While I am ignoring the regular texts that ask if I approve of Dr. Fauci and choking, gasping on the millenarian fumes, I introduce myself to the in-between. It's an unfamiliar territory that I've been exploring with all of my senses on high alert. I tell myself to pay attention lest this is my last apple. You girl, listen to the chanting of the Plum Village monastics over the ringing of bells. Roll the lemony linguine around in your mouth while you still can. Connect to the people you love every day to remind yourself that you have lived and nestled down into a family...and a good one at that. Learn to play chess, a contest where there is an opening and an endgame, a winner and a loser.
My niece Betsy, one of the people I turn to for clarification, tells me this period has a postpartum quality for her. Something has been born, but we're not yet sure if it has all ten of its toes. The long anticipation is now accompanied by an aftertaste of dread. It looks like the stunt of getting Republican state legislatures to appoint alternative trumpy electors won't fly, but who knows what other chicanery he has up his sleeve. We have jumped out of the plane, but the parachute has not yet opened. It's a tough place to be. Or no place at all. A time of suspended animation, outside of conventional physics.
All I can do is play small ball, commit to the daily exercise of the mindfulness muscle. I'm really on my own now that the leaves have fallen and all the cherry tomatoes have been harvested. The white butterflies that danced over the grass low to the ground are gone. The maples, red as barns, are bare. Most days, the sky withdraws into November gray. I wonder if it knows that only a few days ago it was blindingly blue or whether it just moves from one dispensation to another without judgment, without looking back. We humans are burdened with a surfeit of memory. I remember Thanksgivings weighed down by an embarrassment of food. But how much stuffing can two people eat? I remember chanukahs where the aroma of the frying oil lingered long past the eight days. Ditto how many latkes.
Now, memory has been concentrated on the present. I'm called to acknowledge this late fall morning that I'm actually alive. That may seem obvious, but it's easy to forget when your awareness is both overrun with anxiety and empty of distraction. It remains a miracle, this living and breathing. Over the last four years, our awareness of wonder has been bludgeoned by indifference, cruelty, and greed. We will have to learn to walk again and talk again like recovering stroke victims, or at any rate to walk without fear and talk without rage. It will not happen overnight. It will unfold in small ways. I'd like to go back to Rome, but I'll settle for sitting down with family and blowing out the candles on a birthday cake with carefree abandon. I'd like to wave a wand and make all the distrust disappear, but I'll settle for starting to talk to people I haven't really taken the trouble to get to know. But, first things first. While I wait for the parachute to open and solid ground to appear beneath my feet, I plan to order stamps and send postcards to Atlanta.
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.
16 comments:
This one is particularly great Susie!!!! Bravo...I especially love the energy of the last paragraph .. All the poetry of your minds' eye seems to be flowing sooo easily
one picture upon another !!! Thank you this is a beautiful piece!
It's so gratifying to have these moments spelled out with such accuracy and poetry. Defining lessens tension; defining encourages sharing during a time when sharing is in precious short supply but sorely needed. Thanks, as always.
Suzy, What can I say; you keep raising the bar and topping yourself! Larry Z.
Thank you again, Susie. Beautiful and right-on.
Rachel
As you "leaf through Time, remembering Life" you help us awaken more to both the horror of these days and the preciousness. I am so grateful that you are a soul historian to these times, dear Susie, and that you combine your fine mind and the poetry of your soul to help us awaken more to life's sacredness even as we gasp for air.
Dear Jinks.....Thank you for helping me become a better soul historian....Love to you, S
Thank you, Betzie. There is an explosion of energy when I write. It has to happen at exactly the right moment or it doesn't happen at all. I appreciate your plugging in to that.....S
Dear Peggy.....What a valuable point! Defining lessens tension. I take a stab at defining what many people might be feeling and when I hit the mark I also feel a lessening of tension. Thank you....S
You captured the essence of our times quite eloquently.
Anonymous is Dan Hankin.
Thank you for writing and for identifying yourself! I really appreciate thoughtful readers and the opportunity to put words to this very hard time we're in.
Suzie, I just got a chance to read this at 10 pm at night. What a pleasure and I am happy that once again I chose to enjoy "you" and your poetry in motion (writing motion causing all kinds of delicious and profound ripples).
Laura
Loved reading this, Suzie. Good to be reminded of the important things in life and to know we are not alone in this waiting room. Norah
always such a welcome pleasure to read you, suzie! and an inspiration, and comes to and through us with wit, wariness, and no, we will not give up our sense of wonder, withered as it may have become these past few years!!!
That's the strange underside of this whole thing, Norah. There such a deep commonality of experience, at least among people who aren't in denial. Thanks so much for reading and responding.
Fran....Love this quote from Abraham Joshua Heschel..."Resistance to wonder is the source of all sin." Feel free to replace "sin" with some other concept or just midrash it so it means whatever works for you. In any case, what would we do without wonder?
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