4 April 2020
A constant need to
be on-line, to click, to link, to follow the spokes that, deprived of
their rims, resemble buds of the corona-virus, or a dog's toy. To burrow in, to
figure out: no, there’s none of that now. Just the dailiness of pulling moss off the lanai, walking the dog,
speaking at a careful distance. Zoom: the impression of intimacy
without the intimacy. Someone asks what smells make you feel
nostalgia. I think: diesel exhaust as I walked home to my drafty flat
in London. Chestnuts cooked on the streets of Grenoble. Just off H1
near Nimitz, I smell those chestnuts without signifiers.
Free-floating senses, like anxiety, pressure wash the present down
to its concrete bone. The cat comes up, sniffing. He too does
research, stares at the cracked door.
I number this
meditation in order to save it. I call it a meditation because I’m
trying to think. Think through. Confront the map, its measles-like
dots across a continent and some islands. I remember the domino
effect, how I tested it with black wooden blocks, dots like inverse
braille. All fall down. Now it’s the domino of breath. The bus
driver who worried about a woman coughing is now dead. Mouth to mouth
resuscitation now deals death. Incompetence and malevolence are
one. Even to save is to stay away.
One of the questions
is how to write. “Write it!” No question of righting the ship.
The captain walked to the dock alone, his socially undistanced crew
cheering for him. We shed our titles, as writers or as officers.
Self-promotion is a skeleton. I see a dinosaur skeleton gaze out
from a window down the street, which makes me feel oddly happy.
Children inhabit the age of extinction, but in a good way. The
skeleton appears to smile, but who knows what dinosaurs felt,
especially when the earth started to go against them.
In New Orleans, you
felt the violence of the slave market. In Cambodia, you sensed the
bones. The missing limbs were evidence enough. Captain Cook’s men
took no precautions. #RESIST, a neighbor’s sticker reads, while
another neighbor flies his American flag, lighting it from below at
night. Chiasmus of symbols, a conflict foretold. The poor believed soothsayers during the Plague, Defoe reports. They wanted
readings. The readings would reassure, or they would not. I read
plague literature. Camus begins from the ordinary. This is ordinary, not normal.
Oregon sends
ventilators to New York. Interstate treaties are signed. The vents
will return to Oregon when New York is done with them, or done with.
The governor loves his little brother a lot. The little brother
speaks to us from his swanky basement. He feels guilt for having
breathed en famille. We cannot catch that virus on-line, though Zoom
can easily be hacked. We will go with the impression of proximity if
it no longer exists. We don't put our dead on carts, but in
refrigeration trucks lined up against hospital walls. There’s a
chill in the air.
Is this how it’s
done? Seated at home, far from the madding crowd, the ICUs and the
ventilators and N95 masks and the constant struggle to breathe, or
not be breathed upon, the sirens that fill the night, the
homeschooling, the homeless sleeping in parking lot stalls when
thousands of hotel rooms are empty, society as a
skeleton whose flesh is tearing off, of corruption that cannot feed
us, the huge lumps beneath the skin into which they thrust knives,
the gnashing and wailing on the streets. Defoe walks down 5th
Avenue and marvels at how things remain the same. The rest of history
is but punctuation. This the throbbing of lights on the Empire
State Building, the call of civil defense sirens, the mutation of
silence into a mechanics of noise. Stand on your balcony at 7 p.m.
and clap. You are audience to history, last responders rising to cheer
its first.
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