a Rom-Com for Our Political Moment

The Elephant in the Room is available now to rent or buy on major streaming platforms.

Picture Provided

The Elephant in the Room’ Is a Rom-Com for Our Political Moment

Discerning how to connect with people who hold political views in opposition to our own is one of the Gordian knots of our time. This seemingly insurmountable predicament, centered in the new film The Elephant in the Room, hits close to home for all of us in the broad mainline Protestant family. We often get labeled “progressive Christians” — but 57% of White non-evangelical Protestants report voting for Donald Trump. So this is something we can’t just ignore, no matter how uncomfortable it is.

While the topic seems like a natural fit for a drama, writer and director Erik Bork (Emmy-winning writer and supervising producer of Band of Brothers) had the novel idea to bake it into a romantic comedy. And as strange as it might sound, it works. Set during the early days of COVID-19, the movie stars Alyssa Limperis (What We Do in the Shadows), Dominic Burgess (The Good Place), and Sean Kleier (Ant-Man and the Wasp).

Keep ReadingShow less