Day 365

We knew this day would come. One year ago, I was so anxious. I was a ball of tension waiting to collect my child and bring them home that Friday, knowing that schools and workplaces were closing all around us and having resisted the urge all of that week to keep us all at home ahead of the decision we knew was coming. Parents were distancing, we weren’t hugging, we were using hand sanitizer. My friends who are microbiologists were emphasizing all of this as absolutely necessary; I was closely following what had happened in Italy and stocking our pantry and freezer well ahead of our area’s shutdown.

This year, I learned the ways in which anxiety has served me and pushed back against the ways it has not. I have struggled to relax out of hypervigilance for decades; I felt a degree of relief when my nervous system’s level of alertness aligned with the events going on around me, even if only through the early part of the summer. Once my child and partner were both working and schooling from home, I was much less anxious. This was an actual full-blown crisis, and my body is calm in a crisis. It’s a state of being in which it expects to exist at all times, an expectation that causes so many problems for me when there is not a global pandemic during a rise of fascism threatening all our lives. Last year, my nervous system was like, look, see, I was right all along. There is a lot to be said for not being right sometimes.

It is not my desire to recap the entire year we all just lived through. It was awful. Many people died. Many people became and are now ill. From COVID, from isolation, from stress, from an inability to access necessary care for ongoing health conditions. It remains awful.

Somehow, we are all going to have to learn to live again. Newly. Now, in this post-2020 state. With our survivors’ guilt, with our grief, with the health impacts we don’t yet know the full extent of. I have been thinking a lot about the AIDS survivors I knew the 90s, mostly gay men who had either dodged HIV entirely or had lived long enough with HIV to arrive at the state where the drugs began to keep people alive for good. In 1997, a longtime survivor was someone who had lived with HIV for 10 years. We don’t even use that language anymore, but believe me when I say that survivors’ guilt around HIV endures among older LGBTQ people. Why me, why not me. All of us who are here now, still, will have to grapple with this, in ways we have likely been skirting the edges of throughout. Why me (with/out a job), why me (with/out an infection), why me (with/out a home), why my loved one, why a stranger.

I will say what activists and scholars have said for decades now about HIV/AIDS: there is no moral message in a virus. Who gets it, who does not. Who dies, who does not. There is no morality here, no good or bad. There are odds and chances, near misses and sudden deaths. We have survived. Others have not. It is not because of what any of us individually did or did not do, although it is true that systems and policies failed many of us in profound ways. We did our best in a situation largely beyond our control, made choices within frameworks presented to us, frameworks that are uneven and unequal. We can spend the rest of our days shrinking ourselves down to fit into a place of guilt or we can find a way to grieve and live.

Today, I dropped off a piece of art at a local art center, for consideration as part of a show of community work that will go up in a local coffee shop, a collage I made in an online class I took through them this fall. I am wearing a t-shirt commemorating an online concert by one of my favorite bands, streamed in the early month of the pandemic as a fundraiser for the food banks in their home state. I am typing this on the new computer I had to buy when it became clear that my old computer would not rise to the needs of the situation when we were all online all the time. Next to me is the new phone I eventually caved and purchased once I accepted that no one got my texts on time and I was largely unintelligible on my old phone, which had become the way I connected even with my friends on the next block. Farther into this room is my child’s work desk, with a school-issued computer; the repurposed train table now covered with LEGOs; a stack of books waiting to be read by authors I’ve supported through online book talks; my trusty paper planner that’s filled largely with notes about when I cooked what so that we don’t go through all of this only to die of food poisoning in the end.

There is nowhere to rest my eyes that doesn’t reflect some adaptation to what we faced last year. The question is: what situation do we find ourselves in now? Not just where do we go from here, but how. Just yesterday I talked to a friend on the phone and we vowed to embrace each other’s weird, awkward, un/inhibited behaviors when we see each other again. That’s what I wish for all of us, as we emerge blinking into the light of 2021. The pandemic is not over yet, but we can start to learn a new way of living, together.

Day 7

Yesterday, I needed a beat. The cherry trees are gorgeous here, all up and down the block. We’re fortunate to have a park at the end of our street with a creek that can be forded by children at numerous places. Every day, and often twice, we take a family walk down to the park, peering into the Little Free Library without touching it, crossing the bridges without leaning on the railings. Nature is still here, and it’s a beautiful, perfect, mild, early spring outside.

Over the last year, two of my 90-year-old relatives and three friends my age have died, two from cancer and one from suicide. Yesterday, I couldn’t stop thinking about them. About how frightening this situation would be for those five specific people who would each be particularly vulnerable. I couldn’t stop thinking about the versions of those people whom we all have in our lives right now, who are facing this crisis, whom we are worrying about while trying to keep sane alone in our apartments, or stay upbeat in the face of a child we’re trying to protect from knowledge.

I have lived with anxiety my whole life, in conjunction with or as a corollary to my PTSD. I have never used pharmaceutical medication, despite periodically asking my care providers if they thought I needed to. Always I’ve been told that I’m coping well enough for the potential negatives to outweigh the benefits. Always I have reluctantly agreed and I’ve weathered the ebbs and flows of strains on my mental health.

It’s been several years since my strategies have been as severely tested as during this past week; this experience is already one of the most challenging of my life, and I have no doubt it will continue to rise in the ranking. So, I needed to step back from media that has, up until now, kept me connected with writers, thinkers, and social analyzers around the country and world. I needed to step back from other people’s heartbreak and worry while I took stock of my own.

What, then, of days six and seven? We went to the store, successfully stocking up on frozen vegetables, a category of food it had not occurred to me to buy when I initially stocked up two weeks ago. I hope I was only mildly stressful to my fellow shoppers as I nervously babbled my way through my shopping trip with fairly wild eyes. We completed the first week of remote school, capping it off with a music lesson where an entire class of kids played recorders along with their teacher. (Thankfully, she had each child mute themselves so we could only hear her and our one child, which was surprisingly bearable.)

To celebrate the arrival of spring break, such as it is, I baked a crisp and we pushed back bedtime, allowing the child to swing on the tree swing in the cooling dusk. It was nice. It would have qualified as nice before. I hope everyone is able to take a beat when they need it too.