Angleworms

\While on runs, I’ve been spotting worms that dangle from the beaks of robins. I would love to follow a robin around and measure the length each of its victims. The 18’ of worms a day stat continues to impress my mind. That’s a lot of worm meat to consume on a daily basis. Images of worm after worm being snatched from the ground play out in my imagination. I see montages of them being vacuumed out of the dirt by seemingly insatiable robins. Each day another bout of murderous mayhem for our earthworm neighbors.

Google tells me that these segmented creatures also go by the name angleworms. Of this name, I knew not. Google also shares their scientific classifications with me, which leaves me wondering what it’d be like to know the Latin names for all lifeforms; how different would life feel were I to use that nomenclature rather than our common terms? Quicker would be my ability to connect shared traits, especially were I to know the identity for each level of classification. I’d know that this creature was one of many species in its genus and/or family, and so on up the categorization scheme.

As it stands now, I can group certain species, such as crows, ravens, jays, magpies, among others, being corvids. But, on the whole, my range of such knowledge is spotty, lackluster actually. So, I can only speculate what a deeper appreciation might invoke, though I have found that as my knowledge of flowers, birds, and other entities increases I become further stunned by the webworks of a truly marvelous world.

Amusingly enough, I can likely speak more in-depth on the topic of board games than biology, though, conversely, the details of ethology or ecology or other studies of the kind interest me more deeply. It’s just that in my daily life it’s either easier to take in facts about games or that I’ve simply molding myself into patterns to absorb such information. I fear though that to celebrate such knowledge possibly resembles pontification more than anything useful.

Oftentimes the act of sharing knowledge can seem to be a boorish activity regardless of the topic. Though, I recognize that this danger lurks even more notably when the subject matter is more arcane or, at least, less interesting to most. Kelly, fortunately, humors me by listening to my explanations of game mechanics, comparing and contrasting their implementation across a range of examples. It’s like literature, where you have innovators and masters of various forms. I like to think that I convey these concepts in creative, engaging ways, but I should accept the reality that she’s humoring me, at least to some appreciable degree. And, it’s true, I do appreciate her patience.

Guilty Pleasures

There’s music we each enjoy that we recognize as being a guilty pleasure. What’s beautiful about the spectrum of art is that what’s a guilty pleasure for one person might be integral for another person. Like Tom Petty’s unyielding use of the same several chords might cause a person to detest his music, yet that same person might find the immediacy of time slip away as she feels that she, too, is running down a dream while working on a mystery and going wherever it leads. I love Girls Just Want to Have Fun, and had it serve as my “send tune” a couple of years back, delighting in the absurdity of rolling up to a crag with the windows down and screaming along with Cyndi as she laments the boys who hide their girls from the rest of the world. That sort of jam gets the blood pumping and ready to cruise some hard routes, truly. I don’t fault anyone who disses a pleasure of mine, and I get why they’d dislike it. For, I have no interest in your rock-out to Journey; however, I do appreciate that you derive something meaningful from their music.

On this note, I have possessions that are guilty pleasures. Like, my Apple Watch embarrasses me. In the DC area where people seem consumed by ideas of meritocracy, affluence, power, pedigrees, and other constructs of these ilk, you see a good number of people with such watches. They’re not uncommon, and it seems that with each wave of updates to the hardware more people succumb to their allure. When I was in Seattle back in February, that no one seemed to wear smartwatches struck me. I felt like an outlier; it was like I was thrust back a few years when I first secured mine, an outlier of sorts who appears to outsiders to have too much money while also kneeling too much at the altar of Apple.

It’s a frivolous, silly purchase. Not to say it doesn’t provide perks, for it does. Tracking miles during runs is wonderful. Having the device stream info at me as I gasp for air can prompt me to go farther than I might have otherwise traveled. There’s something inspiring about feeling energized, seeing that I have logged X miles, and knowing that I possess the time and energy to accrue Y more miles. It also provides other fleeting benefits, like timing planks or sessions on a systems board. Use of a phone can handle such tracking, but it’s a little more streamlined a process, for me at least, to use the watch. Also, being that I’m a slave to notifications, it keeps me away from my phone, easy it is to see the watch update, and move on with life, rather than finding myself holding my phone and then possibly playing with it, thereby squandering time.

I realize this last example reveals a bigger issue: my battle with distractions and weakness for immediate gratifications. The ability to control music, podcasts, and other media from the wrist has proven quite useful as well. But, again, if applying a stamp that reads “trivial,” “unnecessary,” or “exorbitant trinket,” then you could press such a stamp against the watch. And, then, after having done so, reach for each of those other stamps to press each of them against the device as well.

