Saturday, January 30, 2021

Sweet Hubby and me - Part Four

                                                         NAKED BUT LEGAL

March 11, 2006

Sweet Hubby-to-be had been doing research (I've since learned that SH does a lot of research before making decisions about where to go, what to buy, which doctor to see, etc.  Days, weeks, sometimes months of research.  I, on the other hand, will look at options and say "I like that".  Then, if my choice doesn't pan out, I either deal with the consequences or just make a different choice.  To me, time spent doing research is time that could be used writing, or dancing, or playing games, or reading, or being with friends.  You know, fun stuff.) and had learned that, in Colorado, two people can solemnize their own nuptials.  There has to be a marriage license, of course, but the two can sign as both participants and witnesses.

And so I came to Denver to be married.  Mar. 10 we spent skiing, something he was quite good at and I'd done only once before.  I took a class while he was on the slopes, and I really got the hang of it, enough to go off on my own for a while on some of the gentler hills.  I loved it.  (And we've never done it since, too bad.)  Mar. 11 we drove to Estes Park in the Rockies and rented a cabin.  It was glorious.  Our cabin had a big picture window looking out over a creek.  Snow had begun to fall, and elk passed by from time to time.  I had asked that our wedding date be March 12 (I don't know, I just like the sound of it better than March 11), so we stayed cozy with takeout Italian food and a nice fire in the fireplace.  There were 3 video tapes available in the cabin so, to pass the time until after midnight, we watched Disney's Pollyanna.  It made both of us weep - further proof of compatibility!

March 12, 2006

After midnight, we sat in the cabin's big hot tub, which we'd ringed with tea candles.  We drank champagne, and talked about the future.  Thus, miracle of miracles and did I ever think I'd live to see the day, we were married.

I really enjoy telling people we got married naked in a hot tub.  It's fun to watch people silently wonder to themselves "Where exactly was the minister standing?"

No one in my family had met Sweet Hubby at this point, and it must have been kind of freaky for them to know I'd married someone, a stranger to them, and so very fast.  I mean, we'd only met last August, and didn't start being a couple until November, and all long distance.  We'd only actually been together a few times, and now here we were, married.  Everyone in my family had gone through so many of my break-ups and heartaches and disappointments, I can understand if they were a bit anxious about this new, big, fast step.  But somehow they seemed to pick up from the way I spoke about SH that this time was different.  This time there was genuine promise and possibility.  This time I sounded relaxed and calm and consistently happy when I talked about him and about us.  So they steeled themselves for a possible fall, and also opened their hearts and their arms to this new member of the family.  They've always been pretty terrific that way.  And, of course, when they met him, the absolutely loved him, first for who he is for me, and soon for who he is.  Marrying SH is the greatest gift I have ever given to my parents.  At long last their love-hungry daughter was safe and happy, adored by and adoring of a worthy man. 

Something I noticed soon after coupling with SH was that my old hurts, scars, resentments, and bitter stories about past relationships just dropped away, disappeared, became memories with no sting.  I could see almost immediately that the only problem there had ever been with any of my past loves was that I simply wasn't with the right person.  And I could see my own role in those difficult, ultimately hurtful partnerships, how I'd put up with what wasn't good for me, tried to change him, tried to change myself.  Until SH, I had no idea that love can be easy.  So easy.  So easy and right.  How lucky am I?

Friday, January 29, 2021

Sweet Hubby and me - Part Three

                                                                YES IT IS

Dec. 5, 2005

The first time we got together as a couple was seriously like something out of a movie.  He was coming to Seattle for work.  I was waiting for him at the airport, wearing a dress I had worn at the Denver conference, one he'd commented on.  My heart was beating so fast, I actually thought I might faint.  I wasn't even sure I would remember what he looks like, we'd seen each other so seldom.  But when he came around the corner into the terminal, I knew him instantly.  I had meant to run to him, but couldn't move.  I understood the phrase 'rooted to the spot'.  Everything around him became blurry; all I could see was him.  He came to me and we hugged for a long time, me sobbing uncontrollably.

We didn't kiss until we were in the parking garage, in that moment, I realized we didn't have a lot of natural chemistry.  It went through my mind in a flash: I could give up all this goodness, all this promise, all this love, to hold out for hotter pheromones, or I could surrender to this coupling for exactly what it was,  for everything it did and didn't include.  So I surrendered.  (Spoiler alert: As we got to know one another, as we became safer and more comfortable in one another's company, as old wounds were healed and our life together became evermore joyous and relaxed, our chemistry expanded from a flame to a fire and I'm now consistently having the best orgasms of my life.)

