Category: Uncategorized

  • What holds

    Weird, isn’t it? I’ve been cycling through the Kubler-Ross stages of grief in a way that is both familiar to the human experience and foreign, as a pandemic of this magnitude is beyond the life experience of most living things on this planet, save some ancient trees and ecosystems. Mostly I’ve settled into the necessity of acceptance, which is doing whatever I can to ensure that I keep my family and myself safe because we are at the point here in NYC where the hospitals are overrun, and should an asthmatic like me—even if active and healthy—needs a ventilator, one might not be available. 

    We had some warning here, mostly through paying attention to our friends in Europe. In the weeks before, we’d thought to stock a couple of weeks’ groceries in case of a quarantine, and my husband, a cyclist down to the cellular level, had noticed a steep increase in other bikes during his commute to and from work. But we hadn’t yet thought to worry or panic. 

    The morning of Monday, March 9th, I woke up to things still feeling very normal yet shifting rapidly: I read an advisory from our local councilman advising us to avoid public transit. So my 3 year old and I walked to her art class rather than take the train, and when we picked up my 4.5 year old from school, we drove rather than take the bus to the girls’ soccer practice. 

    On Tuesday the babysitter called out sick, just in case. The 3 year old and I went for a run through Prospect Park, and I recoiled at every runner who spat carelessly. Later that day, NYC Half was canceled, a race that I had worked to gain entry to all last year, yet I was filled with relief, as I’d found no justification able to dissolve my revulsion to the other unhygienic runners I’d seen earlier in the day and had hoped for its cancelation. 

    Public school Pre-K kids had no school on Wednesday, and that morning the anxiety was beginning to settle in. My daughters and I went to the music class they’d been attending since infancy, and their teacher was so worried about being a transmission vector that the parents and nannies thoroughly sanitized the giant sacks of percussives used during the class. Afterwards each family patiently waited their turn to wash their hands before leaving, 20 seconds, no less, more if desired. 

    My older kid went back to school on Thursday, and I spoke with her teacher briefly at drop off, each of us lamenting octogenarian parents who refused to curtail their daily routines. The babysitter showed up at her usual time, and I went for the last run I’ll go on for a while, with my sweet pooch functioning as a social-distancing tactic. When I came home, the babysitter and I discussed how we’d pay her expected wages if we ended up quarantined. 

    Then that night, as my husband and I absorbed the news of the world around us, we realized that we shouldn’t—no, we couldn’t—send our preschooler to school the next day. As the early stages of grief were creeping in then, my instinct was to deny, to question, to justify. But we weren’t overreacting. This was the right move. 

    I woke up early Friday, went to the grocery store for the things we urgently needed, and washed my hands several times upon arriving and unpacking. Our friends were keeping their son home, too, so they suggested we drop off the 4.5 year old for a play date in the afternoon. We kept the appointment, and my friends and I spoke with disbelief, with rising fear, over what was happening: no hugs, no contact, just words colored with disbelief and well wishes. I went to the backyard, rid it of winter’s neglect, and established a space for the girls to play for whatever days and weeks would come. Then the younger kid and I picked up the older one from her play date, and we drove home in curiously minimal traffic with the world looking entirely normal yet feeling vulnerable, fragile.

    We stayed home Saturday, then Sunday, only ever leaving to walk the dog, and then, only at a great distance from people, and the girls have only been to the backyard since. By Sunday night, school was canceled through spring break, and now we’re inside. 

    Our days are now characterized by homogeneity as necessity. Children rely on routines for safety, so we’ve stuck to breakfast, lunch, naps and rest, dinner, bath, and bedtime at more or less their usual times. The days in which we’ve deviated have resulted in more tantrums and tears than anyone has emotional space for. My older daughter has stopped asking when we’re going out, mostly due to frank conversations bolstered by Zoom sessions with her well-meaning teachers, who are all doing their best to tape the pieces together. She plays games with her sister in which she intones coronavirus—a word too heavy for her mouth—and every time, something in me shatters. 

    We get groceries delivered once weekly, placing the order a week in advance without the possibility of modification, lest our order feature omissions we’d rather not entertain, and we’ve maxed out our meal-kit service’s order options to facilitate access to perishables. I’ve placed a stash of neck gaiters by the door previously used for winter workouts that are now meant to cover our faces whenever we have to go out. We started wearing them on the 18th, when few others were masked, and now, most of the people we see outdoors have their faces masked as well. Whereas we began staying in as a practice to shield anyone from any potential contagion we might spread based on the encounters in our lives in the great before, now it is to avoid being part of the catastrophic wave that is crushing the health care system here.

    I stopped walking the dog a week ago, but before that, I had stuck to our three-times-daily schedule with a pit stop to the curb before bed. While the fresh air would seem welcome, the practice was a horrifying survivalist game in which maintaining the 6-foot safe distance often meant walking in the street. I was reaching the end of my tolerance when I collapsed into an anxiety attack on Saturday, March 21st: from across the street, I witnessed a young woman leaning into a car speaking to people, and when she they left, she coughed into her hand four times, then employed the same hand to open the door to her apartment building. My neurons caught fire calculating the number of infections that singular action could cause were she infected, and I couldn’t breathe. The next day, I created an area in the backyard for the dog to use for elimination purposes, away from where the kids play. Luckily the pooch adapted quickly, and now the only reason to go outside is to collect mail and packages and take out the trash. 

