Documenting the Quarantine ed. 1

I have nothing patently interesting to say about life and love in the time of #coronavirus, but I am nothing if not a journalist so I am going to scribble some bloggy thoughts here and again.

We are all four plus the dog on quarantine in Massachusetts. I have glimpsed line graphs and spiked plottings and the confirmed cases and odds do not look favorable, even though numbers are colors to me. Generally whenever asked for statistical analyses or precision of any kind, my answers are usually a resistant lot of, “I mean, probably like so many or whatever” or “A baker’s dozen” or “A butt-ton.” I question most modes and customs, resisting them because I am a pain in the astronaut, but eventually I listen to the authorities who Know Things and I simmer down. Right now I am simmering down and it looks like this:

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My e-mail inbox has been chock full o’ corporate branded messages that use phrases such as “We have been monitoring the situation closely” and “taking every precaution” but I did see Chipotle began offering free delivery and this was big news. I mean, what’s next, no charge for extra guacamole?! Let’s not get covidcraycray….

I have spoken to various friends and family on the phone lately and mostly I am in a state of irritation when they lament their cruise cancellations and the hassles of their work going online. So basically my disposition is the same. I have no capacity as usual for complainsgivings. I have tolerance only for great feats of human courage and radical acts that amuse me. I’m the same taciturn gal, just wearing yoga pants with more frequency.

Yesterday we took the offspring and dog to the DeCordova Sculpture Garden. Our dog freaked out at all of the sculptures and regarded them all with great suspicion, because you know what’s scarier than a whole case of resin sculptures that look exactly like multiple tiers of Jell-O molds? I know! The horror. HOLLLLD MEEEEE.

It was a lovely day in the sun, though, breathing the air that was free for breathing, before we made our way home to entertain ideas of doing Little House on the Prairie-type things. Wouldn’t that be charming and quaint? Playing board games and calling each other Maw and Paw and hustling up some supper? We fancied that for a moment and then I promptly took a QuarantiNap and Lovey Loverpants and I watched “Atlanta” on Hulu and ate whatever tortilla chips were lying around.

I think this is the chief difference between being a family with older kids and wee babes: there’s a lovely laissez fair spirit now, but I also miss the times of order and routines from the days when they—ahem, mostly I—needed structure and command. I long for days outlined by stickered calendars and behavior charts, snack packs and felt loveys all in a row. Now that we are a family with tweens, a.k.a. kids who can be interrupted from FaceTiming 18 hours a day to walk the dog, the quarantine presents a weird limbo. We’re all drumming up our little projects and social channels but it’s difficult to lasso us all into one solid collective of human life. We normally do this by leaving our home, but now that the quarantine is in full effect, we will have to find ways to come together without developing homicidal tendencies.

I am working to bring all of my classes online, and by working I mean that I have contemplated two minute dance parties for all of my courses and have not explored any other modalities that will empower my students to be good and competent citizens. I have one more week to figure this all out. Today I have a glistening stovetop to show for my efforts. Because you know what they say about teaching English composition. You can’t do it with a clear head if your stovetop is in disarray.



JanuWeary

January is a non-negotiable 495 days long every year, particularly if you live north of the Equator, especially if you live in the American Northeast. The Julian calendar is a lie and so is the New Year. You are still stuck with yourself and the bleak atmosphere of January. 

December? December is Mary Poppins as your babysitter, all your needs met and your booboos kissed and your trees topped with sparkly angels, and January is the month when Mary Poppins blows away, gripping her snowy white parasol, and the only person who’s left to babysit you is Boo Radley who doesn’t know any jokes or games and just likes to sit in the corner and peer creepily out the window, waiting for this all to end.

I am not made for January. Thinking about it reminds me that Heaven is a place with unlimited cookie dough and an endless December. January is a box with a gray lid, and within the box is one of those plastic trays segmented by little compartments for various chocolates with mystery fillings. Only in the January box, there is no chocolate nor mystery. Rather, each little pod contains items you collect in January: overpriced gym memberships, kale chips, self-loathing.

