Trying to Detach and Reattach

“Should we donate all of dad’s suits,” my mother asks on Facebook. It’s a simple question, but it strikes a nerve. Dad died two years ago. Hoarder mom is trying to work with a friend to go through all of the items in her northeast home virtually, as she’s stuck in her “snowbird” Florida condo all summer due to the risk of traveling in a pandemic. My mother, who yesterday had a 5 minute argument over whether or not to throw out an empty bottle of eyeglass solution, had no inkling of concern about getting rid of all of my father’s suits. Which, at surface level, is the right way to act about suits (and empty eyeglass solution bottles.) But my parent’s traumatic relationship, lack of empathy, years of domestic violence and pain just sit heavy with me. I know I need to let it all go, but I’m stuck. And like my mom’s 5 minute argument about whether to keep the empty bottle, I posed the question — should we keep one of the suits?

I asked my mom — what was his best suit? Can we keep the one he wore to my wedding?

“That was the one he was buried in.”

“Oh,” I responded. I’m pretty sure I knew that but I forgot in the way I forgot everything about his death because it was all too painful. I immediately experienced a flashback to seeing his corpse at the funeral–even though Jews aren’t supposed to see the body at funerals–because my non Jewish aunt convinced my mother that one should put something important in the coffin before he is buried and I was curious and had never seen a dead person and felt like maybe it would provide me closure or something or I don’t know and Catholics do it all the time so what harm could there be, so I brought my week-old son’s little frog cap and put it on his shoulder and looked at him for a second as the funeral home filled up with my father’s friends and family and acquaintances and I didn’t know whether to let my gaze linger for as long as possible — the last time I’d see my father ever — or to look away, knowing that the image would forever be burned into my mind anyway, and it wasn’t like he was about to move to change the scene…

Death of a parent is hard for everyone. It is especially hard growing up in a home where things that didn’t matter were clutched on to with such passion — a parent who cares more about the loss of an empty glasses cleaning container than the loss of a life, or the feelings of a daughter. My mother has been through a lot, and much of her lack of empathy I think is in response to all of it. A defense mechanism. I didn’t know her when she was young. Maybe she was different then. It’s hard to say. My father too. He had hopes and dreams once. He was always cynical and fact-driven and probably thought he was right in 100% of the arguments he was having even as a young child, but maybe once upon a time he wasn’t so bitter and angry. Apart, they cared mostly about themselves and had the ability to lead reasonably happy lives. Together, it was fuel on fire. Daily.

So you’d think I would want to get rid of my childhood home–a home that stores all of those memories. A home I haven’t lived in now for nearly 20 years, despite visiting often. It’s time to let her go. Yet just like my parents, I find myself more attached to the physical object that is the home and furniture in it than people. My childhood home is a person, with her own feelings and needs and wishes. My home was what comforted me and hugged me on all those long days and nights when I felt otherwise alone. Nothing was stable in my life except those walls. While the house has gone through some updates since I lived there, my own childhood bedroom is largely the same. The same lilac and off white wallpaper I picked out when I was seven, although now ripped in spots. The same Ethan Allen furniture my father purchased for a seven year old that the seven year old quickly destroyed (and I never heard the end of that.) The same view out the window of a huge verdant backyard and thousands of tall trees that would sway violently in summer storms. The power line that swooped elegantly across the backyard close to the trees, the temporary home to many birds who stopped by to visit. And stumps where other trees — like the tall pine trees and apple trees were slaughtered.

A house is just a house. And I can’t get back to the house now for who knows how long. It will likely be sold before I can. I’m not sure if going back to say goodbye would help at this point. In the same way I saw my father in a bad state in June and a slight recovery before I had to catch my flight back to California, only to find out his passed in August, so too may be my final goodbye with my home. I at least got to spend many years going back to visit it. I even had my son back once to run around, though he won’t remember that. I had hoped for many years visiting with my children, trips to their grandparents on the east coast, the comfort of that home, the warmth of seeing my new family experience the best of the house.

