I remember October as a time of exquisite clarity. The gold and red maples stood in the foreground against the wedgwood sky. The apples were crisp, the cider cold and tart. The arithmetic of that time cloaked in innocence involved batting averages, on-base percentages. Day after day, the great postseason dramas unfolded in places like Cincinnati and the Bronx. Now in the Time of Covid, baseball is a ghost of its former self, played without fans, without context, without the ritual of following the stats in the sports pages.
Numbers themselves have become inflated into something called metadata, ripped out of reality, as if they are bloodless straight and curved lines appearing on the screen with no beating hearts in them. We bat them around like whiffle balls. Part of our necessary work in this time of moral crisis is to re-animate the statistics so that we maintain an awareness of the real lives extinguished in the past months. Think of the 20,000 folding chairs set out in the shadow of the Washington Monument, each one representing more than ten people lost to Covid. This man from Honduras struggled to learn English working on the line in a meatpacking plant in Texas. That woman left her three kids behind in Rockaway every night to wash floors in a hospital in Flatbush. My friend and spiritual companion, Virginia, shared her faith with countless seekers before she carried it with her into the nursing home in New Jersey where the virus hunted her down.
So many lives erased, so many stories buried in the landfill. We know that Tom Seaver, who graced the field in Octobers past, died of Covid. But so did thousands of sandlot ball players, some of whom voted for The Clown in 2016 and look where that got them. It got them a front row seat at a circus where the cult of personality plays in a continuous loop day and night. Banana republic balcony speeches are televised but stimulus packages lie dormant. Doctors have become indistinguishable from used car salesmen. Terrorists plot to kidnap the governor of Michigan. We are all spectators at this pageant, witnesses to grand larceny, national identity theft, and all this while the ordinary sadnesses of life continue on as before.
My sister is home now, but it takes three people to transfer her from her bed to the recliner. Her passion for food has faded with the challenge of getting the enchilada from the plate to her mouth. She sleeps all the time and dreams about autumn days back-to-school on West End Avenue in the forties when Roosevelt's guests slept in the Lincoln bedroom. I set aside some hours, some minutes to remember her as she has been. An advocate for justice who brought refugees from El Salvador into her home. A natural musician with all of Tin Pan Alley in her fingers. A savvy storekeeper with a big presence in the East Bay antique business. The author of All Grown Up, a book about getting along with your adult children. Mother of three, grandmother of six and my sister, with or without Donald Trump. In the quiet center of the constant clamor of numbers, electoral demographics and rates of infection, she is there. My sister. I only have one.
Please share your thoughts regarding this post and my 2019 book Twilight Time: Aging in Amazement by writing to me at seventysomething9@gmail.com. I will also reply to comments posted on this blog, so check back if you choose to carry on the conversation here.
22 comments:
Oh dear, that just made me weep--the part about your sister-=-but the whole thing needs to be published nationally. It's such a perfect comment on How It Is Now. Send it to the Times; send it to the Post; send it to the Atlantic--comebody should publish this!!!!
So interesting to read this, Susie. wonderful writing. And I get your sister's essence with your last para. especially. My sister is, as I type this, on a surgical table at Columbia Pres. hospital, and I am on pins and needles. Your blog helps...
beautiful . . . thank you for writing and posting
So good to hear from you, Bob. We met (again) in the infancy of Covid. It gives me strength to know that people from long ago are in touch and open to reading my work.....SK
I agree, Peggy! More minty-true metaphors, too. So affecting and so beautiful.
I, too, found myself wondering about Trump's virus. Maybe I'm too skeptical but I couldn't
help but think there was some ulterior motive or maybe it was all a con job. If I sound
paranoid, he has made me that way!!!! Wishing your sister well. Sending good thoughts to her.
Jenny.....Thinking of you and your sister and hoping for an excellent outcome. I'm glad I was able to "introduce" you to my sister. Blessings, Susie
Thank you, JoHanna. It means so much to walk this walk with you.....Blessings, Susie
Your words, as ever, evoke both empathy and admiration. Wishing your sister a full recovery.
Thank you, Anne. Empathy is contagious. Mine is being fed by all the concern from readers.....Blessings, Susie
A lovely piece, Suzie!
And what a wonderful example you give us of how love and anger can sit joyfully beside each other.
steve wangh
I don't know if my first message went through. I enjoy reading your blogs. Was sorry to hear
about your sister and am sending good thoughts her way. I, too, wonder at Trump's motives
re: the virus. I am so skeptical that I keep wondering if this wasn't just another ruse
on his part. I just wouldn't put anything past him and after reading Michael Cohen's book
I think there are quite a few of his "followers" who would go along with him.
I keep coming up as "anonymous" for some strange reason.
I just read your blog. I am thinking of you and your sister today. You are both in my heart and in my prayers. Your writing is so soulful. May I have your permission to post it on Facebook.
Unknown....I'd be honored to have you post my blog piece on Facebook. Please write back and tell me your name so I can thank you properly....Susie
Steve.....Great to hear from you. I love your perspective on holding all kinds of feelings at once. It is, I admit, dizzying. I wonder what we'll learn from this? Blessings, Susie
We need mindfulness now, more than ever...to keep him out!
Beautiful writing and beautiful thoughts. Thanks, Susie.
Sorry, unknown was Linda Kaye-Moses
Thank you, Linda. I really appreciate your sending my writing out and about.....Blessings, Susie
An astonishing piece of writing again. How you manage to combine the Devil and his murders, Leonard Cohen, baseball, actuarial tables, and then your remarkable sister, in a way that simply radiates, I don't know. But you do. I agree with the person who said this should be published. You're wonderful.
There you are, Jinks. Glad the demon technology decided to cooperate. My mind seems to operate associatively. I take note of the directions that it goes in and try to understand the relationships between words and ideas that are revealed. When I write, I'm learning about my interior process as well as how I can send it out into the world. Some people seem to resonate with that. I'm not working on another collection at the moment. Just trying to keep my head above water in the current fierce climate. But thank you for your confidence in my work and just for you. Many blessings, Susie
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