Anyway, the main reason I want to mention the watch, which apparently “required” an extensive disclaimer regarding the fact that I own it, is that it amuses me with its feedback. Most days I go for a run before noon, but if I’m busy with work then I might not go until later in the day. Around the time I’d have wrapped up the run on a normal day, it’ll display an alert, something like: “Your move and exercise rings are usually further along by now.” For those not in the know, the watch tracks three metrics each day: (1) whether you stood and walked around for 3 minutes each hour, (2) how many minutes you spent exercising, and (3) how many active calories you burned, completion of rings indicates your progress toward a goal that you’ve set for each of metrics. It provides other messages, all along these lines. Some are supportive: way to go, you closed all three rings. Others, usually sent around the time you’re in pajamas, are prodding, “A brisk, X-minute walk should [allow you to close your move ring].”

Eventually, I hope they’ll provide more control over these messages. I picture a range of checkbox or range selector options that allow you fine tune the tone of the messages. Want more snark? Want abusiveness? Passive aggression feedback? Aggressive prodding? Insults? Pleading? “Listen, I know you’re a lazy POS, but maybe you could at least pick up the phone to call the ambulance for what’s surely a coronary in your future.” What also cracks me up is that unless you’re full-on every day, the watch is never satisfied. You could completely crush your targets for ten days straight and then on day eleven you simply wish to rest, for maybe you’re sore, barely able to move, having done ten back-to-back ultramarathons followed by hundreds of push-ups and an hour of abs focused HIIT. Nonetheless, the watch will jab you: “hey, WTF, why’s your move ring look like crap today.” It’s insanity.

Jackasses

A friend from pre-college posted the following message on FB:

  • “Get mad at me for saying this if you want, but reading/hearing middle class white people call stay at home orders oppression is HILARIOUS and reminds me that America truly has been a very different place for ethnic minorities.#HonestObservation #ImNOTHereToLieToYou #Privilege. Edit: This is undoubtedly true for all marginalized groups.”

I have a vague memory that involves this friend. It’s of when we were in middle school, mostly during a math class, which was taught by an inept guy who was doomed as a teacher given that he took to heart how his students perceived him. Given that at the age we were at, you shouldn’t put much stock in our opinions and most of us were likely selfish jerks, this guy was a failure at his job. He catered to people who pretended to not understand what he taught, thus his earnest desire to leave no student behind, before that phrase became a political angle, meant we mostly spun around in circles. Or, rather, I recall trying to balance our desks on two and then even one leg. Boredom precipitated tomfoolery.

Part of our shenanigans involved prodding at boundaries. I forget the specifics, but a group of us would jokingly use racial, cultural, and other similarly minded slurs toward each other. Well, not even slurs at times, but rather categories. No malice meant. We, at least this was my take on what we were doing, were mocking the absurdity of these terms, of the ideas behind their use. We’d declare, “Whatever, Jesus Christ worshipper” or, “So says the Jew,” or whatever else. I suspect we may have also used some of the usual suspects when it comes to outright offensive language, and I discretely recall someone receiving a Happy Bar Mitzvah card for a birthday, which isn’t necessarily a religious assault, but, at the same time, isn’t what I’d label as classy. I think this guy, the Facebook poster, was part of this crew, though I may be misremembering. I know that he was in the class, and I believe that we cemented our friendship during this class as we sought purpose, for learning math wasn’t the outcome toward which we were heading.

Of course, at that age, I’m sure that this friend had a better idea of cultural differences than I had at the time. Being black, I suppose that shit hits you on day one. There’s no looking away. It’s like you’re sitting in a chair with an apparatus strapped your face, which provides prongs that hold open your eyelids so that your eyes can stare at a projection and the images that it carries. Your ears, well they hear things, and you’re smart, so you pick up on what’s happening in society on the TV, with your family and friends, and basically every vibration that we call life that happens while you’re alive in this culture. Not that you even need to be smart to pick up on these social constructs, on how the world works, for we’re all pretty smart even if we don’t make use of our intellect at all times. You just have to take a moment to pay attention. At that age, I wasn’t paying attention. I was blind, essentially. Most people don’t pay attention; that’s the first thing you learn once you have a moment to close your eyes and reflect.