Here is a list of good things that happen during January if you live in the American Northeast: 

  1. We remember Martin Luther King, Jr. and his legacy.

  2. We get a day off work/school to remember Martin Luther King, Jr. and his legacy.

  3. The Golden Globes are an event that happens in California and also on television if you have cable. 

  4. We then get to enjoy the Fashion Recap after the Golden Globes.

  5.  Some things go on sale. Like cars you don’t want to drive in January. Or TVs you don’t want to haul home in January. 

That’s it. The complete bucket of January joy poured out. (But be sure to toss salt on it or else it will turn to ice.)

It seems the only people who are happy in January are Zumba instructors. They get to be inside and elevate their frothy endorphins while doing a hip-hop dance that I will try to follow but invariably just grapevine my way into a deranged Macarena.

Besides Zumba instructors, there is another human living in the American Northeast who does not struggle with the Jans/Febs. 

I live with this human. His name is Husband. Husband is relentlessly chill. In fact, where hardship and woes are concerned, he is an all-around cool customer. I am told this is the mark of his birthright as a Canadian (show me a Canadian who is not earnest, I dare you), so even-keeled and fair-minded. This explains most of his immunity to the Jans/Febs.

There is another reason, though, that has nothing to do with his natural disposition and everything to do with his upbringing which was largely devoid of holidays, celebrations, birthday cakes, and all the trappings of my girlhood steeped in Americonsumerism. Where my December was a cozy hearth with stockings hung on the mantle, Husband’s was, you know, just a regular mantle, probably with the music stand he set up in front of it so his parents would believe he had actually practiced his violin (instead of watching “Days of our Lives” as was his weekday practice). He had no holiday letdown growing up and therefore he just soldiers into the barren month of January without expectation. Whereas my January is a snowglobe with snowflakes swirling around a bottle of anti-depressants and a lost mitten, Husband’s is a snowglobe with a peaceful tableau reminiscent of a Thomas Kinkade painting before they were mass produced by underlings.

Do you know anyone who has none of the post-holiday funk, none of the snow-capped mountain highs of the holiday season and none of the deep valley lows of the daunting new year? Isn’t it a little curious? What is there even to talk about in January if not lamentation? Perhaps I am getting the chorus wrong here, though, because Husband is the son of immigrants whose entire lives have been one, long, strong lamentation. His parents did their darndest to build a better life for their sons in a country that was as foreign in its culture, language and traditions as they could possibly imagine. They were not concerned whether they were going to have to pay express shipping on the shearling bathrobe they had embroidered with a monogram. They were interested in paying their rent and not being deported. That has a way of informing a boy who becomes a man who understands what a real crisis is. A crisis, contrary to what my Jans/Febs contend, is not Sephora running out of my favorite--actually, no crisis involves the word “Sephora.” Forget I ever mentioned it.

Much as I’m inspired by Husband’s non-subscription to the holiday and post-holiday tectonic shifts, I’m not really sure what to do with myself in this partnership. The balance in mental health tilts so far it hits the ground on my side of the marital teeter-totter after New Year’s Day. I can’t transpose his upbringing onto mine, nor would I want to; I can’t trade glasses and see it all anew. Ann Voskamp already stole my idea to write 1000 happy thoughts down and emancipate herself from the sads, (and she’s a Canadian, too, so you know mine would never be as earnest as hers anyway). 

I can try on a new pair of perspectacles, though. In fact, I’ve been practicing since earlier this year when my old man got a bunch of baseball tickets. My stepmom Julie’s Christmas gift to Pops was a trip to see the Cleveland Indians play at spring training in Arizona. “This is strategic, see,” explained the old man, who specializes in being pedantic about life decisions, “My old mentor Jack once told me you should plan your trip in February because that’s what going to you through January.” The simple plan struck me as oddly profound. It’s not that dangling a carrot just a short distance from one’s nose is a brand new concept. But I am dazzled by the notion of manufacturing a personal holiday just far enough in the future to get us through. That is, not relying on a civil rights hero to have a birthday observed or for a bestie to decide to come for a visit, in order to incentivize our survival of the Jans/Febs. 