My father at least would have see the value in that. He cared about that house too. He put more money into it than one ever should have, in buying very nice furniture and adding on a family room and fixing up the bathrooms in ways that made little sense for resale value but met his own unique aesthetic taste. My mother has no attachment to the home, only the stuff in it. Only to empty eyeglass cleaning fluid bottle, and the papers upon papers that have been saved over the years — magazines and coupons and lose sheets where she jotted down notes. And hundreds of books and toys with missing pieces which she can’t bare to get rid of because she wants my children to have them. A hundred thousands pieces of my and my sister’s childhood mixed in with just about anything else you can think of – likely more empty glasses fluid containers.

I’d like to go back to the house once more to do a serious pass of my own stuff. Every time I went back I went through my things a bit, but never effectively. It was too much emotionally do deal with. I am a hoarder too, though I recognize it so try not to acquire a lot of things that I know will be hard to part with for no good reason. I buy makeup because I have no emotional attachment to it and it’s easy to get rid of. Clothes are harder, but I’m learning to become less emotionally attached to them. It helps that my life has no important events in it anymore, so I have few clothes that store memories in their threads, outside of what I wore when I gave birth to my son and my wedding dress, which after nearly 4 years I’ve failed to have cleaned and packed up appropriately.

For my own life, I am struggling because I do not have a home. I am looking to buy a home and the process is triggering due to what home means to me in the first place. Knowing the only home I’ve known as home is slowly dying. Looking around at my apartment and seeing not a home but a temporary place of shelter. Visiting potential homes to buy and thinking how we probably wouldn’t want to stay there forever, how they might be an acceptable starter home, but how long term, if financially possible, we’d want more space. So the home, even if we owned it, would also be temporary. Would it become too hard to let go? Or would it always feel temporary, like this apartment, and all the apartments I’ve lived in since I moved out of my home at 17? If my own home is sold and gone, maybe I could build a new home. Maybe the memories of the past would fade. Much like my father who I still remember very much alive, I’ll remember my house with her lilac wallpaper and the yard and the feeling of the wet grass under my feet and the dirt under my knees as I planted a dozen plants I purchased each year at the school plant sale despite being the world’s worst gardener. As long as I’m alive, those memories will never die.

And I know I need to let the house go. Much like my mom needs to let her random empty bottles of glasses cleaner that she might one day use to pour fluid from bigger bottles into go. I realize, intellectually, life isn’t about things, but about experiences, about moments, about what happens in any given day. I don’t need to be in a house or touch an old suit to make those memories any more valid. And there are some things in my life I’d probably be better off forgetting. Starting over. But it’s scary and sad and despite being 36 I don’t feel any more ready to let any of it go. I know soon I won’t have a choice. The only choice I have is in my own life. In the home I make for my family. In the decisions I make every day. My childhood is over. It’s long over. And, even if my mother cannot let the things in the house go, I need to break free of that house that provides a false sense of security. Nothing is every truly owned. Not even a house. The land is rented. It was never ours. The only thing that is ours is what we choose to remember.

In Trying to Stay Above the Surface

Option 1: ignore the time and space continuum and try to let it all blur into ad nauseum and add nausea and try to be a mom wife employee best of all worlds and keep it all spinning so fast you get lost in it until it never was and you’re slid 6 feet under because that’s how fast it goes and in those last moments you realize regret and wonder could there have been another way or are you always you and any way would have been no better and so you take your last breath and again let your life pass before your eyes just as it always has.

Option 2: Stop and feel everything, the good, the bad, all of it. Try to embrace each moment of these fast fleeting days. Each discovery your son makes. The excitement in his eyes conquering a new skill. Remember the good more then the bad. There was good, wasn’t there? You’re so negative. Surely there was good. Long days and nights of a youth that went on and on. Looking forward to things—there was a time when you did that also. You can do it again, perhaps. If only you stop expecting the moon and start embracing the flickering overhead lights that life offers. They’re still light and if you squint enough and/or drink enough maybe they too will look lunarly lovely. Won’t they? If only you could see the glass not only half full but imagine a few more inches of liquid there. Why waste all the little time there is lost in the time that was?

