April 4, 2020
Bits of this time feel absolutely heavenly, like a chance handed down with a nudge. I dreamed that the state of NC sent me an official letter telling me I needed to be the minister of Grace Presbyterian Church, here in Asheville. It was some kind of state-sponsored switcharoo with the current minister. I was terrified at the prospect, but the irrevocability of it indicated a confidence in my abilities that I was disappointed to wake up from.
The sun is starting to dip behind the mountain. Sand Hill Road seems about like normal on a Sunday night. Three neighborhood boys I recognize from Orchard Street just rode by on their bikes, careening down from their hill, seeming to move almost as fast as the tractor trailers blasting by. I hope they stay safe.
My heart is rooted here and sinks deeper the more I get outside and open my eyes. I love the layers of zigzag roof points of the factories beyond our streets. I love the redbud trees and double-blossom cherries in full array now, and the stately white cherry blooms towering at the top of my hill. I love how this neighborhood is both humble and sanctified by the feet of all the kids that move on these streets, by the hard working people and families in each house. Wherever I put my energy and focus is where my heart blooms, and it's HERE now.
I went to campus for the first time in a while. My office, which used to feel like a refuge, feels strange now. Silence crashes down on that place and in it you feel a deathly presence. Maybe if I'm lucky to live through this and still have a job, I will go back there and feel it as an alive place again. But now I'm glad to have what I have, at home, and terribly lucky to have it, too.
Yesterday I took A. to the old abandoned K Mart parking lot an we ran around there. He did what he always wants to do now, if we're in an outdoor space that he trusts, which is play imaginary games that reference his old (pre coronavirus) life. He wants to play "going to school" or playdate at a friend's house, or having someone to his house. Only in these games, he wants to be the adult and the driver. He flies off on his walker and I run behind, pretending we're driving to school. He drops me off, saying "see you at one o'clock!" in an imitation of my own bright tone when I'm off to work. Escorting me to a pretend playdate, he imitates my best nice-mom voice by saying "don't forget to share!"
He would play these games for hours, but inevitably I need to pee or stop pretending. It's a bit sketchy in the K Mart parking lot, where people drive through at breakneck speed to do...what? There's only an ATM and a Papas n' Beer restaurant, serving take-out in this time of quarantine. Some folks drive there for brief meet-ups where they park, verify each other's license plates then speed off together through the ghost-town business district.
We played and looped, and dodged cars, and careened around the bumpy asphalt for as long as my patience held out. It felt suspended and okay to play out the past. Some things, in his hands, are light and tender, and this was one. After everything closed I was beginning to fear we wouldn't have this game anymore. But all we need is a space, even a parking lot, and it grows again.
My cousin's wife tested positive for coronavirus. News is scant from them so I'm not sure, but my cousin who had some health scares already is worried. The stories on Facebook, the stories in the news. In the weird back pockets of experience are these deeply lonely events, people dying without saying goodbye except for when a nice nurse connects them with their family over video. The sadness and despair of the medical staff who tend to these patients. The families left behind.
We are still at the beginning of this precipice as a country, and in my state and county.
I will take the peace when I can get it. I will try to keep my eyes open.
Bad First Drafts
Saturday, April 4, 2020
Tuesday, March 31, 2020
COVID 19 Journal 10
March 31, 2020
Tonight Atticus and I had a dance party in the living room using songs from titles his teachers sent home. Finding the right versions of these songs, using him as my guide, was really tricky. With every wrong guess I could see his shock, realizing the lack of connection between school-world and home-world. So much is lost in translation. But we cobbled together a list of songs that seemed to work.
He mostly wanted to play the keyboard during the songs, versus dance to them. Coordinating the experience of listening to music, feeling the rhythm, and getting his body to walk and move in time around the room took an extreme amount of effort. I've never quite understood what these moments must be like for him at school when all the other kids are dancing. Complicating his physical experience, for certain, is the fact that he is able to process individual notes of music at exact pitch. He will occasionally tell me, offhand, of the particular notes that make up some random sound we're listening to. Max has tested this numerous times and he's usually right.
Max is restless tonight, and also has a terrible stye in his right eye. What an awful time to have a stye. His eye doctor is not seeing patients right now due to the virus, though we hope to get a telemedicine appointment soon.
This sounds whiny, when I know we shouldn't go anywhere at all, ever, now, but every place Atticus and I go to is closed by the next day. The little park behind the library. The Arboretum. Today we just stayed home. I don't think I will try to "get out" again for a long time. It's crushingly disappointing to have each small solace taken away. Best to pretend there are no outlets except for the house, the garage and the neighborhood.
I've been doing a lot of Zoom meetings lately for work, and to keep in touch with people. Seeing faces in neat little boxes is getting to be a normal experience. Which is kind of good, because it makes it easier to travel through those little windows remember that people still exist.
Tonight Atticus and I had a dance party in the living room using songs from titles his teachers sent home. Finding the right versions of these songs, using him as my guide, was really tricky. With every wrong guess I could see his shock, realizing the lack of connection between school-world and home-world. So much is lost in translation. But we cobbled together a list of songs that seemed to work.
