Mar 302020
 

It started with a plan, because isn’t that how most of us try to start our days now? The overcrowded households, filled with socially isolated children of all ages, a few pets, and the odd grandparent—those households must enact plans that keep everyone occupied and engaged while navigating a physical space never meant for as many as are now occupying it.

Solo households have a different, less immediately challenging task: How to creatively or productively fill time, coupled with attending to mundane tasks. I gave up cleaning my small house a few years ago, but darn if that hasn’t been added to my plate. I just have to handle it in smaller bites. Cooking and small sewing repairs aren’t my jam either—my sister excelled at both—but I’ve been practicing both since she passed away.

Grocery shopping isn’t something I thought I’d need help with, even in the time of the pandemic. I have two masks, courtesy of my neighbors. I’d made up lists and visualized the store I wanted to go into and factored in the timing so it was at the end of “senior” time on a rainy weekday. I had a plan. I was ready.

My plan didn’t include getting hit with anxiety about going into a store I shopped just ten days—and several terrifying news stories—ago.

I postponed, told myself I’d try again tomorrow. I decided to tackle another project and bring out my warmer weather clothes. A shirt I bought for my trip to Canada last summer with my sister came out of the spare closet and went right back in. Her death is too fresh.

I texted a neighbor friend, who let me know that her beloved dog had to be put down two days earlier. Scarlett, born a month after my dog, was the first puppy Molly ever met. They shared a genuine affection. I could always get Molly to walk the neighborhood by saying, “Let’s go see your girlfriend Scarlett.”

Then I read a note from a dear friend who has been sick and alone in her apartment for a month. She lives on the other coast, although in the time of pandemic, she could be in the next city. She is scared. I want to help. I can’t figure out how to help.

So: fear of shopping, memories brought up by a shirt, loss of a neighborhood dog, a frightened friend. I didn’t need any other excuses to have a good cry.

Another luxury of solo living, I suppose: the freedom to wail at will.

And then what? This is our new normal, both informed and exacerbated by the availability of information. Some of it is true, some of it is false, some of it is unverified because this damned pandemic is, to a large extent, difficult to verify. Without a doubt, death and illness are underreported but would more testing and more identified cases bring more relief? I don’t know. Like hundreds of thousands, even millions of others, I both depend on and have limited faith in my government, at least at the federal level.

But I have good neighbors and good friends and access to information. The support on the ground is amazing. I can click on my growing list of resources to take a virtual tour, listen to soothing music, follow a stress-relieving class, or bake. Then I hug my dog, work on my novel, watch a little TV, engage in a bit of social activism, wave at neighbors from a safe distance, and plan to do it again tomorrow.

You all know what books to read or shows to watch. Below are a couple of other resources (by no means a complete list) for you to check out:

Twelve museums to visit virtually.
• Wonderful music by Frederick Aragón. Sure to soothe the soul.
• Stress relief yoga with birds!
• Recipe for blueberry muffins. Anyone can do this!

Mar 132017
 

Spring is just around the corner; can’t you tell? Okay, may not if you’re living in much of the United States north of Florida and west of California. Ten days before the official start of spring, the temperatures can’t get out of the twenties and more than a foot of snow is predicted. Forecasters promise a colder and wetter than usual season.

Absent weather that conforms to a recognizable pattern, we proceed by sensation. It feels like spring is close at hand and not just because the calendar says so. We have more hours of daylight. Here and there, a bud or a birdsong suggests we are done with hibernating, no matter what the thermometer says.

Spring it is, then, and with it, a chance for renewal, reinvention, rebirth, redo.

Sorry, not that last one. Though we’ve been pummeled and punished by the toxic sludge stirred up by the election of 2016 (wherein violence seems to have been given a permission slip to run amok) or by life in general, we know there are no mulligans. We can’t rewind to our twenty-first birthday or even to last year, much as we might wish to. We can’t do over; we can only do again, maybe better.

What does “better” mean? I ponder this every March, which, by the way, is my personal new year. Not for me the man-made calendars or cultural/religious constructs that have us repenting or resolving in September or January. My rhythms derive from Mother Nature. If I could sleep from December through February, I would. If I could live the other nine months with nothing but naps, I would do that as well.

I engage in what I call psychic spring cleaning. My physical health is something I attend to seven days a week, fifty-two weeks a year. Mental health, though, can always use a reboot, never more so than this year. So I’ve joined a group so I can attend get-togethers, meet with new people and feel connected.

The real adjustment I’ve had to make involves my attitude. Like many of my friends, I’ve lived these last four months alternating between anxiety and anger. Each is a natural default position for me and neither produces anything constructive. Thus, I’ve taken on a set of activities that allow for civic involvement rather than simply online venting. Thus, I’ve renewed my attention to charities that supersede politics and target groups that are chronically in need. Thus, I check in on my neighbors and practice my customized version of gratitude.

There’s also this: my birthday is in the spring. It’s been years since I’ve looked forward to it. From the moment I crossed what is by any measure the halfway mark of my lifespan, I saw myself as in countdown mode. That’s a formidable shadow to shake off and each year it becomes a little more challenging.

Which is why each spring I emerge, determined to fight my impulse to stay hunkered down and folded in. If I open my eyes, I see there are places I’m still needed and ways in which I can still be helpful. Sometimes I have to push extra hard to prove my worth in this youth and resume-oriented world. And yes, sometimes it’s a struggle to rise to the occasion or even rise up out of my comfortable chair. But the times demand it. So does a life repurposed, renewed and rebooted.

Sep 092016
 

Ten years ago and half again

History witnessed…

Oh never mind

We find a generation almost grown since then

Remembers nothing of that September morning

The arcing flames reduced to ash

The rubble swept away

Consigned to history’s trash bin


Gone the faces of course

Replaced by faded shadows

Dancing on the edge of memory just out of reach

As if they have something left to teach us

No idea what that would be

No matter

It seems those pesky recollections

Now reside in restless dreams


Naturally the symbolism of the dead

Resilience, courage, love

Instead became a propaganda tool

A tug of war between a changing cast of fools

Which means the deaths are meant to represent

A single moment’s goodwill

Quickly spent

Out of pocket out of mind


God and Christ and Universe

It hurts!

Not his absence

That’s a curse I’ve learned to live with

What makes my heart ache fills a bigger screen

The mean and bilious rancor we’ve allowed to spread

The fear-backed hate

The endless dread


What purpose served

What noble end

And don’t pretend purveyors of division

Will offer us protection

It’s all misdirection

Built for glory

Meant for gain

How dare they commandeer our pain to suit their pleasure


We know what’s gone

We won’t forget

And neither will we let the legacy of all those deaths be hate

That’s not the fate we will to future selves

The past as prologue

But what will be does not need match what has been

We hold our tattered hope up to the light

We do not let the ugly win

World TRade Center light towers