    The germination of grief means that you cannot accurately gauge a situation: your judgment is fundamentally altered because you cannot apply obsolete standards to a broken and incomplete whole, regardless of how seemingly incomplete it had been before. A void has opened up, and it must be acknowledged, salved, and healed, if ever. It’s still too soon to tell what is bruise and what will become lasting scar, but such determinations are as speculative as when it will be safe to go outdoors without fear or anxiety, when it will once again be a delight to sit next to a friend and laugh without worry.  

    We are grieving, and we are careful. We are grateful for what we have, and even though at times it feels as though the center is collapsing, we will persist. 

    Love, EACdB

  • (Im)Balance

    I have been trying—and not very hard, I might add—to pick up the pen again.

    It’s not been easy. Mostly because I’ve been trying to write and not actually writing.

    My problem isn’t rooted in anything as mundane or purely fictitious as writer’s block. I don’t believe in Writer’s Block. (Phillip Pullman once said at a lecture in Oxford that one would never walk into A&E with a broken arm and allow the doctors to say, “I’m sorry I can’t help you—I have doctor’s block.” The same should and does apply to writers.) I’ve just allowed life to get so stupendously in the way that, in the whirlwind of the last nine months, I’ve simply gotten out of the habit of stringing together words for poetic and/or narrative purposes.

    It doesn’t take much to define a habit. You only need to repeat the same action for a few days in a row for the seed to settle and then stick with it when it takes root. It really is that easy.

    However, I will concede that the inner conversation that must occur to establish a habit is not always easy. Encouraging yourself to eat chocolate-covered bananas daily is much more easily established than demonstrating the discipline to wake up 45 minutes earlier everyday to exercise, and when exhaustion and other day-to-day life complications step in and demand your attention, it’s far too easy to chuck an inner mandate for exercise out the window in favor of the immediate gratification of the head against the pillow.

    I’m rubbish at blog promises, so I won’t lie to any of us with pledges to keep up this page or get back to Project X, Y or Z, or even so much as knock out a haiku. I will, however, at this point, admit that I miss writing terribly. While I couldn’t be happier with the state of my life at the moment, there is part of me that is nostalgically appreciative of the body of work that poured out of me during that incredibly fecund period of mid-2009 through early-2013: the completion of a 65,000-word novel for literary fiction types, a young adult trilogy with supporting apocryphal stories amounting to about 350,000 words, a feature-length screenplay drafted and redrafted an unmerciful number of times over half a year, a couple of embryonic graphic novel scripts, several short stories, dozens of poems, a blog about a job I had, and several rants, some of which I kept to myself and others I shared. I was solely preoccupied with writing for a few years, and while they were undoubtedly defining and still whisper to me, I haven’t quite figured out how to develop the habit of bringing them back into my life with any measure of regularity. Balance is something I admire but don’t understand, as my soul tends to jump on one side or the other of the scale’s platform until it crashes to the ground and leaves its sister dangling high above it. But I can work towards understanding and incorporating it into my life.

    In the meantime, there are a few posts I tossed up late last year/early this year on a Tumblr blog called Presently Transforming that I was purposely keeping quiet at the time. They’re the only things I’ve written with any sincerity in a while, and I don’t mind sharing right now.

    Tea Leaves
    Malt Vinegar
    Architecture
    Resolve
    Quickening

    I want to and will come back to these projects I have occupying burners in the back of my skull, but I’m also realistic to admit that with some of the smaller ones (and Ministers of Grace is not small), I might not. I do know that writing is in my blood, to the extent that it seeps out of my breath and adds contour and color to all my thoughts, so there’s no way I could truly walk away from it. But as in the past, in years prior to my most productive years, there were times when I had to take the time when it was offered to me—a week here, a house-bound month there—and write much as I could with the days I’d had. I might have to do that again. Or I might develop a more balanced manner of discipline and work everyday to a larger goal.

    I don’t know. We’ll see.

    But for now, it was damn nice to write something today.

    ♥ EAB

  • An explanation.

    Dearest Regular Readers,

    Nadiel was too embarrassed to post this herself, so I told her I’d step in and offer an explanation and an apology. She honestly thought that she could deliver the ending to her most recent narrative “Astaroth’s Wager” in a timely fashion so that she could begin a new one soon enough. (When you get to the end, you’ll understand why she was so keen to let go of this one.) She’s been blaming me for pushing her to produce, which is a fair and accurate complaint. Whichever way you want to look at it, I’m here to apologize for the both of us. Nadiel really didn’t mean to renege on her promises to present a conclusion in her previous posts. I forced her to make promises she couldn’t keep, and I should’ve been nicer. Sorry, readers. Sorry, Nadiel. Mea culpa.

    The conclusion to “Astaroth’s Wager” will be presented to you over the next few weeks. We all hope you enjoy it. Feel free to check out the previous ten chapters in the meantime.

    Part I • Part II • Part III • Part IV • Part V • Part VI • Part VII • Part VIII • Part IX • Part X

    Barring a catastrophic WordPress error, Chapter 11 will go up Tuesday morning, January 18, 2011, at dawn local time (7.12 MST).

    P.S. In the interests of maintaining her word, she begged me to remove all her false promises from her introductions. Mea maxima culpa.

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