Purple Columbine |
Sigh.
Corona Virus and sequestering, as a friend said, “Is
interesting. We’re going through an historical period; how often does that
happen?” She’s right, but remember: “May
you live in interesting times” is a terrible curse in at least two cultures.
Probably good stuff will come of it. Maybe we’ll learn some long-forgotten,
basic hygiene. We hope to emerge as a no-longer racist, and less divided,
nation. If our legislators really listen and do what they should do, we’ll no
longer discriminate against people who are different from us, in whatever way;
we’ll have grown a national conscience and heart; and we won’t kick people out
of the country for really questionable reasons or lock them up like animals;
we’ll have learned not to elect people who have no business running the country (especially if they’re
good at running it into the ground), and we’ll fix that national error and source
of shame and present danger; and we’ll start to mend trust with our
international friends.
In the meantime, we’re still in the throes of it. The very
best entertainment for myself, as well as an excellent stress-reliever, is to
take a handful of clean masks, packed away in clean envelopes, and hand one to
the way too many people in public places who aren’t wearing one – summer complaints,
I assume, because surely no native New Hampshirite is that selfish and
self-centered and foolish – and stare them down until they put it on. I suppose
there’s a small chance that the person I’m snarling at doesn’t actually own a
mask, in which case I’m happy to provide one. But I doubt it, at this point in
the pandemic. Anyone not wearing a mask isn’t keeping their hands off their
faces, nor keeping their hands clean. Hello, round 1.2, of Covid 19 spike.
I got the garden planted during the deepest part of the
sequestering, but the weather gods are apparently ticked off, because the
garden’s suffering from lack of water. I’ve never had to water daily this early
in the season, ever. Who knows what will actually become harvestable this year?
Which worries me – a full chest freezer of produce is a main part of what feeds
us over the winter, and if there isn’t that freezer full, then the living
expenses are going to be higher.
And that worries
me because even though I’m now seeing patients, the frequent and elaborate
disinfecting routines we have to go through, and spacing treatment days to
avoid coming-and-going overlap with other practitioners, means I can only see about a third of the patients
I’d usually see. It’s necessary; but comes after three months of not seeing
patients. So my professional life – the life that brings in actual cash for
bill-paying and grocery buying – has been on hold, and remains in a really
tight space now and for the foreseeable future.
My life during the deepest sequester amounted to spending a
lot of time reassuring patients, sending face masks to those most at risk,
hunting down facemasks and gloves and disinfectant that kills human corona
virus, writing protocols for risk management when I finally could work again, checking
in with more fragile or elderly patients, and writing endless notes to NH
Employment Security trying to get them to send me unemployment checks. Despite
two poems, two begging notes, several irritable notes, and total hopelessness,
my application for self-employed unemployment benefits is “under
consideration,” as it’s been since the week of April 5.
Every so often I get a call, responding to a note or poem
I’ve sent. They’re always nice folks, but they’re also always not someone who
can do anything about it or explain the hold-up. I thank them for the work
they’re doing, they tell me to be patient, I point out how long I’ve been being
patient, we hang up, and I cry, as I watch my financial life crumble into dust.
I’m one of the lucky ones. The husband, who is also
self-employed, started getting benefits almost immediately, and that, plus the
government’s May check, has kept us from debtor’s prison, or whatever the
equivalent is now. I have a home, and the remains of last year’s produce in the
freezer, and a place to plant a garden. For us, stuff gets put off – maybe we
can pay this month’s food bill, maybe not, and that’s what credit cards are
for. Real estate taxes are going to be impossible this year. An EID grant let
me pay my back rent, and the current installment of my professional insurance.
It could be worse; it may become worse.
But there are people with no homes, no gardens, no family to
help, and the rest of us are feeling strapped, so we have fewer extra dollars
to share. But share we must – it’s part of the growing of a national conscience
and heart. We must be part of that growth.
Even when we’re poor ourselves, we must share a little of what we have,
and insist our legislators do the right thing.
And NHES – if you’re listening, c’mon: it’s been almost
three months, for heaven’s sake!
Slightly shorter version published 26 June 20 in the Concord Monitor as "The Curse of Interesting Times."
Deb Marshall photo.