I remember, in history class, one of our classmates would lament that the South had lost the Civil War, which caused this particular friend a lot of, hmm, I’ll call it anguish though it manifested as incredulous anger. Like part of him couldn’t believe how dumb her words were, for she seemed to lack all concept that what she was saying. She even said that the south would rise again. I now realize that it’s a miracle that he didn’t smack her. She might has well added that she wished that her family could own his, which, now that I think of it, I think may have been part of our pushing-the-boundaries jokes, “my great-great grandfather owned your great-great grandfather, or something along those lines.” As I said above, that math teacher was a fool. He either had no clue that we were being ridiculous or didn’t have the temerity to do anything about it; I hope he found some sense of dignity before long, for sans a sense of self, the world steamrolls you.

Anyway, I share all of this mostly because I miss this friend, for we’ve been in different states for the bulk of our lives and people sort of do their own things, but we have our memories, and I think of those I shared with him from time-to-time. Sleepovers. Conversations. Sports. Games. A trip with his father to a time share. Various tidbits. I don’t retain the specifics of many things, but a decent chunk of memories that he and I shared I continue to curate, even trivial moments like a time I picked him up for school, which, in retrospect, was a touch absurd given that I had to drive like ten minutes the wrong direction to retrieve him, but he was my friend and it was fun to hang out as we went to that pen that is our educational system.

Though we rarely interact via Facebook, and it’s been years since I’ve seen this guy, I do keep an eye on what he’s up to and what he shares. His life path interests me, and I appreciate things that he says and does, like helping people get to voting stations, regardless of whom they’re voting for. He’s one of the good ones. I guess what I’m trying to explain is that his post—and it being the morning and my having guzzled coffee and, thereby, feeling energy that needed to be focused—provoked me to respond. I wrote the following:

“The world turns, and things change as it revolves. Yet, idiots shall remain idiots, blinded by their hypocrisy. What’s unfortunate is that these people stem from a legacy that instills them a voice, which means their idiocy will continue to pervade our lives for years to come. These open-up jackasses couldn’t see gradations or nuances before COVID and most of them will continue to bump through life without opening their eyes, their feckless helpless blundering a potential harm to us whenever it nears.”

My friend replied with: “I wanted to both love and laugh at this comment. Well said sir.”

To which I responded: “Thanks! Though, add in some tears as well, for the optimist in me ever hopes that things will change despite persistent evidence otherwise.”

Though, I regret having written jackasses. Part of me hopes that these people will engage with others and that they can change; calling them jackasses does not invite circumspection. It’ll tune them out; cause division. I’ve changed in some ways, opened my eyes and reconsidered various facets of my life. Other people have done so as well, and, sure, some people will never change, but I feel that you must keep clear the pathway that can get them to reconsider assumptions and perspectives. One of the most amazing people of whom I’ve learned is Daryl Davis. His story, of which I’ve heard a couple versions of and probably prefer the Snap Judgment account titled The Silver Dollar Lounge, in short, is that he befriended KKK members, which caused them to leave the Klan. That level of faith in humans and desire to give people a chance to improve themselves despite risk to personal safety astounds me. What he managed to do through curiosity and a willingness to put aside his ego and preconceived notions inspires me.

Yes, KKK people and Nazis and all sorts of people who believe, say, and/or do things that I would label as terrible are detrimental to society, they pollute our ears and distract us, as a society, from improving. Yet, I do not know that I can discount humans generally, they suck so often, myself included, but there’s always the chance that some percentage of people can improve, and I find it difficult to simply say, “you’re trash,” and refuse to pull on the rope to which they could cling should they wish to extract themselves from the quicksand that pulls them down. For we’re all sinking in mucks of varying substances and sometimes we can clamber out on our own, but, in the end, much of what saves us from ourselves can be the little insights we notice, such as to extract oneself from the mire you can sometimes use nearby roots rather than a rope thrown to you.

I believe that we can all improve, it just takes a desire to do so, and any deities watching me from the beyond surely know that there are so many ways I, as with all of my fellow denizens of earth, am a jackass. I can see these past faux pas moments stream along as I recollect past moments, innumerable and unyielding they appear. So, in this regard, I hope that I have changed, and recognize that for many of my failings I still endeavor to improve; accordingly, I wish the potential for such evolutions to all.

Birding through COVID-19

Birds have become part of the COVID-19 life. We had been watching them from our balcony. The center of our apartment complex hosts many trees, of which local and migratory birds frequent. Most of the usual suspects alight here. Robins. Crows. Grackles. Doves. Starlings. Cardinals. Blue jays.

