Welcome to a Brave New World.
I've been meaning to write this for the past few days, but I—we—have been…distracted…from our normal routines.
Repeat after me: We're going to make it through this.
Like everyone else, I too went into panic mode when COVID-19 hit our shores. I'm in a vulnerable (i.e. I'm old) population group and I have certain health issues that put me at risk, but it's not that. I'm not scared of the virus itself. It's the fucking human herd-mentality hoarding going on, and the absolutely appalling response from our so-called "administration."
You wanted history to remember you, Donald? You wanted a legacy? Well, you've got one. Congratulations, daughterfucker.
And then I stepped back and took an assessment amid the swirling chaos that was building. How could I ground myself and make sense of it? Somehow—and to this day I still think amazingly—I made it through the AIDS crisis. I made it through cancer, forchrissake! And that journey in particular is what surprisingly gave me the focus and solace I needed to approach this crisis as well.
More than AIDS, I liken what the country (and the world) is facing with COVID-19 to my personal cancer journey.
Let me explain.
Initial diagnosis was a shock. Treatment was a trip through hell. And when I came out the other side, I was a totally different person than I was going in. And that was a good thing. A very good thing. To this day I look back at the Mark who existed prior to 2003—his dreams, his philosophy, his motivations—and I scarcely recognize him. I am a better person now than I was before cancer walked up to my door and said hello.
It seems that our country, our world—our society— is about to go through the same thing. We've all been joking that "this planet needs an enema" for years. Well, it appears the enema has arrived and pretty soon there's going to be a flood of shit coming out. We'll come through this okay, but everything will be different afterward. This is the paradigm shift we've all sensed coming—and perhaps silently prayed for—for the last few decades. We instinctively knew this capitalist-consumption-fuck-the-planet view of the world was unsustainable. We knew changes had to be made, yet as a people, we lacked the courage to do what needed to be done.
I had a friend years ago who often recognized when changes needed to be made in his life, yet resisted making those changes happen. Ultimately the Universe would step in and make those changes for him—perhaps not as smoothly or as painlessly as would've been the case had he made them himself on his schedule, but the changes were made nevertheless. The same thing is happening to our society as a whole right now.
There's no going back to the way things were even a few weeks ago. The system was broken, and while this transition is going to be painful, ultimately we will all be better for it.
Maybe I'm delusional. Maybe I'm just manufacturing bullshit to calm my own jittery nerves, but there's no denying that viewing what's happening through this lens has certainly helped me to find some peace.
well said
I was diagnosed with cancer in 1989. I came through it changed. I got rid of family and friends who did not support me, I divorced my then-husband (who abandoned me), I cherished the people who stuck by me. and I swore I would never be anyone's personal doormat ever again.
31 years later and I still feel the same way.
Glenn and I have followed your blog for at least ten years.
we have this same feeling. you have Ben, I have Glenn. Hold tight, we will be fine.
The world is changing. By the time this plague us over, I do not doubt many Republicans will be dead, mostly because they can't believe this is real. This is going to go away in a week or so, they tell themselves, totally ignoring precautions. Darwin was right.