It is almost July. Time is no longer relevant. Moments are everything. Days and weeks and months and years and decades are, well, they bookend the moments many or few, they remind us of the lack of forever in forever as does the skin that crepes slowly on our hands and crows that line around our eyes and pigment that escapes our worn and weary hair leaving nothing but silver white. And so I ponder the options and question my free will and in all that thought another year goes by and I wish I made faster choices or something but I’m just here trying my best to stay above water and I guess that’s worth something I mean I guess that’s worth everything even if it doesn’t mean I am satisfied or content or happy or in some state of acceptance or anything. It is just is, as it is, as it always was.

50lbs.

This evening, I put on clothing only to be worn in my house, and took a picture of myself in the mirror to examine my weight loss progress. Looking straight into the mirror I felt saddened by the folds of skin and fat still hanging around my 2 years postpartum belly. That will need surgery to fix, I thought, turning around to see if any other angle was more flattering.

There were a few good angles in there. A few moments when I thought maybe my body could be remotely acceptable again. Not exactly now, but I’m starting to see parts of my body come back. I can’t say I ever loved any part of myself—but as I lose weight I feel less embarrassed about what I had let myself become.

I’m still 19lbs overweight, and beyond that I think I’d be the best with another 20-30 removed. I said I wasn’t going to focus on a goal, but if I can sustain a long a week weightloss, I should be able to hit my goal in a year. If I can increase that to two pounds a week, which would be ideal, then it can be done in 6 months.

I imagine what I might look like then. November 2020. Right before my 37th birthday. For a moment feeling good about myself, if possible. For myself. I don’t want to do this for anyone else because that’s entirely useless. I’m tired of caring what other people think. This is for my health. It has to be achievable. I got to 140 before my wedding, so what is 30lbs more? Even 120 would be amazing. 125. Once I’m in that range I’ll feel better.

And even though it’s not ideal to obsess about anything I need something healthy to fixate on right now. Something that involves no one but me, myself, and I. A clear objective and path to get there. Alone. With the only reward being how I feel. Maybe I’ll learn what it’s like to have confidence. I don’t know. It seems like a fairly healthy obsession for the next year. A distraction. A much needed healthy distraction.

Trace.

Imagine pupils tracing flesh, noticing. Just, noticing. The way your mouth curls when you smile. The simple sway of your hips. imagine being watched. Noticed.

Imagine being invisible. It happens with time. Happens. Imagine not being seen. Traced. Noticed. Imagined. You wonder.

Remember being traced. Eyes noticing. And you think all that’s left to notice you is the stars and trees in silhouette against the night. You wonder. What it’s like to feel slightly less invisible. You wonder and imagine and your mind plays tricks on you and drives you towards the deep end. There where everything erupts inside out. So you don’t go there. You don’t go where you might be seen. Noticed.

I remember as a child my parents taught me my worth was in my beauty and my lack of worth was in my lack there of. I made funny faces and never believed I could be beautiful. And if I couldn’t be beautiful, nothing I could be mattered at all. And I’ve spent my life longing to be noticed. Traced. Seen. The light that follows the curves of my body, that funnels into the darkness between my lips. Perhaps that’s what we all want. To be called beautiful. Not even with words. But a look. From someone who notices everything but still happens to take the time to notice you. And you wonder. As you age. Are you permanently invisible? Maybe you are. Maybe it’s better that way.

Alone.

I think everyone understands now a little of what I’ve felt through my life. This sense of social isolation. Of the world around you existing and yet there you are, miles away from it, despite it all going on right there in front of you.

I’m trying to get over the loneliness I’ve always felt. I’m not sure the kinds of connections I crave are at all realistic. Those deep, intimate connections where you can be authentically you down to the feelings that don’t make sense in spoken form, but they’re true nonetheless. Those emotions that can only be communicated in art because they exist between sounds and sometimes not in brushstrokes but in the white space. In the way one’s body curves while dancing or otherwise embracing.

