I know that this month is the shortest of the year, but these 28 days have felt like 28 years (or centuries—take your pick). Winter storms. Iced-up roofs and windows. Sick puppy. And, yesterday, I had a tooth pulled. The hits just kept on coming.
You may think I’m crazy, but I kind of miss the forced isolation of the pandemic. That time was slower, less hectic. The world even did better—air pollution dissipated; carbon footprints became carbon shadows; countries came together to fight for global health; and (with the exception of MAGA morons) people were just nicer, willing to help each other out.
Marie Howe reflects on the pandemic . . .
What the Earth Seemed to Say, 2020
by: Marie Howe
Do you still believe in borders?
Birds soar over your maps and walls, and always have.
You might have watched how the smoke from your own fires
travelled on wind you couldn’t see
wafting over the valley
and up and over the hills and over the next valley and the next hill.
Did you not hear the animals how and sing?
Or hear the silence of the animals no longer howling?
Now you know what it is to be afraid.
You think this is a dream? It is not
a dream. You think this is a theoretical question?
What do you love more than what you imagine is your singular life?
The water grows clearer. The swans settle and float there.
Are you willing to take your place in the forest again?
To become loam and bark, to be a leaf falling from a great height,
to be the worm who eats the leaf,
and the bird who eats the worm? Look at the sky—are you
willing to be the sky again?
You think this lesson is too hard for you.
You want the time-out to end. You want
to go to the movies as before, to sit and eat with your friends.
It can end now, but not in the way you imagine. You know
the mind that has been talking to you for so long, the mind that
can explain everything? Don’t listen.
You were once a citizen of the country called: I Don’t Know,
Remember the boat that brought you there? It was your body. Climb in.
I love the idea of living in a land called I Don’t Know. It conjures up the Keats and his concept of negative capability—the idea of suspending judgement about something in order to understand it. Basically, it’s about accepting uncertainty without obsessively searching for an answer. The pandemic was a time of great uncertainty. Nobody had the answers. People who really can’t live with uncertainty turned to conspiracy theories instead—about COVID’s origins and mask protocols and vaccines.
WARNING; This post is about to become political.
And now we are entering another time of great uncertainty, thanks to President #47’s war of choice against Iran. One day after President Bill Clinton and Secretary Hillary Clinton were deposed about Jeffery Epstein by the House Oversight Committee (and the Clintons’ calls for #47 to be deposed, too), suddenly the United States and Israel are bombing Iran. Coincidence?
I’ve been struggling not to get supremely pissed. I guess I just want the simpler day-to-day that the pandemic offered. Everyone was too wrapped up in not getting sick. Sure, there was political division (unavoidable, considering the United States was being led by President Narcissist), but what I remember most is being really close (physically and emotionally) with the people I love most.
It wasn’t all sunshine and hand sanitizer, though. During the pandemic, I lost my mother and one of my sisters. Like so many others in the world, I was grieving. My mom spent the entire pandemic in a nursing home. She was already suffering from Alzheimer’s and macular degeneration prior to 2020, so there was a year where none of my family was able to be with her. I still experience quite a bit of guilt about how little I saw her in her last years.
Human beings, as a whole, don’t deal well with endings/beginnings. We don’t want to say “goodbye,” and we don’t want our comfortable lives to be disturbed, either. Pandemics and wars do both of those things—they disrupt and cause loss.
However, times of difficulty can also bring people closer together. I think, in the days and weeks to come, this new war is going to unite citizens of the U. S. and the world, but not in the way that #47 is anticipating. There WILL be marches and parades and headlines. I’m positive about that. But I’m not so sure that President #47 and his stooges are going to enjoy those events. In fact, I’m positive they won’t.
People are going to come together. Count on it. They did during the Boston Tea Party. And Women’s Suffrage. And the Civil Rights Movement. And the Vietnam War. And Watergate. And Black Lives Matter. And REAL change happened.
That gives me hope.
Saint Marty wrote a poem for tonight about his mother . . .
Mother’s Dementia
by: Martin Achatz
She slowly became a Picasso painting.