He mostly wanted to play the keyboard during the songs, versus dance to them. Coordinating the experience of listening to music, feeling the rhythm, and getting his body to walk and move in time around the room took an extreme amount of effort. I've never quite understood what these moments must be like for him at school when all the other kids are dancing. Complicating his physical experience, for certain, is the fact that he is able to process individual notes of music at exact pitch. He will occasionally tell me, offhand, of the particular notes that make up some random sound we're listening to. Max has tested this numerous times and he's usually right.
Max is restless tonight, and also has a terrible stye in his right eye. What an awful time to have a stye. His eye doctor is not seeing patients right now due to the virus, though we hope to get a telemedicine appointment soon.
This sounds whiny, when I know we shouldn't go anywhere at all, ever, now, but every place Atticus and I go to is closed by the next day. The little park behind the library. The Arboretum. Today we just stayed home. I don't think I will try to "get out" again for a long time. It's crushingly disappointing to have each small solace taken away. Best to pretend there are no outlets except for the house, the garage and the neighborhood.
I've been doing a lot of Zoom meetings lately for work, and to keep in touch with people. Seeing faces in neat little boxes is getting to be a normal experience. Which is kind of good, because it makes it easier to travel through those little windows remember that people still exist.
Saturday, March 28, 2020
COVID 19 Journal 9
March 28, 2020
I miss taking Atticus to the grocery store. We would always look for the buggy with the blue plastic car attached. Almost always it was already taken by another family, so we'd opt for the Caroline Cart (a buggy for adult-sized people with mobility issues). It has a big seat in the front by the handles. Atticus likes to climb into the seat and flip the handles down, and then stand up at alarming times during the shopping trip, holding onto the handles. This buggy is great for a kid like him and a mom like me. He's way too big to fit in the standard child-part of a regular buggy, where AFOs and shoes tend to get stuck in the leg-holes. The Caroline Cart also always reminds me of my friend Caroline, and Atticus's Auntie C, to capable and loveable people the idea of whom could carry us through the store.
Atticus gets left out of most errands and trips for which he was once co-pilot. Of course there are also none of the old trips that used to be solely for his enjoyment and exercise. Indoor spaces that he can run through are his favorite. My wish, for him to be a kid that likes playing outside in the yard, has yet to be fulfilled. If we step outside he's somewhat okay on the small porch attached to the front of our house, but upon entering the yard he visibly starts to shut down. His focus dissipates. His eyes lose their shine. He has a hard time keeping his head up, and he's super slow to respond to any question. His feet drag, his legs buckle. It's usually in this state that neighbors see us outside and want to engage, and this never goes very well.
I wonder often these days, as I try again to cajole him into going out to play, if there's too much sensory input to process when he gets outside. As a baby he shrank from the sky when I tried to carry him through the neighborhood for a walk. His favorite times seemed to be if I wore a wide-brimmed hat that made a little roof over his head. I think he's a kid that likes a roof, even a temporary one. During this quarantine I've prayed for inspiration on safe ways to get him out of the house that will inspire him to be lively and move around with his walker or canes. The sight of him floppy and shut down during regular neighborhood outdoor play is heartbreaking--I can tell he's not having a good experience and it's hard to know how to help.
...
The past two weeks have had some odd moments. Last Friday was my annual physical with my gynecologist (who happens to also be my former OB). As an OB he was lively, verbose and bubbling over with confidence that my pregnancy would go well. Max came to all the appointments and we'd grill the doctor with our notebooks and pens drawn. He responded to each question fully, always challenging us for more: "what else?" he'd say impatiently after we were done and looking blankly at each other. He and Max bonded easily as the two men in the room. I think they appreciated each other's intellectual bent, plus Max is naturally skillful at charming medical professionals by asking them leading questions, piercing questions, about their viewpoint on world issues and matters of interest to Max. When I see my gynecologist now he always asks about Max and sends his regards. He probably wishes Max had the vagina.
When I entered the office I wore a bandanna over my nose and mouth. Everyone was taken aback. I felt like a bank robber in an Andy Griffith episode. No one else in the office, staff or patients, was covering their mouth with even a hint of a mask. Except for the signs on the entryway warning people with fever/cough to wait outside, it looked like a regular women's health office in a town, in a country, that had no worries about viruses. I maintained my coverage through the process of waiting, going back with a nurse to give my temperature and weight, and halfway through the preamble in the exam room. By then it was itchy and hot and I felt like a moron.
But it seemed like a time when people should be acting more cautiously. M gynecologist, when he came in, seemed riskily underdressed. I watched his clean-shaven face, his pale, long muscular arms, his agile, skinny neck and mouth. He was wearing sneakers that day, and short sleeves, calling it casual coronavirus Friday. He seemed so exposed. Once when I saw a bit of spit fly out of my mouth as I laughed at something he said, I feared for his life. I thought about how he was still seeing patients, when other practices with different specialties had closed down.
Maybe it was imagining him gone, no more in this world but a casualty of the impending plague, that moved me to make a joke about my breasts. Which got him to talking about how his wife felt about her breasts. Which was all very weird. When it came time to do my exam and he was feeling of my breasts, the whole situation had an overlayer of creepiness to it that it never had before, and though he didn't do anything unprofessional I vowed once more to switch to a female gynecologist even if (maybe) it meant leaving this practice.