For Kelly’s birthday, she found herself the owner of a pair of high-quality binoculars. They live on a table near our living room windows, alongside The Sibley Field Guide to Birds of Eastern North America. Most days will see her giggling as she uses them to observe the absurd antics of birds. Robins and other ground scavengers bring her much delight whenever she spies them throwing leaves and other debris about as they quest for worms.

The other day I got her the newest Sibley book, What It’s Like to Be a Bird, which provides numerous facts about birds, generally as well as for specific species. She regurgitates tidbits for me as we look at these marvelous critters. I imagine a lever that I can pull to have her spit out a factoid. As we watch a bird, she’ll whisper what feels like a secret: robins can eat 18’ of worms a day. If a bird ate pizza, the proportionate number of calories for a human would be 25 pizzas a day. I may have these facts wrong. She remembers the details better than me, but you get the idea, and the figures are close enough to accurate. Once you enter the realm of the surprising, the details are all a touch fluid anyhow.

From our apartment window, we once saw a yellow-bellied sapsucker. Though, we’ve not yet seen anything exotic or unexpected. Snowy owls aren’t making appearances, or red-tailed hawks for that matter. I dream of barred owls, though recognize the divide between desire and possibility. With the arrival of leaves, it has become more difficult to spot our avian neighbors, and it’s become even more difficult to photograph them. We still hear their calls, so their presence continues to delight our senses.

Most weekends we travel somewhere nearby to stroll through the woods, along fields, or within wetlands. The primary goal is to move; to walk and spend time together. Though, given that Kelly has resorted to unyielding exercise to deal with this situation and that I am not too far behind her in this regard, for I run most days and do some core or arms or legs workouts most days as well, it’s not like we need these trips to combat an otherwise sedentary lifestyle. I had referred to our trips as hikes, but Kelly chided me. We’re barely walking, it’s not hiking. She’s right. Though, I maintain, and I think that she agrees, that we’re conducting a form of exercise, nonetheless. Being away from the home, and wandering about alongside flora and fauna, does exercise one’s spirits, replenishing us. Being locked up in a home isn’t necessarily the definition of comfort that most people would scribe.

What we mostly do during these walks is unearth birds at which we then stare. A call sounds, we stop. We look. We regard. She uses the binoculars. I use my camera, equipped with a telephoto lens. There’s a lot of standing around happening during our walks. Most trips involve us seeing a species that we hadn’t seen since we began our explorations alongside the birth of the pandemic. Red-winged blackbird. Tree swallow. Titmouse. Warbler, of which we’ve seen many varieties. Mockingbird. Eastern Towhee. Great Blue Heron. Egret. Osprey. And the usual suspects, named above. Numerous types of woodpeckers as well.

As the weather warms, I fear that these excursions may cease for each trip sees an uptick of other people who have elected to leave their homes to enjoy fresh air and pleasures of nature. Being near people, generally, does not concern me, but the presence of many folk does increase my anxiety.

Yesterday, we visited Burke Lake Park, which was overrun by individuals and families performing activities that fit many a label: joggers, cyclists, meanderers, romantic excursionists, fishers, etc. We left the trail to wander along the kiddie-train tracks or traverse the roadways when feasible, but much of the time we were being passed by those locomoting quickly as well as crossing paths with people circumnavigating the reservoir via a counterclockwise path. It was a bit too packed for me, so we’ll need to be more discerning for our next jaunt.

We did see something amazing at Burke Lake, though. Throughout our hike we heard great commotion. Lots of geese flocked about doing geese things as geese are known to do, so we sort of assumed that they were the sole source of the ever-present din. There’s a small island in the reservoir. Only near the end of our stroll were we on a section of the trail that nears the island. The cacophony was most intense along this stretch and we could hear variance in the pitch. Up went the binoculars and camera. To our astonishment we saw at least a dozen large nests in the trees, many nests per tree. In each stood or sat a heron. As we observed, a heron would arrive, sometimes with fish, and take the place of the heron that had been in the nest so that bird could then fly off, presumably to hunt. If the arriving heron had been successful, then it would regurgitate the fish for the young. Given that these nests were at least 100’ up in the trees, we couldn’t see the chicks. However, it was astounding to see so many gigantic birds in one tree, and then to see numerous adjacent trees each with multiple herons occupying enormous nests. It was really cool. Either Kelly’s bird-fact lever had jammed, or she hasn’t yet made it to the heron chapter, for the extent of this colony left her equally stunned.