When we’re young, we have to rely on forces outside of our control to spark our great expectations. We circle the date around the calendar as to when the junior high dance is scheduled, and we count down the sleeps until we get to leave for Girl Scout camp. Then we become grown-ups and I can only speak for myself in that sometimes it’s as though I forget that I have agency in how I plan my life. Sometimes I get so psyched about remembering to bring my reusable bags when I grocery shop (I AM THE GREATEST! ECO! HUMAN! EVER!!) that I forget that this is not the point of being an adult. Do better for yourself, Kendra. Do better for nine year-old Kendra who wrote in her diary “It’s Friday and I have to wait a whole two days for school again, what a bummerrrrrrr.” Do it for that girl who didn’t know what fun tasted like. Put the little totem of fun a few miles down your path. Then run your guts out in the race to get there, through the Jans/Febs, through tax returns, through snowbanks and through the pennant flagged car lots trying to sell Cadillac convertibles. Run your guts through all the bologna until you reach that marker. Then, do what Mark and Julie Stanton do at Spring Training.

For context: Mark and Julie are the most Midwestern people you will EVER meet. They make friends EVERYWHERE. Once, while on vacation in Savannah with them, Husband and I got up from the table for a few minutes at a restaurant and a couple of strangers sat down in our place, probably because they smelled the Midwestern on Mark and Julie Stanton. They could sense this was a friendly kind of couple. They had told Pops and Julie their whole life story by the time we got back to the table, leaving nothing out. Net net, Pops and Jules are at spring training. Naturally, they are SO PUMPED because of something they refer to as "Vendor Heaven," which, let me translate that Midwesternese for you: they are irrationally excited over strangers who carry over-the-shoulder satchels full of overpriced snacks to sell you while you watch sports. Pops and Julie text me that they are keeping their eyes peeled for one vendor especial. 

One of my gal pals had been to spring training in the past and bore witness to this supposed snack elysium. She also told us about a particular beer vendor who was so memorable that my folks would likely know him when they saw him. She relayed that the vendor was “stout” and “intense.”

Well, given no other physical description, Pop and Julie texted that they had found The Beer Guy.

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The next day, I receive a short video clip from Julie of a poor man’s John Wayne explaining his career trajectory as a beer vendor to his new confessor, Mark Stanton.

Me: “He’s exactly how I imagined him. Did you buy a cold one?”

Julie: “We bought a cold two. He explained to us that he’s battling exhaustion and peaked too early yesterday. Also gave us his itinerary for the next week. Gotta be in top form for the Giants.”

I share the video with my girlfriend who had been at spring training the year prior. She responds, Mmm, he’s not her beer guy. But that she now wants to hang out with my parents at an Indians game and compare notes about favorite vendors of the suds in a ballpark in Arizona.

This is how you sidestep JanuWeariness, it turns out. You buy yourself some tickets to a baseball game that will take place in February and look forward to meeting your beer guy. It doesn’t matter if he’s not someone else’s beer guy. It doesn’t matter if you don’t drink beer. Just embrace him or her, embrace the experience, and boom! Lookathat. It’s already March. Home run.

You have been unsubscribed from the American Dream.

You have been unsubscribed from the American Dream.

We’re sorry to see you go! Would you mind telling us the reason you unsubscribed?

  • The content was no longer relevant to me.

  • I’m just taking a break until 2020.

  • I didn’t realize it was set to auto-renew before 2020.

  • I didn’t know I had subscribed by being born on U.S. soil.

  • I just finished Between the World and Me.

  • I am not a mediocre white man who has romanticized his forefathers’ immigration story.

  • It looked like Spam, both the virtual and the canned form.

  • It was too expensive, e.g. for my soul.

  • I thought this was for Blue Apron.

  • I was only able to take advantage of $0.79 of the benefits because I have a uterus.

  • The flat pebblesnail has more constitutional protections in the state of Alabama than I do.

  • It is easier to purchase an assault rifle in North Dakota than it is to order contact lenses.

  • The Dream was not translated into my primary language.

  • It was not included with Amazon Prime.

  • It wasn’t as user-friendly as I had hoped.

  • I’ve moved to Canada like I promised I would.

  • My children are separated from me, probably in a cage without medical care.

  • Other