And only people who feel this deeply understand it. This perpetual loneliness. Burnt out by social interaction yet craving company as when our only company is our own mind we can get lost in it, tangled in our thoughts. In our childhood rooms wondering what is it that the rest of the world knows that we don’t. How does happiness seem so simple for some, yet so elusive for others?

And—why does knowing people still feel like not knowing them at all? Why is it I long to understand the inner workings of a few, very few select people whose minds are museums of every possible emotion layered with ever-growing curiosities kept safe in permanent collection.

I stand across the street from said museum and study its Corinthian columns. Protective and strong. My mind wanders inside, exploring its many floors and exhibits. The surrealism. Modern art. Photography and film. History and bones. The living and the once lived and the might live one day. The never lived but more alive than anything that ever has. The science and stories and symphony of the stars.

Perhaps it’s just I am void of my own intrigue. My memory nonexistent I am not fact but fiction. I exist in the moment deep in my gut. I exist in a thousand possibilities of the future and regrets of the past. The loneliness hangs there, iced with the blue green flame of well below frozen. In the clay that I am seeking to take form, awaiting sculptors to knead me. To bake me in their kilns to harden me into the form of their liking. To submit to sculptor. To be hardened to further fragility, yet safe, trusting, saddened by sentient solitude no more.

Want.

There seems to be a cliff dropping down to a gorge so deep it’s impossible to know how deep between reality and another reality that seems to be on the other side of it. And, in this time of coronavirus, my side of the gorge is shifting backwards, not forwards. It becomes particularly enticing to make a running leap despite knowing that there is no way the laws of physics would allow me to safely land on the other side.

Maybe it’s time to leap. I’m getting older by the second and making so little progress. I asked earlier if progress is really productive and yet I want to keep moving in some direction, ideally forward. I guess it’s just as a woman of great dreams my heart is saddened by moving away from the edge of the cliff and resolving never to even consider leaping again. To avoid falling, certainly, to the victim of my wild imagination, my constant hunger for something greater than or other than this side.

I should have leapt sooner. If I fell, I’d have fallen, but now it’s too late to try. Life is no longer about chasing that reality across the chasm it’s about sinking into routine and silence and hoping to save for the down payment on a house you will be outbid on anyway so why bother?

See, I’m an escape artist. A master of disguise so masterful I don’t even recognize myself when I look in the mirror anymore. So it goes. I long to be reminded of who I am or once was, but don’t we all. For all the years of our youth we spent preparing to become ourselves in adulthood the cruel joke is that we actually were ourselves all along and ran out of time to pursue whatever it is we really wanted. So instead we are stuck, toes tight around the edge of our cliff and looking out into what is now all but an impossible leap to the other side which we can’t see anyway.

That doesn’t keep me from imagining what is feels like to be there, rolling in fresh soil, burying my toes deep, curled against the softness of how I assume it all might be, that other maybe, a thousand million miles away, instead of the actual exactly, the here and now and tomorrow that can be easily estimated and played out well in advance. At some point the desire for suspense and surprise becomes too strong. At some point she turns towards her demise and starts to sprint ahead towards that impossible leap.

Lockdown Day 22: The Bittersweet.

My attempts were futile. No matter how many times I put the canopy over his head and tried to explain how it would keep him dry, he pushed it off gleefully to feel the rain falling on his head. Soon, he also felt the rain pouring on his feet, as he quickly clawed off his shoes and socks. This was moments after he realized, 10 minutes into our walk, that his father had not come with us. “Where Daddy go?” he inquired over and over again, frantically looking for my husband. “He didn’t come with us,” I attempted to explain to my 20 month old socially isolated son, who, after five minutes of repeating “where daddy go” finally got the memo and replaced his “where daddy go” chant with repeating, in the most adorably sad voice, “bye bye dada. Bye bye dada. Bye bye dada.”