Alchemist Turns Gray

Paul Coelho’s The Alchemist is written beautifully. That I listened to it as an audiobook made the smooth narrative easy to follow as I ran across suburban streets. I wouldn’t recommend this novel to anyone, unless they’re seeking something light and fast. It reads almost like a self-help tome written, an allegorical tale steeped in South America’s magic realism literary culture. Whereas Marquez’s novels like 100 Years of Solitude require some engagement and thought, Coelho spells most everything out for you. Not to say that efforts to peel beneath its veneer would not reveal additional layers or substance but rather that you’d find much of the veneer to be its substance; the novel spells out much of what it contains. I might have missed a lot, and perhaps its didactic nature beguiled me, shrouding its richer concepts beyond my sight, but I suspect that part of the book’s popularity lies in its accessibility and general message, which are things that I support and appreciate.

I finished listening to the novel during a run. I had planned to time its completion with my return home; however, an urge to add another half mile struck so I put on some music. Given that I was fumbling with my phone while running along streets, which also involves ensuring that I maintain proper distance from passersby, I selected one of the first options I saw. A Touch of Grey sounded, which isn’t a song I listen to frequently, and it has likely been years since I’ve played it. Sometimes it’ll come on while I’m shopping for groceries but then it’s more of a backdrop that does remind me that I’ll survive the store, which, I suppose, I appreciate. At this moment, it was the perfect song. The Alchemist brightened my mood with its general theme and then this cheerful, optimistic song fit this COVID-19 heaviness. “I will survive. I will get by.” “Every silver lining has a touch of grey.” The bouncy nature of the tune meshed with my stride. I sang along, I smiled. I laughed. My pace quickened. It was wonderful. Then Friend of the Devil came on. And then Uncle John’s Band. Ok, so we’re heading through the checklist of pop hits, but, whatever, these songs are nevertheless good and sparkly and they fueled my reserves, bounded me forward, and got me through an additional couple of miles beyond what I had planned. Not a bad way to wean a little love.

Observing Golden Hues

A pathetic jade-like plant sits in a small pot amongst an African violet and a dead succulent near the bedroom window. This morning sunlight bathed it. The edges of its tiny thumb-like leaves glowed. Observing these golden hues, I thought of auras. Outside it had rained through much of the morning. Anxiety and life and whatever else had jostled me awake for short bursts throughout the early hours. Fragments of these moments remain retained, thereby counterpointing this floodlit plant with the foggy vapors of the dawn’s heavy rains. Now, as I accept my first motions toward entering the day ahead, this plant strikes me with its beauty. It resembles a bonsai tree in its diminutive state. It grows horizontally, threatening eventual doom should it not expand other directions. We rotate it, but it maintains a consistent path regardless of to which cardinal point this finger-like projection aims. Perhaps this shelf serves as an offering to Osiris, Hel, Hades or whomever plants might worship, for the blooms of the violet have shrived and now decay within the center of the plant’s mass.

We know not the species of the dead succulent, though when alive it sported fine hairs that Kelly would stroke daily while at work. She enjoyed how it felt, finding it odd yet soothing. I never touched the plant for we transported it home once the lockdown began, and it did not survive the transportation. Some plants live to die, in that they grow in unsustainable fashions, branching out in one direction so as to tip their pots or to an extent that their structure cannot handle.

This plant espoused suicide through its growth patterns. Finicky and temperamental, the combination of a self-destructive growth pattern, some temporary neglect due to the work-from-home transition, and a minor calamity when it tipped over while traveling home, thereby ripping it from its dirt bedding, thereby destroying many of its roots. At home, it progressed from green to brown; its integrity softened. One day, it exploded. Or, maybe a better description is deflated for suddenly moisture released, wetting the dirt, leaving behind skin reminiscent more of a snake shedding than of a plant. Light’s warmth dried the soil, desiccated the plant. We let its carcass remain. A sort of chalk outline of a memory of what once was.

One day we’ll replace the dead plant with something new. Perhaps we’ll locate another of the its species and continue its story in the guise of a 2.0 version. For now, we have this triad of fading beauty, bizarre life choices, and extinguished promise. Yet, how the sun strikes the jade makes me rethink how I conceive this shelf. It’s so beautiful, the plant and its illumination. This world can be so splendid, I remember. The sky has taken on pastel hues. Even the water-drenched bricks along the highest portions of the buildings in view conjure a sense of beauty and mystery. I picture the droplets soaking into the bricks, flowing within in a manner reminiscent to a creek cascading down rocky mountain slopes. Some doves swoop past, seeking balconies higher than my window view grants my vision access.

