Tuesday, June 21, 2016

Fragmentation

I have not been able to write since Omar Mateen walked into Pulse early last Sunday morning. There did not seem to be anything I could contribute to the keening over the bodies of the mostly young, Latino, gay men who perished in Orlando, even though I was feeling it in my cells. Even now, I certainly have nothing to add to the shameful, deafening second amendment brawl we are forced to listen to. I feel unworthy. What can I say in my state of secondary bereavement that could possibly comfort the mourners, allay the fears of people in communities under siege, gay people, Muslims in this country who are not extremists or psychopaths? I understand, quite suddenly, the awareness suffered by the children of Holocaust survivors. You experience the horror deeply, but at a remove. You weren't there.

At the same time, I am weighed down by the suspicion that things are going to get much worse before they get better in this homeland holy war. America, smugly distant from the rest of the world, an ocean away from the fighting in the Middle East, the refugee crisis in Europe, is eating itself alive. A daily fusillade of hate rhetoric rises to a pitch until it explodes into real automatic weapons fire, the whole country a fragmentation bomb. On the Right, there is a story that people tell each other about good guys shooting bad guys. In this fairy tale, a salsa dancing reveler reaches for the gun strapped to his ankle and takes down the terrorist with the AR-15. Never mind that under other circumstances these same second amendment junkies would probably not be in a hurry to defend the rights of gays or brown people. They just want more guns. They can never get enough guns. On the Left, there is another story. In this beloved sentimental fiction, a tragic event, the slaughter of twenty children or forty-nine Latin music fans, proves to be the tipping point, the moment when sanity finally prevails and the culture begins to dress its wounds. Never mind that gun sales go up dramatically every time there's a mass shooting. Never mind that several bills proposing minimal attempts at gun control have already failed. You know I want to believe the redemptive vision, but some days, forgive me, I just don't. If Chris Murphy isn't standing on the Senate floor day and night, I waver. I seem to be a person of little faith.

You can see why I've been reluctant to write this past week. The day before the assault in Orlando, I was sitting up in bed trying to read Don DeLillo's latest offering, Zero K. The book is a chilling, kafka-like fable about mortality. Out of nowhere, my eyesight became fragmented, as if the normal optical mechanisms had gone on vacation. Objects in my field of vision were shattered like the pixelated images on TV of criminal associates in the witness protection program. Everything looked like broken glass, nothing cohered. It was an ocular migraine which passed in a half hour, but during that time, I recognized clearly that things fall apart. I understood that this fragmentation is one aspect of both the natural order and its poor relation, the social order.

It is easy from this point of view to become a teller of the third tale, the one that takes place in a despond of cynicism, a place to be avoided if possible. So far, I have encountered two living artworks that have had the power to rescue me from this swamp. The first was the sight of a woman I care about deeply beaming at me from twenty-five feet away in the produce aisle near the strawberries. I beamed back. We never spoke. Our connection was a bridge of endearment, not engineering. Chris Christie has no authority over that bridge. The second was the discovery of a sheep farm on Seekonk Crossroads in Great Barrington. I haven't been on that road in a long time and apparently missed the arrival of more than a hundred sheep, milling around in all their biblical wooliness, making their consoling, reassuring sound. It turns out that sheep have a bad rap. These sheep were not falling in line, mindlessly conforming to expectations like Republican congressmen. They were a peacefully congregating community of equal beings, absent any scent of blood lust, the living antidote to cynicism. Meeting them unexpectedly allowed me to breathe. I exhaled fear and inhaled hope and remembered for a moment, as Howard Zinn has written, that human history is a history not only of cruelty, but also of compassion, sacrifice, courage and kindness. It is all those things.

23 comments:

Deborah Golden Alecson said...

Great piece, Suzie. I too am reading Delillo's book. For me, it always gets back to walking through my days with gratitude in one hand and grief in the other. They are equal in their weight and in my awareness. The upheaval of our civilization will get worse because of climate change. There is no turning back from this eventuality. The most basic instincts of survival will prevail and this includes killing others to survive and to feel "right" in the eyes of our personal god. All I can do is fight for the causes that I believe in, try my best to reach my potential, and to be prepared to die - to love my death. I have a great teacher when it comes to blossoming in the face of the facts of things and that is my son.

