I’ve done my best to keep a positive outlook throughout this COVID-19 pandemic, stay safe, and follow the rules to keep everyone else safe. When the first shelter-in-place order came down from Sacramento March 19, those first weeks were surreal. Back then we thought it would be a short-term thing, we’d lick it, and move on with life. We were constricted to our own neighborhoods, and told not to drive anywhere except for doctor, pharmacy, or grocery store.
So, I savored the incredibly clean air that was just beneath all that car exhaust. An Amazon Prime delivery truck might circle by. Otherwise the middle of the road belonged to walkers. The leaves on the trees were so green, the outlines of branches sharp and crisp. And I could hear my own thoughts! It was quiet! If I rode my bike to the bay I could see a clear outline of San Francisco in the distance. The weather was fine. The neighbors were friendly. Our teenagers were home. And we had a sometimes working internet connection.
I partook of a plethora of literary and writing offerings. Book tours and concerts were suddenly available online free or cheap to all, with location no longer a deterrent, too many to even attend. I Zoomed and Zoomed and Zoomed. I wrote a lot. I did online pilates. I adjusted. I found the silver lining.
Over the next several months, restrictions ebbed and flowed, cars took back some of the streets, construction and gardening noise returned, and the fine, fresh edges receded. But still, I stayed positive. We were lucky. Things were inconvenient, but we were safe. We were alive. We were healthy.
Then the heat waves, then the fires and the smoke. Then friends having to evacuate.
And then I woke up Wednesday, September 9 at exactly six, like Bill Murray in Groundhog’s Day. The light was muted and blank-looking. It didn’t look like morning. Something was wrong. But I took the dog for an early walk. We’d had two weeks of baking heat wave; you had to go early if you wanted to get out at all. By seven we were walking beneath a strange urine-colored sky.
The crows perched in their high tree, and didn’t seem to care at all about the change in circumstances. They cawed loudly as ever, gloating in the curdled atmosphere. Bring it on, they crowed in their harsh language. Bring it on!
And, you know what came next. If you don’t live in the Bay Area, you saw pictures. Everywhere, the sky turned from yellow to an eerie orange glow against the black outlines of trees. Instead of getting lighter, the day got darker, the sun all but blotted out. We had to turn on the lights. Cars needed their headlights. The streets were mostly quiet again. I felt like I had to stay very quiet.
No filters, we kept saying as we posted our glowing orange pictures on Facebook. No filters! The hours passed and it got darker still. It was a relief when real nighttime came.
The next day the weird orange glow was gone and the smoke from the fires had sifted down to breathing level. We were forced to stay inside with the windows closed, AQI (air quality index) hovering near 200, unhealthy to very unhealthy depending on which app you used. I heard the crows still out there cawing in their glory, smoke be damned.
Finally, after a full week of this, even I broke a little. The world felt shifted off course. Of course it had been shifted off course for a while, I’d just been trying for that silver lining. But I couldn’t drum up that positive outlook anymore.
This weekend is six months since our first shelter-in-place order. It’s also Rosh Hashanah, Jewish New Year. The sky has cleared, the air is fresher, at least for now. Many, though not all, of the fires have been contained.
But Covid-19 is still with us. Sickness, death, injustice, climate change, violent weather and all manner of loss caws its all too earthly cry. Now we’ve lost Ruth Bader Ginsberg, too. We’ve lost so much.
But it is a New Year, and I can only hope it will be a good one. That we will come back from all of this, that we will come together and change for the better. That, sort of like the crows, we, too will have a perch to share, and a new outlook.
For all of us, may it be a good year. May it be a sweet year. May it be a year that counts.
Spoken like the poet you are. Wish I could send you some of the rain we’re getting in Florida. Stay safe and positive.
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“For all of us, may it be a good year. May it be a sweet year. May it be a year that counts.” I am with you in wishing fervently for those first two. I think, though, that the last is the only one over which we have control.
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Happy Sweet New Year! It must get better! It must get better!
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L’Shana Tova! A sweet new year, a year of renewal and hope! A year of positive change in our political leadership. A year of cleaner air and healthier people across the planet.
Prayers for the coming year to keep us strong, positive and stalwart in improving ourselves and our works.
Blessings to all
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I love the new look of your blog, Lisa. And the crows. (Quoth the Maven, evermore.)
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Thanks, Laurel!
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Thanks Lisa: We can only hope 2021 will have turned a corner on so many levels. I’m hoping it will be a Yom Kipper gift
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