Yesterday I felt a tad overwhelmed by the news. Certain ailments have always caused me distress. As in, the concept of them pains me. To contemplate what causes them and their effects causes me distress. Strokes and heart attacks terrify me. Their prospect cripples me upon thinking of them for I then imagine what it might be like to suffer their brutality. Seeing that blood clots is a manifestation of this enigmatic disease that’s overtaken our world society left me feeling helpless. Strokes. Bodies turned against themselves. The demon inside being literally just that. It’s incapacitating.

What scares me the most is not dying but, rather, thinking about what it would be like for loved ones. They’re the ones that carry any burden of my passing. I think of trivial things such as purchases that are soon arriving in the mail, trinkets that my girlfriend should not need to deal with in terms of donating or selling. Even the surprise of the arrival would remind her of loss. To gain is to remember what you have lost, at times. I think of bank accounts, credit statements, possessions, and all of the associated work. I worry about where my savings will end up, and whom can access it, or, more importantly, who might lack access. These things are trivial, I realize, but they’re ways to ignore the more pressing aspects of loss. To think that the adventures and memories we had planned will be never achieved. To believe that inside jokes will no longer be replicated.

Everyone will forge on, but that I will have become a story of loss saddens me. My solace is that I know that we can adapt, and I guess that’s the paradox of my fear. If one of us were to succumb I’d rather it be me, though I know that I could handle any loss, but I’d rather not wish that need on anyone else. In the confused state that results from this confusion, I know that we must both survive, but that we might not is what terrifies me.

Each person out there would be severely missed if lost, and each day we see the death toll numbers increase. It’s a bit much at times, which is why I stare at the sunlit ovals and reach my fingertips toward Kelly. She murmurs an appreciative noise as she stretches in response to the contact. I glance over to see a slight smile. Upturned lips, always a delightful sight. No idea what comes next, but staying alive to try to spark such wonders, her happiness and all that it brings, shall remain a bedrock of my metaphorical soul.

Reminded of pleasures and of possibilities, I left the bed to make come coffee and pancakes and to take on the world. It’s a lazy Friday full of reading, some gaming, contact with friends via technology, and whatever else shall arrive at our door.

Little Perks

An unanticipated upside of this COVID-19 quasi-lockdown is that we can appreciate aspects of the madness unique to this situation as well as continue certain benefits following its completion.

For example, and I recognize how trivial this is, Costco shopping has improved substantially. What had been stressful, a crowded venue with many people behaving without regard to the presence of other humans, where you not only needed to navigate human-constructed blockades but also dodge carts as they caromed about the store, has ameliorated. That the store restricts the number of shoppers at any given moment, you can move freely and shop without needing to adjust your presence to allow space for others while not needing to worry about some errant cart striking you down.

Similarly, the rare times you find yourself driving somewhere are generally sans traffic. Routes that prompted anxiety for delays would be inevitable now can occur without delay. We traveled to a location that I’d never visit given the otherwise certain blockade of slow-moving autos for miles, and never did we need to hit the brakes to slow down, rush hour be damned.

My family video chatted to play Just One, something we had never done before. We’d play it again, which is to say that we might not carry this connective activity beyond our COVID-induced sequestering. My brother and I engage in semi-regular bouts of Splendor. Various friends engage online for games and other activities, and we’ve begun to video chat at work, which could continue as, down the line, individuals rather than entire Agencies telework. I exercise in some fashion near daily, sneaking in pull ups on the hang board that had been long neglected, and taking a moment to do chair dips in-between emails. Daily runs, even if brief, occur. All of these activities are becoming engrained as what’s normal, and I hope that they spill into normal life once the social distancing restrictions lift.

Spending more time with my girlfriend is wonderful as well. We each do quite a lot of things separately, like she’s chatting with a friend at the moment. Each week, we set aside one night to do things exclusively together, and otherwise, as would be the case during a non-quarantine week, do things separately. Though, it is fun seeing her as we pass across a room to reach the kitchen or bedroom. And, being able to interact briefly across the spans of workdays is also a delight. This entire “thing” seems to bring us closer together, which is a blessing.

All-in-all, I remain appreciative that this societal chaos enables me to remember what’s important and to focus on what matters, which is the love the we bring to each other as well as our wellbeing, and to each I cling with eyes wide open and smiles and appreciation turned up to their max.