The good thing about it being under 50 degrees and pouring on day 22 of lockdown is that no one in their right mind was outside, at least in our little apartment complex. Being so close to our front door, I opted to let my son–already soaking wet–run through puddles barefoot. This is what childhood is all about… except usually it’s with other kids. But my son, who doesn’t understand why “boppa” and “grandma” can no longer visit, who screams into my phone “call friend” so he can see another kid around his age who makes funny faces at him virtually, seems mostly ok with this whole lockdown thing. He might not realize he traded in friend and grandparents for more momma time, but I can tell he likes that I’m home.

But the days of working from home have turned into one big blur. I made a commitment to myself yesterday that everyday at lunchtime I would eat a super quick lunch, then take my son out for a short walk. It was definitely the perfect day to commit that to myself in an area that typically has nice weather, the day before it was 48 degrees mid day and pouring rain.

I hadn’t paid much attention to the weather (what’s a little rain?) and I asked my husband to get my son ready for a quick walk so we could get some fresh air. My son was already enthusiastically shouting “need go home a park go home*” (“go home” means “go out” to my son) when I opened the door and noticed the little rain was actually quite a lot of rain. I grabbed an umbrella, threw on a hoodie, and figured the rain would keep us safer. One might say my son could catch a cold from being out in the rain and getting all wet, but–he won’t catch coronavirus.

After I quickly lost the battle of “keep the canopy down so you don’t get soaked,” I watched my son sit up in his stroller, uncovered, staring in awe at the rain, the heavy grey sky, and the sopping wet verdancy around him as he reached out with delight to brush against the soaking leaves–leaves only slightly less soaking than his outgrown brunette hair and fuzzy Elmo hoodie. Given he couldn’t get much wetter, I opted to take him out of his stroller to roam free. I questioned whether I was being a bad mother for letting my son run shoeless through puddles in cold-for-California weather, but I made the call to not care either way–he was having fun, and fun comes in short supply these day. Splash splash splash, he stomped, from one puddle to the next. I let him wander freely with the exception of keeping him far away from the postman and the construction worker who were having a socially-distanced chat by the mailboxes.

We weren’t outside for long. We headed back to our apartment to get warm and share all of our adventures with “dada.” I went back to my bedroom to resume work and prep for a call, and my son went back to the other room to watch too much Sesame Street. As I curled up in my bed and got back to work, I felt the same unsettling mix of deep existential sadness swimming through my veins in tandem with a tinge of peaceful delight that I’ve felt for days now. The deep pit of guilt for feeling anything positive in any of this, with so many suffering, and yet, finding so much of “this” is making me happier than I’ve been in a long time. The long focused periods of work where I can perform my best and not be distracted by severe anxiety. The getting to see my son for a few minutes on breaks and give him a quick hug or see the newest thing he has learned (or visit, after finishing one big project for the day, when I heard him giving dada a credit card and telling him that he wanted to “buy a mommy.”) The eating small portions when I’m hungry versus stuffing my face all day long with too much food. The being home and fully present when I’m done with work versus having to drive 45 minutes in traffic and arriving home too exhausted to do much with my family other than sit on the couch and survive social interaction before it’s time to go to sleep. Getting to see my son go down for his nap in my husband’s arms. Doing what’s best for my mental health and my professional productivity. Living a life that feels like I have a life… I mean, one where I can’t see other people outside of my family and where I’m constantly worried about my loved ones getting sick and dying… but a life nonetheless.

This weekend, as I roasted onions and garlic for fresh red pepper tomato sauce I was attempting to make for the pasta my husband found at the supermarket last week, I stood in the kitchen and let the thick, blood red aroma fill me. I reveled in the suspense of potentially cooking something edible, and the likelihood of it being barely that. Ultimately, the pasta was undercooked and the sauce too bitter, but that didn’t matter. I found joy in the process of making it. In the process of doing something just to try it out. Anything not entirely burnt was preemptively deemed a success by yours truly. And as I ate my pasta too-al-dente with sauce surprisingly flavorless and thin, I grew excited about what I could do next time to experiment and make it better. Because now, for the first time in years, I have the time to just be present in the world where the future is so uncontrollable I’m forced into sweetly hovering in the present. My anxiety still stabs my heart and takes my breath away at times, but lesser and lesser each day this lockdown wears on. I connect with a few friends and family members here and there, in text messages and on zoom virtual happy hours, but my contentment seems more to do with the semi-solitude that social isolation forces (and enforces.) It feels as if my little family of three is floating out amongst the stars, light years away from other sentient creatures, despite radio contacting others for comfort here and there. And there, amidst those stars, I finally am getting a taste of what happiness can be, and it tastes far better than my pasta sauce, though perhaps equally bittersweet.