One of the eerily wonderful aspects of our coming together was that the company he worked for has a small satellite office in Denver, but its headquarters are in Seattle.  That meant he could come visit for however long he felt comfortable leaving his very tiny, very old kitty in the care of others.  And I was working only part time, so I could go to Denver for as long as I wanted to.  This first coming together was on my birthday.  The next time was around the new year.  I won't say that every moment was ideal, and we still had a lot to learn about one another, but it was just so darned easy to talk about everything; we listened generously, argued fairly, and were always affectionate.  There was one moment which chilled me a bit.  He'd been married twice before and mentioned he didn't want to get married again.  I was certain I wanted to get married and determined not to betray myself, as I had so many times in the past.  But instead of panicking and making trouble, I decided to let this relationship continue to play out, with the firm private understanding that at some point I would speak up if I started to feel frustrated or resentful.

Feb. 14, 2006

He came to Seattle for Valentine's Day, not that either of us usually gives that day much significance, but it did seem appropriate for such new, deep love.  That morning he was in the kitchen making his breakfast before going to work.  I was in my robe, running a tub of water for a bath.  I leaned against him and said "I love our life".  He said "Do you want to do it forever?"  I shrieked "Not like this!  I'm too distracted!"  I ran to turn off the bathwater, then came back into the kitchen, leaned against him, and said "I love our life."  "Do you want to do it forever?" he asked.  And so we were engaged.

Thursday, January 28, 2021

Sweet Hubby and me - Part Two

                                                             COULD IT BE?

August, 2005.  

The three-day playwrighting conference in Denver took place at a large arts center.  There were workshops in several of the smaller meeting rooms, but I opted to spend the entire time in the auditorium.  Each day, staged readings of new plays were presented, one after the other, with talkbacks following each reading.  A panel of what were called luminaries (meaning people more well known than I) gave their impressions and suggestions first, and then the members of the audience were invited to give theirs.  Me being me, I had something to say about every play.  I'd been writing and teaching for a couple of decades at that point and felt fairly confident in my ability to provide useful critiques.  Also, I'm a showoff, and hadn't yet completely learned how to walk into a room and not immediately try to grab the spotlight.

I ended up enjoying the experience and was so glad I had decided to go, despite the costs.  The colleagues who had urged me to attend were there as well, so I had a few people to hang with on breaks.  I was surprised and impressed by the level of talent in Denver, which was proved by the parade of actors performing the readings.  And what a delight to spend a solid three days completely immersed in the world of dramatic storytelling, being with other folks who were on a similar path to mine.

At the end of the conference, as I was getting ready to leave the auditorium, a man came up to me to mention that he had appreciated my comments.  I remembered him from a performance he had given in one of the plays and was able to give a compliment in return.  I had a boyfriend in Seattle at the time, which meant this was one of the rare instances when I was not cruising/trolling/scouting/flirting, so when someone tapped this nice man on the shoulder and he turned away, I left to catch my plane.

A few days later, this nice man sent an email, having tracked me down through the Internet (thank you, Google!!!!).  He reminded me that we had met at the conference.  He mentioned that he came to Seattle from time to time for work and that he might reach out to me to ask for theater recommendations next time.  We casually exchanged a few emails after that, and I got the inkling he might be interested in me, but I was still with that other man, and even though I knew other man was not my life's partner, I'm very loyal when I'm with someone, so I gave little thought to Mr. Denver.

Sept. 14, 2005

Mr. Denver mentioned he was coming to Seattle and asked, as he'd said he might, for theater recommendations.  I found out he would be here on his birthday and offered to take him to dinner (which he ended up insisting he pay for).  We had a lovely, easy conversation over oysters and salmon, and I kept finding myself thinking "I should be with someone like him."  (At this point in the story, Sweet Hubby always pipes up "Turns out I'm exactly like me.")  I really didn't want a long-distance relationship, but still, I liked him well enough, especially that he was able to show emotion (my current beau was a bit wooden in that regard), and that he had a love of theater (beau was an accountant and horserace gambler).  It was at that dinner that I told Mr. Denver I had a boyfriend, and I can still remember the look on his face; he kept smiling, but said "Damn" in a way that let me know he'd had his hopes up.

