A Realization

That graphic has been sitting in my downloads folder for weeks. When I originally ran across it, the message resonated, although at the time there was really nothing in my life it directly pointed to.

Oh, how things can change.

I realized this morning that emotionally I'm going through the same things with the loss of hour home as I did when I received my cancer diagnosis in 2003. It came out of nowhere and totally changed the direction of my—now our—lives. At first it was disbelief (although not totally), and then anger. Once a plan of action was in place, I felt somewhat better and was able to wrap my head around it, but not knowing where things were ultimately headed or the final outcome was still overwhelming at times.

The shock of the fire has for the most part worn off, but we're both dealing with the anger. As I mentioned in my last post, "Fuck James" has become our go-to phrase for pretty much everything at the moment and will unlikely remain so for many, many months as we begin to heal and rebuild our lives.

Right now it's a waiting game to see what the insurance company comes up with and how many of our items are actually returned from restoration. We've started looking at new digs (and actually applied at one place), but we're discovering that while places may be available, in the age of COVID it's not just a matter of walking into a leasing office, seeing a place and signing a lease. EVERYTHING is done by appointment, and so far only about half the places we've contacted have gotten back in touch with us. (This waiting period is akin to the time between my diagnosis and when I actually started treatment.)

Once we have secured a place, we can get out of the hotel, but what will we sleep on? What will we sit on? And since the leasing agents we've spoken to want us to move in sooner rather than later, this poses a real challenge.

Yes, if we secure a place we can go ahead and buy a few pieces of furniture in anticipation of reimbursement by insurance, and frankly I'd rather do that with my available credit than sending it down a black hole of continued life in this hotel, but until we actually sign a lease, nothing like that can move forward.

Additionally, we've been told we aren't going to be receiving any of our items from restoration until after the first of the year, so it's not just a few pieces of furniture we'll need to acquire to begin resettlement. It's bedding, towels, cooking utensils, dishes and silverware. All things we wouldn't have had to buy if it were not for the short-sighted "I can fix anything" mentality of our former landlord.

That's where the anger comes from.

Fuck James.

Our friend Cindy, who along with her husband, went through this herself many years ago and was not nearly as lucky as we were, tells me that eventually things will get better. She says that it will be fun to shop for new things once we have the insurance money in hand, and I tend to agree with her in that limited regard. But even buying new stuff promises to be a pain. I'm not looking forward to putting furniture together again. Or organizing a new house.  Or essentially having to move when we had no desire to move at all. Or any of the thousands of other things that will need to be done over the next six months.

Fuck James.

On the other hand, these are things I know we have to go through, as painful as they may be; the same attitude I had when the radiation treatments began ravaging my throat making eating even the softest of foods was unbearable at times. (One of the reasons god created Ensure, my doctors told me.)

Eventually, things did get better. I made it through the crucible and onto the other side. My throat healed. I received a clean bill of health from my doctors, and life went on. I didn't want to get cancer, but looking back on everything now, it was obvious that changes needed to be made in my life, in me, and that was the catalyst necessary to bring them about.

Hopefully the same will happen as Ben and I travel through this crucible. I think we both sensed that change was needed, but at the same time we needed a bitch slap from the universe to bring it about. Hopefully this journey—much like my cancer journey—will leave us better people when we emerge from the other side and years from now will ultimately allow us to look back on it and see it as—if not necessarily a good thing—at least a necessary one.

Goodbye, Friend

Well, it's done. There are a few items remaining on the property that we need a truck for, but yesterday was my last trip to this house. (Ben and his friends will be removing those items next weekend.) The restoration companies (one for hard goods, one for clothing and linens) came out earlier this week and inventoried, packed, and removed everything that was salvageable from the house. The contents will be cleaned and restored and returned to us wherever we eventually resettle.

We hit the place after they had finished Wednesday evening and retrieved anything else we wanted to keep that they had deemed unsalvageable. For instance, they took the vast majority of my books but curiously left others that were completely undamaged.

We are somewhat fortunate in that with my anal-retentiveness, I'd scanned and saved receipts from many of our big-ticket items which will make getting money out of the insurance company that much easier.

