Sunday, March 22, 2020

Take Heart

Some of us see a dark future or no future, a lunar wasteland replacing the paradise we have only recently come to notice. Some of us see a renaissance, a flowering of art and justice replicating itself in all directions and dimensions like a hall of mirrors. And some of us can't make up our minds. We have good days when we inhale in common with the Chinese their freshly laundered air. And we have bad days when we're no longer certain where good retreats and bad advances. We have days that unfold in the paradigm of science - what little we understand - and days that unfold in the paradigm of metaphor, a more familiar territory. These are not points of view so much as personality types that come and go, even within the consciousness of one person. I can wake up a virologist and go to bed a metaphysician. In between, I scavenge for disinfectant. Some days, I vacillate wildly between thinking it's all random and knowing for an undeniable fact that it's my fault. I have eaten my fair share of BLTs.

Of all the words written since the beginning of the pandemic or, to be more honest, since the scourge, in a Marco Polo u-turn, reached St. Mark's square and the Campo de Fiori in Rome, the remarks of the Pope have given me the most comfort. Francis says, anticipating an end to the crisis..."Tonight before falling asleep think about when we will return to the street....Every second will be precious. Swims at sea, the sun until late, sunsets, toasts, laughter. We will go back to laughing together." I appreciate especially "return to the street." Francis, despite his clerical costume, has a novelist's love for the world.

Every day that the virus claimed more lives, new flowers appeared in Berkeley. I was there making my annual March pilgrimage to celebrate the birthdays of my niece and my sister, this year turning 85. There were California poppies the color of tangerines. Enormous bushes of rosemary smelling like leg of lamb and bursting with purple blossoms. Jasmine and camellias. My sister sat in her recliner and took it all in. On St. Patrick's Day, she and I performed our own arrangement of "Danny Boy," until we were undone by the Irish tenor high notes. We fortified ourselves with cashews. We did our trademark imaginary tour of upper Broadway, seeing if we could remember all the stores and all the shopkeepers from the fifties. Every morning, my sister read the dire headlines in the Chronicle. We explained that there was a virus like a wildfire in the Sierras spreading out of control all over the world and she nodded. You couldn't tell if it registered, if it meant anything. But then again what did it mean to us? No more Thai food? No more browsing and people-watching at the bookstore? It's not like a terrorist attack. It dawns on you slowly, this new day.

At first, I kissed her forehead each time I entered her room and each time I left, marking the coming and going as if my sister were a mezuzah holding a sacred text. And maybe she is and maybe I am and maybe you are. But in the last days of the trip, I was no longer kissing my people. We were communicating our love for one another virtually, sometimes in words, but more often in chaste adoring glances like shy Victorians. I put my hand to my heart and she put her hand to her heart. When I sat opposite her on the final day before heading to the airport in Sacramento with my N95 mask and my supply of blue plastic gloves, she was leaning back in her chair under a wool blanket. She reached out from under the weight of it and grabbed my pinky finger with her pinky finger. We made a pinky promise, the way schoolgirls do, and despite the potential contagion of her skin touching my skin, we promised to love one another no matter the wreckage of this broken world.


Please share your thoughts regarding this story and my 2019 book Twilight Time: Aging in Amazement by commenting here or writing to me at seventysomething9@gmail.com

15 comments:

Peggy said...

Sweetness for the soul...pinky promises

Unknown said...

Dear Susie:
Thank you for writing this. Thank you for sending it. Your writing is so exquisite that I feel like I have just had dessert (flourless chocolate mousse cake).
Love,
Sharon

Anonymous said...

Dearest Susie,
Love how you put into words the feelings I experience viscerally but am not always able to express. Thanks for being, for writing, for sending. You are a gift.
Love you (and Frank) much
Nina


Peggy Reeves said...

As always you have so profoundly reached my heart with your beautiful
writing.

Anonymous said...

My special Aunt ~gorgeous memories. love the picture, as if we were together right now finding the right angle to capture its magic. and why they are wide at the bottom?
your writings almost always leave me in tears that are filled with love. pinkie promises are especially important!
i love you
b

Susie Kaufman said...

Betsy, darling....Consider us forever linked by our pinkies. You're right next to me on Amador just out of the shot. Much love, Susie

Susie Kaufman said...

Dear Sharon.....Would you believe I was eating flourless chocolate mousse out of the freezer while reading your kind comment?Thank you for your support for my writing and for your kindness...With love, Susie

Susie Kaufman said...

Dear Peggy....I'm touched by your outreach to me and my work. I appreciate it so much...Many blessings, Susie

Susie Kaufman said...

Dear Nina.....I feel the reciprocity of this so strongly. I reach out to you and the thoughts and feelings you're experiencing and you respond to me. So we're less isolated, less fearful. Thank you so much.....With love, Susie

Anne CBH said...

Dear Susie,
So glad to be receiving your beautiful writing. Touching, illuminating, and wise. Would love to see you next time you're in Berkeley. Stay safe, Anne

Unknown said...

I wish I could still sit with my sister and remember the broadway of our youth. You write, and it is always personal to me. Love in the times...

Jinks said...

Oh Lord! The power of your words, the images, the stories you create with love, Susie...of your family, your sister, your love of reading and writing. The poignancy of this piece and its understated and dramatic tenderness simply unzips me. I wish I could kiss you, like a mezzuzah!

Susie Kaufman said...

I'll have to check on the bruchah for putting up a mezuzah. I used to know it but much of that learning has left me. So glad you enjoyed this piece. With love, Susie

deb koffman said...

thank you susie...for your words, wisdom, your heart...your words and how they are arranged have touched my heart...well...broken it wide open...blessings to us all, love deb

Susie Kaufman said...

Dearest Deb...There is an outpouring of love now...in these perilous times. Sometimes it seems to go everywhere, like the virus. Isn't it compelling that we've had to isolate to feel its power? Thank you for everything. Much love, Susie