Kaya said...

thank you for the sheep farm image- beautiful and helpful.

Judi said...

Thank you, Susie, for a very thoughtful piece. I, too, struggle mightily to maintain a "redemptive vision" in the face of this unspeakable gun violence. (I love the sheep metaphor, and will be sure to get myself to Seekonk Crossroads.)

Susie Kaufman said...

I really appreciate your practice of holding gratitude and grief, one in each hand. I'm reminded of the hasidic story about the man who has two scraps of paper, one in the righthand pocket of his jacket and one in the left. One says (something like) you are the apple of God's eye. The other says you are nothing but a grain of sand. And both are true. The key for me is avoiding cynicism. Cynicism causes me the greatest pain.

Susie Kaufman said...

I'm so glad you resonate with the sheep. I wasn't sure I could make that work but several people seem drawn to them. They were such a gentle presence in the midst of the harshness.

Susie Kaufman said...

Thank you, Judi. The sheep were a deliverance. I'm so glad you could see them in your mind's eye.

Barbara Drosnin said...

even though there are no words, you have found words. thank you.

Susie Kaufman said...

It's a deep experience. Thank you for your recognition.

Glenn said...

Wonderful, Susie. But I have to say that when I first saw the picture of those sheep grazing on the hillside, I couldn't help thinking of the more than 100 unsuspecting, defenseless victims of that madman murderer, and of the hundreds of panicked others who managed by luck to flee.

Susie Kaufman said...

That's another layer that I hadn't thought of, Glenn. The sheep came to me unbidden and had a calming effect. Your comment gives me reason to think of them in a more nuanced way.

Unknown said...

Well put and echos much of how I felt. I didn't see sheep. I drew calming breaths in my garden, as you, trying to balance, center myself in the chaos.

Susie Kaufman said...

Thanks for weighing in, Carol. Appreciate your reading.

Jinks said...

Dearest Susie, You HAVE found a way to say what is unsayable. Though your vision fragmented briefly, your sight was restored, and you allowed yourself to see and say what needs to be said. How I treasure your voice. You are an angry, broken-hearted prophet, who is yet consolable. Your final paragraph brought me to my knees. Thank you Susie, Jinks

Susie Kaufman said...

I love the word restored, dear Jinks. Just reading that word is consoling. Broken-hearted seems just right.

Deborah Golden Alecson said...

What is your definition of cynicism and how does that differ from the way things are playing out?

Susie Kaufman said...

Cynicism is a consciousness inside of me, not an observation of how things are playing out. Cynicism would mean I refuse to consider the possibility of change. It would mean I don't believe that anyone is making an effort to bring about change, that all those congresspeople sitting on the floor were just doing it for laughs. For me, it's more of an overall, longstanding attitude, not so much a short-lived lack of faith.

Anonymous said...

Brava, dear Susie, you created another beautiful essay. Powerful writing about an unspeakable event. You put into words what I've been thinking and feeling. Lovely bucolic ending with the innocent sheep, whom I hope will continue to graze peacefully and not end up being slaughtered.

Susie Kaufman said...

Peggy? I think this is you...which gives me the greatest pleasure. Bucolic is right up there among my favorite words. Would that we could all graze peacefully.

Unknown said...

A moving essay, Susie, beautifully written & expressing what I think many of us are feeling....A radiant example of the power of visionary writing, even if that vision appears to be fragmented. So much beauty & truth live in those fragments. Thank you.

Susie Kaufman said...

Radiant is an important word in my lexicon. I like the idea of my writing radiating out into this fractured world. Thank you!

Anonymous said...

Susie dear, not Peggy,but me, Joan Embree. The only way I can post on your blog is to select "anonymous". Who knows why?

Susie Kaufman said...

Joan....I should have known. You can't comment here on the blog unless you have a gmail address. Only as Anonymous.....but please put your name in the comment text. That way I know it's you, dear friend. Thank you for reading me. Can't wait for your reading!

Anonymous said...

Duh! Joan here....I need tutoring for social media and how to participate in the modern world. thanks, Susie dear for explaining and for being my friend in endless ways.