Categories
Adjusting Memories Nostalgia

Death is near

During a psychedelic moment in Amsterdam, a friend once mirthfully said to me, “Death is near… but not near me.” We were seated, giggling, at an outdoor cafe. I didn’t see Death, but our squad took his word for it.

When death is near, things tend to get profound

When death is near, things tend to get profound – and at times – darkly amusing. Our brains, between waves of panic, find pools of calm where we make connections on kaleidoscopic levels.

My Uncle Frank ( an incredible teacher, coach, family patriarch and documentarian); Kate (my dear friend, fashion entrepreneur and activist, mother of two darling young girls); Little Richard (my first cognizant toddling memory of a tv image). These are just a few who passed away in the recent days of the shitdown, each warranting proper memorializing. We kind of barely spoke of it. It’s untenable when death is so near and we have lost the luxury of mourning losses per our pre-Covid conventions. Our brains and hearts can’t metabolize so much collective and personal loss and trauma all at once. Bodies are piling up in unusual places and services with tears-in-physical-proximity-to-loved-ones are verboten.

Kate Kruger (December 29, 1973 – April 11, 2020) with her girls.
Uncle Frank Greco, family historian. (February 1, 1932 – March 18, 2020)
The legendary Richard Wayne Penniman (December 5, 1932 – May 9, 2020)

Zooming with my Foxhole girls, B said it best. The data is fierce, said B, we are NOT every man for himself. At the same time, we are finding ways to be more self-reliant.

The thought of my absence from my father’s side as he went through chemoradiation would have been unimaginable before The Great Adjustment. He sent a photo of what he calls his Hannibal Lector disguise, the bespoke computer-designed thermoplastic mask that held his head to the table during treatment these past few weeks.

Masks give us quite a lot to unpack, both as a symbol and a tool.

I mean masks give us quite a lot to unpack – both as a symbol and now as a tool. Maybe that’s why masking is so provocative and charged. Images of face coverings stir us emotionally and culturally with ramifications that may be both practical and archetypal.

Where are we on a spectrum, where what was once disturbing and uncomfortable, becomes a lifeline to survival?

Categories
Adjusting The Upsides

I’m starting to like the shitdown

Chronic isolation was on board for us, way before it became official…

Well, it’s very private. I’ll say that. An intimate life with whomever you’re locked in with. Hopefully very peaceful, once you accept it.

And basically, i was personally already in a quarantine for 6 months last year and then very limited contact with people for the last several months. Just as my friend K, coming back from cancer – and so many other people in the world who are struggling with illness, or age, or means, or mental health or whatever. Chronic isolation was on board for us way before it became official.

I think it’s hard to be outside here in Doha this season anyway. If you are a bird, if you are a worker, if you’re a plant. The air is better inside. I was noticing that before i came over, the only way i had to access any information or understanding of this new country and city or our potential home was through research, on the computer screen. Now that i’m supposedly here physically, no part of that virtual-only experience has changed. Where am i? My survival – and comfort – is based solely on what i can learn and discover with my keyboard and phone – actual physical exploration is not available. So interesting. The experience remains virtual, although i have apparently arrived in a new physical locality.

Is this mean? I can’t help it!

And with time being revealed as a very odd construct, once you are removed from a natural world, one can float on whims in ways we could not do before. Get up and start laundry at 3am, no one knows – take to your bed for a couple of hours at 11am – have a cheeky cocktail at 3pm … who cares? Having a panic attack? No problem. No one sees you – so just do some art or yoga or dishes or whatever works for you on the spot. Brush your hair – or don’t. Our homes are consistently immaculate. What luxury!

And i’m finally writing for you all, rather than procrastinating. We are in a slow free-fall all together, so we have the opportunity to connect. It’s like getting the chance for that last phone call to your loved one as the plane is going down. Why wait?

“We have adjusted. It could be a lazy Sunday morning for us right now,” my friend B. reports.

But I do seem to have trauma rhythms. My M. describes the darker times “as the curtains being drawn” for a while. In the beginning of Covid life, i would have one decent day, followed by a very down day, where i just could not pull it together – over and over. Grief comes cycling through, on one of those old-fashioned, high-wheeled penny-farthing bicycles, wearing a clown nose and smiling broadly. Accepting a new reality is so challenging for all of us. Still, look how incredibly adaptable we are.

I’m becoming a hostess again- one of the key roles of my life which i haven’t been up to the past year of my personal internment, a loss which had measurably compromised my sense of self. Now i get to dress up, prepare, and be quizmaster for the work team, virtually invite family into our home, or gather friends together on a friggin’ Zoom. And you can leave the party whenever you want with a click. How perfect.

You know how i loath goodbyes. 😘

A neighbor paints on his balcony on a covidly April evening