Interludes

Much of my life, I felt like I was moving to the next stage. Everything served as a transition, with nothing feeling like this portion fit where I should remain. Not that I was depressed or ravenous or anything of the sort. Rather, it was that I anticipated change underlain by uncertainty more than feeling that, yes, this must be the place where I should be. Life felt like early spring, with days that made sense and others that lacked coherence. Situations would come and go, and the vibrations of life could feel like lines of a poem written on a receipt that gets caught in the wind to travel to another place, another time, before returning to the earth as rain and bacteria and fungus take hold. Sparks of beauty and brilliance, whether deluded or not, cast about the world as I planned as well as reacted and generally let the oscillations of the heavens ferry me onward.

Now, I make no claim that I am now grounded. Nor, do I proclaim to possess any semblance of wisdom. The more I act, the more I realize that much of what I do continues to fall into the bin marked react. And, it seems that I can realize mishaps and blunders on a daily basis, whether finding myself irritated for something someone else is doing or not doing to later realize that the primary cause for the conflict arose from my own doings or even simply moving toward someone yet misjudging my location and thus bumping into said person. However, the thought to characterize myself as embedded in perpetual limbo has abated, or at least lessened.

While I do not know where my career might head or even what city I might label as home three years from now and though it seems that friendships as always come and go and that what drives me forward and what bores me thoroughly all might vacillate, little unease underlies my mental state. I feel grounded. Before the uncaring, randomness of the universe and the unlimited fountain of kindness and stupidity that humanity presents, and in spite of the pain that people cause me, often unaware that their actions impact me, and without regard to the beauties that others share with me, I find myself generally excited for each new day as well as generally appreciative of what has occurred. And, I relay this sentiment not to gloat or anything of the sort, but rather to appreciate that despite the chaotic inchoateness of existence that sometimes things feel like they align, and to wonder what may have altered to cause this shift in how I perceive my immediacies as well as fate.

Age could be a factor, alongside experience. Having fulfilled some goals, whether espoused or not, and finding some grooves while teasing at the unknowns so as to develop new talents and interests surely grounds a person. Similarly, chemistry surely alters as the body moves into successive phases of this life thing within which we’ve each discovered ourselves. However, I suspect, and perhaps this is the romantic in me, that having connected with a person who infuses richness into my days and supports me as we dabble together along this planet as it arcs through the expansive unknown is a primary cause of my newfound sense of ease.

Together, we’ll figure out adversities, delight in windfalls, and try our best to grasp the intricacies of our individual and mutual realities. We will make plans, big and small, and we will suffer setbacks. That she’s part of my life makes things feel less like I’m moving from room to room, stage to stage, and more like life is an adventure where we’re narrating ourstory, in the singular and collective senses. Thus, from our eyes and bodies and sense of selves we spring from place to place, we linger as desired, and simply live our lives, while taking in what happenstance presents to us as well as deriving what substance we can from opportunities. Life feels a bit more in the driver seat with her involved in making some of these decisions, whether made together or one of us for the other, a sense of grounding backlit by boundless prospects that stream across the view as shadows toward which we might illuminate. Not to say that I’d be lost, let alone adrift, without her, and I suspect much of this sense of acceptance and purpose has become a fixture of whom I am, but I do believe that nothing about everyday life with her feels like it’s an everyday sort of scene, for the moments spent together fulfill and fuel me, and make me excited for what shall next arrive, as if we’re shooting through space at warp speed, ever searching for new life and adventure, boldly going wherever the hell we can find ourselves, as this wonderful and terrible world keeps chugging along.

Abstracted Coffins

My girlfriend and I entered the elevator. An older woman stood in the corner. Not old, but simply older than us. She was petite, and shared a slightly nod, not a smile, but still she transmitted that she recognized our existence. We smiled back, saying a hello. Down the elevator went toward the basement. The lobby snagged us. A woman stood before us as the doors slid open. We had backed up to allow her entrance. She stared, somewhat agape, obviously uncomfortable.

“I don’t want to make you uncomfortable. Social distancing. 4 seems like a lot of people for an elevator.”

I stared at the woman. The door remained open. Its sensor awaited a body to pass its threshold.

“I don’t want to make you uncomfortable.” She repeated, almost as if looking for verification. Then stop saying that and get in the elevator, I thought.

Everyone seemed confused. Just get in the fucking elevator I thought. I also wondered, “if you’re crazy, why not just take the stairs,” though, to be fair, I never understand people who appear to be generally healthy who take the elevator to travel one floor. I tell myself that surely there’s more to the story, some malady not apparent to the eye. Maybe their parents were butchered in a stairwell; they witnessed it; blood everywhere; tendrils of flesh, or something even more internal and important; psychic trauma, surely.