As we were parting ways after dinner, he asked for a kiss, but I reminded him that, if I were with him, he wouldn't want me kissing another man, right?  He was a good sport about it.  It had been a nice evening and I figured nothing more than that.  Still, I was aware even at the time that in a way, I was showing him that I am loyal, that I can be trusted.  You know, just in what seemed the extremely unlikely event that we ended up dating.

Nov. 7, 2005

Seattle beau broke up with me, so I contacted Mr. Denver, not with particularly high hopes nor expectations, just to sort of say "Well, what do you think?"  We began emailing and then talking on the phone daily.  

Nov. 21, 2005

Two weeks later, I wrote Mr. Denver a letter stating that I knew he and I were going to be together forever. (I very wisely didn't send it.) We had never kissed, never even been on a proper date.  With all my mistaken choices and disappointments and heartbreaks in the past, I truly don't know how I could have been so calm and so certain, but I was.  When he and I talked, I kept waiting for that feeling of "uh oh" or "I don't know if I like that", but never felt anything but "yes".  One night after we hung up, I did freak out a little, thinking "This can't possibly be as good as it seems to be."  So I called him up and told him I was scared, and he talked me through it so kindly, saying "We couldn't have gotten this far if it weren't real."  I think the moment I fell in love with him was when he said, "I promise I will always show you the parts of me I want to hide."

I had found, was being given, what I had been searching for my entire life.  The only way I can take even the slightest credit for that is that I never gave up admitting to myself that I wanted to be loved and married.  I never closed my heart, never became resigned or bitter, never turned to dissing all men for the heartbreak dished out by a few.  I was 54, still holding the door open, and oh my god the right man finally walked in.

Wednesday, January 27, 2021

Sweet Hubby and me - Part One

                                                    THE SEARCH FOR LOVE

The desire to be loved has been the primary urge to shape my life.  I am loved by my family and friends, of course.  (That 'of course' illustrates how carelessly I took that kind of love for granted.)  I wanted romantic, partnership love.  I wanted a man to get to know me and decide his life would be better with me in it.  I wanted to feel safe and secure and not hungry all the time.

I certainly made every possible effort.  I dated all the time, with very little discrimination: skinny and ferret-y, tall and gorgeous, overweight, acne-scarred, intellectual, artsy, neurotic, needy, aloof.  I was three years with a man thirty years older and four years with a man fourteen years younger.  I kept working to reshape myself, to be funnier, smarter, more athletic, more charming.  I didn't really know how to be prettier, as I've never been interested in all that make-up and hair and cleavage business women are encouraged to adopt.  But I figured there were men who preferred au naturel, right?

I just couldn't figure out why that love was so elusive.  I may not have been the most beautiful, but I was certainly not the ugliest, not the stupidest, not the bitchiest.  I could get a man to want to date me, but it never seemed to stick.  At some point he (almost always he) would break it off and I'd be left wondering again "What's wrong with me?  How can I fix this fatal flaw if I don't know what it is?"  I got plenty of advice, of course: make a list, join a club, try the Internet, dye your hair, etc.  The most frequently offered was some version "It won't come to you unless you don't want it."  But I always insisted that a man could love me even if I wanted him to.

It probably didn't help that I was in Los Angeles chasing an acting career.  Au naturel doesn't play well in Hollywood.  Also, my social life was peopled in large part by gay men.  (At least I understood why they didn't want to marry me.) An awful lot of my girlfriends were in the same boat as I, single and frustrated and bewildered, so I didn't feel like a complete freak.  I understood that I was supposed to be happy with my life as it was, to be strong in my single-ness and satisfied with what I had.  But I knew that I wanted to be married, happily married, married for life.  I could never talk myself out of hoping for that.