Lately the most common phrase to leave my lips is "Fuck James." (James being our landlord whose negligence while sweating the water lines to the new water heater caused this disaster.) Every time I have to buy something that didn't need to be bought, every time I have to throw myself out into public after nine months of COVID isolation, I mutter "Fuck James."

All this could've been prevented if he'd only used a heat shield up against the wood when he was welding.

To be honest, there were a lot of things we grew to dislike about this house; little annoyances cropped up over the years that became sort of a running joke. (Like for example who puts the refrigerator directly opposite the stove, preventing two people from working in the kitchen at the same time?) Counter space was abysmal; the bathroom horrifically small. And the back yard…don't even get me started.

But it was still home.

The Virus Didn't Defeat America, Freedumb Did

From John Pavlovitz:

COVID beat America—completely, unequivocally, and historically.

There's simply no way around that truth.

We have been decimated far beyond even the most dire calculations back in the Spring of 2020.

The sickness has been unfathomable and the death toll staggering.
We have been the planet's most egregious cautionary tale on what not to do, how not to navigate this crisis—on how patriotism can become nationalism and nationalism can become deadly to a nation.

It's no mystery how we got here: a nonexistent Federal response headed by an unprepared, ignorant sociopathic president who had neither the capacity nor the inclination to prevent loss of life. But these massive liabilities alone wouldn't have been enough for the virus to defeat us so fully. It needed a boost. It needed an accomplice. It needed one more fierce ally in its brutal assault on America: it needed Americans.

It needed the flag-waving, chest-beating, bottle-rocket, Don't Tread On Me, MAGA bluster of hundreds of millions of people raised to believe personal freedom trumps everything: Science, facts, humanity—even life itself.

And so, when the warnings came they cried "conspiracy!"
When the restrictions arrived they marched like star-spangled martyrs on Governor's mansions with guns waving.

When healthcare workers pleaded with them for restraint, they tore off their masks; imagining themselves some heroic modern Tea Party patriots defending liberty against manufactured tyranny.

When the case and death numbers climbed, they attacked the "Deep State" and doubled down on the well-curated myth of their oppression.

When the second wave began, after a first wave that never ended—they complained about restrictions not working the first time, never mentioning the fact that they didn't abide by them to begin with.

And now here, in complete and utter devastation they refuse to admit that America got its collective behind handed to it, because they had to "live free or die"—or at least, they had to live free and kill lots of strangers. They are so intoxicated with the drug of American greatness, that they can't admit that in the face of this virus we have been brought to our knees because we insisted on it.

Today, I spoke with a friend in Taiwan about the response there to the COVID crisis, one they largely have in their collective rear view mirror. It is a story repeated all over the world:

She said "We got control of it here because we follow orders here, we do what we're told." She talked about the initial lockdowns and the way people did the hard work aided by wise leadership, and they got the upper hand early.

I talked about MAGA Americans and their chest beating, flag-waving anti-mask "freedom" stance that inexplicably still has them marching defiantly unmasked through grocery stores and still refusing to adjust their behavior.

She replied, "Today, I don't have to wear a mask and I can go to the movies and see my family and travel and live a normal life without restrictions. So who has freedom now?"

That's the hard truth America is going to have to reckon with: our ceremonial, showy, hollow "liberty" has caused us actual freedom:
to do the work we enjoy,
to make a living,
to see the people we love,
to make plans,
to be spontaneous,
and to fully enjoy these days.

We have lost an entire year of our individual and collective lives, because nearly half our country has ignored restrictions, flouted safeguards, refused medical expertise, and given a strident middle finger to the efforts of intelligent people prepared for exactly this kind of disaster—all because they wanted to protect a red, white, and blue facade of American exceptionalism by owning the Libs, even if it killed them. In their lust for personal liberty they abandoned the responsibilities of living in community with other human beings with whom they are interdependent.

In the coming year, these myopic, short-sighted practitioners of a religion of nationalism will try to rewrite history. They will spin the numbers and deny the crisis and blame the incoming Administration, but they will not be able to change what happened or why it happened and they will not be able to redact the real story:

The virus defeated America because their phony patriotism and cheap liberty was the greatest friend it could have ever had.

They were exactly what it needed to win.

God bless America.