It’s all going to be ok. Right?

People who do not have anxiety disorders may understand a smidgen of similar panic these days—that deep sense of dread that no matter how hard you try and plan you just are not in control of anything in this rabid little big giant world of ours.

I know I ought to stop reading the news, devouring every qualitative and quantitative data point about this virus. I hadn’t spent a single minute becoming the world’s expert on the flu or other causes of death at scale so why do I find it so impossible to look away from the many articles about infection spreading across the world?

Maybe it’s the tightness in my chest that hasn’t fully dissipated for two weeks despite a full course of strong antibiotics. Maybe it’s knowing that many of my loved ones—my mother, in-laws, and grandmother—are in the at risk category which means things could get very scary if any of them got infected. Given worst-case projections that 75% of us many get sick it’s hard to not worry.

There is also a chance this will all blow over fairly quickly. Maybe the rates of death are much lower here than they have been in other countries. Maybe medicine will soon keep the worst of the disease at bay. It doesn’t help much to be a pessimist, though I wonder how much it helps to be a realist in this situation. I mean, it is important to take necessary precautions and isolate, but beyond that what can we do? How panicked do we want to be?

I don’t understand those who don’t feel the heavy weight of anxiety right now, but I envy them. Those who are in the what will be will be camp seem to accept this may get pretty ugly, but they aren’t particularly worried about it. Then there is the camp that thinks the entire situation is being hypersensationalized. That the media is playing up our fears when the data is not yet available to get an accurate analysis on what is really going on. That this is all not worth shutting down our economy over, despite acknowledging that some people will die from this who weren’t otherwise ready to meet their proverbial maker.

But it’s challenging to pretend everything is business as usual when it so clearly isn’t. Ignore the news—fine. Don’t engage in conversation and social media chatter about hospitals becoming overwhelmed and people of all ages becoming critically ill and unable to breathe. Got it. I just don’t know how to tune out how dramatically life has changed, in an instant. How we can no longer see our friends, or anyone really. We go for walks and sprint to the other side of the street when anyone heads our direction. We do not have a moment to look a stranger in the eye and exchange a friendly silent hello or an awkward accidental glance in anyone’s direction.

Two weeks of this is certainly survivable. It may be longer than that. How long? So many think it won’t be long at all. It doesn’t make sense for this to be a month or two and then we return to normal. To defeat this thing it seems we must accept it will seriously disrupt our lives for quite some time. Months? Years? Certainly not weeks.

There are positives to the isolation as well. It forces us to return to simplicity, in solitude or with our close family. We cannot go out to be entertained, we must entertain ourselves (or at least cozy up on the couch while watching Netflix.) It provides pause to a modern life that sprints ahead with no retrieve, and gives us the opportunity to think, create, and, if we can quiet our minds enough, sleep. So I’m trying, I’m really trying, to focus on the positive and not expect the worst. The focus is to keep loved ones safe, keep ourselves safe, and take everything one day at a time.

Isn’t that what the non anxious folks do?

Life in the Time of Corona

50 minutes until we go on lockdown. It still seems like we’re all living in the middle of a movie, instead of real life. We slowly–very slowly–start to accept that things aren’t as they should be. Some of us by choice, other’s, force. Our self-promoting everything-is-dandy-and-I’m-perfect President finally admitted that our situation is “bad, very bad.” Yes, it is Mr. President, it is.