Eventually I had the wherewithal to press the close doors button. The doors closed, finally. The stranger said, “People have gone nuts.” We laughed and agreed. “So strange.” Then, the elevator reached the basement and the doors opened and we wished each other to have splendid days.

Outside were the people wearing masks to walk the sidewalks. Some people wore rubber gloves. It’s all so insane. I feel like people don’t understand risk, as in where the risks lie. I suppose some people have that perspective toward me as well. I don’t know. From what I’ve read, and from what I understand, the keys are to wash hands, be careful while inside locations shared by others, and to minimize the number of people with whom you maintain contact. It’s like STDs, don’t fuck everyone willy-nilly, don’t roll around indoors where others lurk. But, people are bad at assessing risk, and people turn to their fears so easily, so I suppose it’s expected to see the world gone mad.

Sure, it’d be shitty if the woman entered the elevator and coughed. Don’t DO THAT. I am a cougher. I cough a lot. All of the time. It’s basically like blinking for me. But, these days, I don’t cough when near people. I stifle that shit. If I couldn’t do so, then I wouldn’t go out, or if I had to go out (like my building was on fire and I was going to be coughing a lot) I’d wear a mask. I think we’ll be ok traveling a few floors with each other in an elevator. Not to say that it’s overkill to wear a mask whenever you’re outside, especially while indoors, but I suspect that for most, with this disease, that it’s a panacea more for the mental distress than our physical safety. For gloves, if they’re not disposable then there’re one more thing that can bring the disease into your apartment and one more thing to wash, and if they’re disposable then we’re looking at an insane amount of trash if everyone uses them. Just wash your hands, they were made to resist most diseases.

Of course, there are people who are more likely to die from the disease and it’s understandable that they’d take extra precautions, such as not taking the elevator… I mean, I could have just been in that particular elevator coughing up a storm, and she’d have been fine getting in without having seen me. I don’t know. It just seems that fear got this nation into a protracted and unnecessary war with Iraq following Afghanistan, and that fear got us Trump, and that we’re playing into this manipulative mentality when we view people as threats more than as humans. And, yes, I provide space to people while outside, and I push down my coughs, but I’ll also offer to help grab objects from high shelves and hold elevator doors and generally be polite and caring, for in the end what will get us through the day is not our paranoia but our circumspect vision and calm and minds.

Bird Song

Years ago, I would hear voices. Not often, but even one time is enough to make you appreciate that it does not happen again, or at least frequently. Mostly, I would hear a voice that resembled mine, or something speaking in clear, distinct terms to me. Most of these events happened before sleep, so I figured I was perhaps asleep, or maybe my mind had entered some strange state within the liminal space surrounding slumber. Again, these auditory hallucinations were infrequent and transient, and then they faded from my life. The closest I get is while climbing, I sometimes think that feedback provided by someone is for me. I know that it is not, but it’ll seem like the words are directed at me, in direction as well as content. However, I know that it’s almost always the case that I need to lift my left or right leg or move a hand to a given handhold, so the advice is nearly always close enough to believable, for people shouting advice tend to be the people who aren’t providing all that useful, or at least nuanced, information. Occasionally, it’ll turn out to be a person I know who had said, “nice work,” or whatever, for upon descending or looking down I’d see a smile beaming my way, hello.

A part of me has always wondered about varied perspectives. In high school, I’d switch sides of a classroom debate, from pro to con, as the argument interested me. As a child, I’d try to stare blankly to cause optical distortions in patterns, and the premise of DARE backfired completely as the police officer explained that drugs would distort reality and cause you to feel things not otherwise normal, which all sounded wildly fun and, hell, people must do this stuff because it’s enjoyable in some way or another, hence the few drug-filled, if not fueled, movie scenes I had witnessed by the time I had reached fifth grade. So, I try to imagine one-off situations as I traverse through the day.

Accordingly, earlier today I strolled down a suburban block with my roommate. Birds were everywhere, as they tend to be. Surely, they might be the most plentiful animal larger than an insect. So many birds, everywhere, woodpeckers, wrens, chickadees, starlings, and so on. They’re singing and calling and bickering and generally flying all about doing the bird-things that birds do. What if, I wondered, there were no birds, and I simply heard their din throughout the day. Auditory hallucinations plaguing me. Distracting me. What it would it be like to suffer from such schizophrenia. Nothing else, no voices, nothing to drive me batty or violent or irascible outside of hearing persistent avian articulations. With my eyes closed, as I walked for several steps, the world I know collapsed, for I found myself in a sans bird world populated by a perturbed mind that clicked along as it passed about the world, its machinations internally made audible by bird song.

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