This feeling, that anyone might die of the virus at some point in the not-too-distant future, pervades every interaction. I view neighbors differently, and close acquaintances, coworkers and even strangers. Everyone seems tender as the tiny blue spring flowers I mowed down by the garage yesterday. Myself, too. "I might die," I thought as I packed some winter clothes into a plastic tub, tossing in all my work pants which are useless now in this time of waist-up Zoom meetings and perpetual weekend-feeling days.
Not since Atticus's NICU time has there been this floating day-to-day bliss and agitation. We have to be grateful for all that we have. But living in such gratitude can feel like being a packaged Twinkie squeezed up too close to the other Twinkie. There are breaths I take where it feels like the package has been opened and I'm getting fresh, clean air that frees my brain. But the rest of the time I'm calming my panic in the staleness, just trying to make it through to the next minute.
Wednesday, March 25, 2020
COVID 19 Journal 8
March 25, 2020
Atticus and I went to the little Enka park today around lunch time. We started on a trip towards the shopping center where the library used to be open, but he got distracted by traffic on Sand Hill Road and wanted to sit and watch for trucks.
We haven't done that (watch traffic) in a few years. It's really pleasant to just sit there on the side of the road and watch what comes by. I'd forgotten how peaceful it could be, almost like being at the beach. In these times Sand Hill is still busy with delivery trucks and dump trucks during the day, but at night it clears out.
Atticus and I went to the little Enka park today around lunch time. We started on a trip towards the shopping center where the library used to be open, but he got distracted by traffic on Sand Hill Road and wanted to sit and watch for trucks.
We haven't done that (watch traffic) in a few years. It's really pleasant to just sit there on the side of the road and watch what comes by. I'd forgotten how peaceful it could be, almost like being at the beach. In these times Sand Hill is still busy with delivery trucks and dump trucks during the day, but at night it clears out.
- 3.2 million people applied for unemployment this week!
- Gas was $1.87 per gallon when I got it
Tuesday, March 24, 2020
COVID 19 Journal 7
March 23, 2020
March 24, 2020
Coke purchased to help A. swallow some chalky antibiotics he was taking at the time |
- I showed up to Ingles at 6:40 a.m. and got some ground turkey! Meat has been scarce. The store has changed to opening at 7 a.m. instead of 6 a.m.
- New York stock exchange floor closed for the first time (to humans). Computers will be doing the work on their own, which will mean more unstable prices.
- National Guard rolls into Manhattan supposedly. There's video footage of this but no news outlets reporting on it yet.
March 24, 2020
- Mountain Xpress lays off a bunch of staff
- City buses in Asheville now only allow 10 people on, including the driver
- Asheville City Council to give Mayor Esther Manheimer emergency powers
- NC public schools announce that school will be closed for in-person instruction through May 15
- Great Smoky Mountains National Park and Dupont State Forest closed
- Raleigh issues call for medical volunteers
Sunday, March 22, 2020
COVID 19 Journal 6
March 22, 2020
We went to Dupont Falls today. The weather looked so good out the window I cooked up the plan at 11 a.m. but by 12 p.m. was so grumpy and frazzled I almost backed out. We ended up going anyway, all three of us.
Everyone else had the same idea. There were so many cars there, more than we'd ever seen. It was easy to look at every single person as a virus-infected asshole. Atticus was scared of all the dogs.
It was so nice to be out in the sun and the wind, the spray of waterfalls, that at the end of the walk I'd almost forgotten about the Corona Virus. It seemed like an ordinary day out of a time that doesn't exist anymore.
What Changed:
We went to Dupont Falls today. The weather looked so good out the window I cooked up the plan at 11 a.m. but by 12 p.m. was so grumpy and frazzled I almost backed out. We ended up going anyway, all three of us.
Everyone else had the same idea. There were so many cars there, more than we'd ever seen. It was easy to look at every single person as a virus-infected asshole. Atticus was scared of all the dogs.
It was so nice to be out in the sun and the wind, the spray of waterfalls, that at the end of the walk I'd almost forgotten about the Corona Virus. It seemed like an ordinary day out of a time that doesn't exist anymore.
What Changed:
- California residents ordered to stay at home
- 793 additional deaths in Italy today, the largest so far. They announced they are closing factories and all nonessential production.
- In Asheville Mission Hospital and Buncombe report first positive Corona cases (3 cases from Cherokee). Total NC cases 184.
- Department of Justice secretly asked Congress for the ability to detain arrested people indefinitely (suspend Habeus Corpus rights) and other powers, during Corona Virus and other emergencies. Democrats in the House of Representatives said no.
Saturday, March 21, 2020
COVID 19 Journal 5
March 21, 2020
Odds & Ends of News:
Atticus finally got to hear his favorite big number used in a real-world context |
- Corona Virus drive-through testing halted in Buncombe County
- UNCA extends remote learning to all spring semester, cancels graduation
- South Bend mayor institutes travel advisory
- One case at Virginia Tech where friend Courtney works
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