Today, the stock market dropped 3000 points. Everyone is panicking. The fed dropped interest rates to 0 and eased some quantitativeness but no one seems to care. The world is ending (it’s not ending)–the stock market is certainly acting like it is–because EVERYTHING is impacted by this little bug. As others have written, it’s like a silent tsunami. It’s a natural disaster of epic proportion but we can’t see it. We’ll only see the carnage in hindsight.

Today, the President asked people in our country to avoid gathering in crowds of more than 10 people. Today, the President admitted that this is a serious issue. Today, in California, in the Bay Area, six counties are, as of midnight tonight, on full lockdown. For the next three weeks we can go out only to get groceries and to visit the doctor in an emergency. We’re supposedly allowed to go for walks, as long as we remain six feet away from others. Police are supposedly enforcing all of these rules and at least in San Francisco it’s a misdemeanor to go out for reasons that aren’t allowed.

Despite my lingering chest tightness, I decided to go for a walk this evening to get some fresh air. I first brought my son in his stroller, then eventually made a few more loops around my apartment complex solo. The way people darted across the street when I walked by, you’d think I had developed a case of toxic B.O.–but one quickly remembers it’s just Corona Etiquette–walk briskly and deviate from your path if needed to avoid any and all social contact. Everyone has the plague. Act accordingly.

I managed 11,000 steps this evening, which is more than I’ve gotten in the last week since my company went work from home and I’ve opted to mostly shelter in place as my lung issue worsened. I had a phone appointment with my doctor today, which was as surreal as anything else going on these days. Dear doc: do I worry, or not worry, about this chest tightness and cool liquid sensation in my lungs? DOC AM I GONNA DIE? TELL ME LIKE IT IS DOC, TELL ME LIKE IT IS.

Doc: well, your symptoms are a bit concerning, not particularly because of Coronavirus, but typically with chest tightness that isn’t getting better I’d have you come in to get checked out. But since, well, things are, different these days–because shortness of breath is a symptom of, Corona, if you came in we’d have to suit up and it would be a whole thing and… I’m just going to prescribe you drugs for pneumonia, which I wouldn’t normally do without seeing you, but these are different times… and, uh, you won’t be able to get a test because, uh, you don’t have any exposure to someone with Coronavirus or severe symptoms so…”

Me: thanks doc. I know it must be, uh, crazy these days. Thank you for taking the time to talk to me. So, uh, if this doesn’t get better, uh, when should I be worried, like, uh, where I, you know, contact you, before it’s really bad, but not before it’s like, not really bad, because I know you’re busy dealing with people who are, uh, really bad…

Doc: if it gets worse and you have pain in your chest, if the medicine isn’t helping…

Me: Ok, doc. Thank you. doc.

Doc: oh, it would be better to send someone else to pick up the medicine since you, um, have some symptoms…

Me: uhhhhh…

Doc: have your husband pick it up for you.

Me: um… (thinking: husband doesn’t want to get sick) …um, ok. Thanks doc.(click.)

A Week Ago

A week ago we just got sent home from work and told that we would be working from home for two weeks. Then everything in the world fell apart. The time between last Monday and this Monday may as well been the length of a thousand Mondays. I’ve aged too many years with worry in such a short time because the rawness of life, the vulnerability of humanity, the weakness of all of us and our mortality is there, in front of all of us, like a raw beating heart that is pulsing to the rhythm of some childhood joke “nah nah nah nah” beats the heart, pouring blood everywhere, squirting up to the moon–there’s your rotten humanity for you. There’s all the control you’ve tried to obtain fucking painted red across the stars, a sky dripping with maroon rain all over our faces, yet most people somehow don’t even notice it yet, don’t taste the blood there, slipping slowly down to their lips, smelling like salt and old copper pennies.

We control nothing. Nada. Not when a little tiny virus can slip into our throats and nostrils and lungs and take over our bodies, our poor little weak bodies that try to wage war against against these intruders and yet eventually fail in 2 out of 100 cases or maybe 3 out of 100 or 5. There is nothing we can do when the army of our white blood cells can’t take on the enemy. And when hospitals no longer can give our army the backup needed to fight the good fight to keep us alive, we’re on our own, and on our own, we are alone in the fight.

This is happening. It’s not an overreaction. It’s not an anxiety-induced prophecy. Look at Italy. Italy is in chaos. And we are 10 days behind. 10 days. A lifetime. A lifetime of 240 hours where in this horror movie some percent of us know the plot and we’re saying nooo, wait, stoppppp, don’t open the dooooorrrrr and you’ve got people still having birthday parties and gatherings and choosing not to pay attention to the inevitable because it’s too hard to admit how little we control in this world for ourselves and yet how much we DO control if we work together to stop this thing. But we’d never do that.

So every country goes and does their own thing to try to stop the impact of the virus. Italy goes on lockdown. Every state in the US has some different rule, some with curfews, some not, some with no events, some with any event, who knows. The UK says fuck it, let the young folks get sick now, so when winter comes the old folks can be less likely to get infected (yes, my friend, winter is indeed coming–though it’s hard to imagine winter and the Return of the Corona (in theaters this December) while spring has barely sprung and the virus has barely, well, viraled.)

Tomorrow morning, I will go to the pharmacy to get my steroid inhaler and antibiotics, and I will pray to the gods I don’t believe in that I don’t catch this virus at the pharmacy with all of the other sick people to get medicine to treat what may be this virus or may be something else that is still causing some serious issues with my respiratory system which probably makes me more at risk for serious complications from this virus if I was to get it if I don’t already have it. And so. Anxiety amplifies. I try to breathe. To remind myself that most people my age do not die form this thing. That I am doing the right thing and staying inside and in a weeks time this should all pass.

But in the back of mind I’m also thinking–we are 10 days behind Italy… we are 10 days behind Italy–and what if, what if in 10 days, or 5 days, or 7 days, my lungs take a turn for the worst? What if, whatever it is I have, I need to go to the hospital in the thick of it. What then? What can I do now to prevent that? Take my medicine, I guess. I can’t get an X-ray, they won’t give anyone X-rays for pneumonia at this time. I just have to take my medicine and hope I get better. Stay home. Stay home and hope. That’s modern medicine for you.

Why are my lungs so cold? There’s ice liquid in there. Liquid ice. Pouring in. I can breathe. And these days, breath is our most valuable asset. So, I remind myself, just breathe. Just. Fucking. Breathe.

T-10(?).

When the quiet comes.

When you’re you but you aren’t you, your mind racing and all the world alive with possibility and excitement and shouldn’t but should, you feel whole yet like a thousand pieces of you flipped inside out and upside down and stuck themselves back together to be whoever it is you are in that moment, electrified. Days, weeks, months later you look back at it and wonder who that was.

When the quiet comes it’s as if you’ve been running, running, running and then all the sudden everything is still–still–still. There is no more motor running, your boat is just there splashing about, barely staying afloat, ignorant of how it already is filling with water, preparing to sink deep into the dark blue of the depressed sea.

When the quiet comes, you wonder who you are if who you were wasn’t her and who you feel like today may be no more her than who you were then or who you will be tomorrow. It’s not as if you are multiple people, you’re you but you’re not you you are you on fire and you unable to move and you basically functioning and you embarrassed by all the things you said when you were you but you weren’t you.

When the quiet comes, you express your gratitude for not crash breaking the fragile state of stability that you’ve grown to love and need and take for granted. You wish you could take back so many things but you can’t and so you decide it’s best to move on and try to pretend you were never that, then. You invest in your health and trying to get into a routine and trying to socialize and be yourself but not too much of yourself that you scare off the people you’d like to get to know.

When the quiet comes, it is satisfying to throw out the trash that has been piling up and go for long walks under hazy blue skies and lie in grass and let sunlight sink into your skin. To be the mother that you are and the wife that you’ve been and the employee that you want to be. You can think straight for once in so long and try to pull all the pieces back together that fell apart in their hopeless exhaustion and manic mood melodies up and down and up and up and up and down again you went, but now, the quiet is here, for now, and so you embrace it, you cautiously cradle the calm.