When I finally healed from an especially bad break-up, I realized it was time for a change, a big change.  I was almost 50, yearning for adventure, discovery, fresh perspective.  I was ready to be new.    I had discovered myself as a writer, which freed me up to live somewhere else, so I left L.A. and moved to a family beach cottage on the central California coast.  There I had an intense relationship with a man who was a famous photographer, a lifelong peace activist, and, it turned out, a sex addict.  When that one also went kerplooey after the highest highs and lowest lows, I knew I had to move again.  There were pieces of him in every activity I engaged in, every friendship I had there.  At that point I could have lived anywhere in the world and, for reasons I have never understood, Seattle began to draw me with a mysterious magnetism.  I didn't know Seattle, didn't know anyone here, didn't have anything waiting for me.  But it's not a good idea to resist when the angels are calling, so I moved to the beautiful Pacific Northwest, and immediately fell in love with my new life. No one in L.A. ever talked about Seattle except as a kind of piney wilderness, so I moved here expecting to find nothing but lumberjacks and salmon fishermen.  Instead I discovered that Seattle is amazingly rich in arts and culture and I found a writing community right away.  I was even deliriously happy about the rain after the relentless sunshine of Los Angeles.  I was still single, still searching, but having a wonderful time.  

In 2005, I was accepted into a playwrighting conference in Denver.  Although I had been applying to writing conferences and retreats and residencies for a while, now that I'd been invited into one I hesitated to commit.  I was barely scratching out a living as an art model and real estate assistant, and wasn't sure how I would pay for airfare and hotel, rental car and food.  But some of my colleagues urged me to go anyway.  "We know you'll love it," they insisted.  "Just make up a reason to go."

"All right", I sighed, and gave the reason I went just about anywhere.  "Maybe I'll meet the love of my life."

  


Monday, January 25, 2021

The yuck of fame

I seem to be thinking a lot lately about celebrities and fame, maybe because I used to want to be one and have some.  And I have to say, it's such a relief to be thinking about that instead of about politics.  A friend and I walked 3 miles around a lake today, as we do twice a week, as we've done for a year.  And we got halfway around the lake before we even began to talk politics, and then only because I said "We've gotten halfway around the lake without talking politics."  For most of the year we've been walking together, politics was our only topic.  It's ever so nice to find that the subject has shrunk down to proper size and isn't taking up so much space in the ol' brain pans.

Anyway, last night I was getting set to dance my ass off to some Rod Stewart, which got me thinking about his ex-wife, Alana Hamilton.  George's ex-wife too.  Decades ago she and I were in an acting class at the same time.  I didn't get to know her well at all, despite the often intimate atmosphere of an acting class.  She seemed serious and unapproachable, not very friendly, and not at all happy.  At the time I accepted that assessment of her personality, but now, with a little more wisdom and a lot more experience, I find myself wondering if perhaps she had taught herself to harden so that people would leave her alone.  She'd become famous, not for anything she'd done but for who she had married, and both marriages had ended.  I won't say failed because they might not have.  In fact, she and George co-hosted an afternoon talk show for a while, the gimmick being that they were divorced, but it was awful.  They had to work at it to look as though they were enjoying themselves and each other.  It seemed so fake and I found it cringe-y to watch.

Anyway, her marriages ended, which must have been painful.  So here she was, famous but with nothing to back it up, and alone.  It seems to me it would be difficult to be happy inside a life like that.

Once you're famous and a lot of new people come into your life, you're never again going to know who wants you for who you are as a person and who wants to be near the reflected glory of your fame.  It sounds just awful.  Even the people who have always known you probably start acting different.  Maybe not everyone.  If I became famous, I would want to be appreciated by my siblings for whatever I had accomplished that put me into a spotlight, but I wouldn't want them to see me any differently.  I'd want them to downplay my success as though it were no more important than one of the little community theater productions I get so many of now.  You know, show a tinge of pride, as though I'd made a good pie crust, and then on to other topics.

I realize I'm making myself famous in this little fantasy, which is almost laughably unlikely at this point.  First of all, I've made it this far without a blowout, so why would I think my upcoming work will be more extraordinary than what I've already written?  Besides, even if I had a play go whatever the live theater equivalent of viral is, I would still probably remain safely obscure.  I mean, tell the truth: Is there any playwright in the world you would recognize on sight?  Okay, Shakespeare's ruffled collar might give him away.  But most of us are ciphers to the public.  This is one arena in which it's possible to be wildly famous without being known.

And the crazy thing is, I might actually become one of those much-produced playwrights and get all sorts of awards and see my stuff produced on Broadway and translated into seventeen languages and turned into movies and TV series.  It's no likely, but it is actually possible.  I don't want to be famous any more, though, not at all.  Gives me the heebie jeebies to think about it.  What I would like is to be a good enough writer to deserve to be famous, even if I never am.  That would be pretty sweet.  And I'd like it if my plays became famous.  I hope they do, because I am just nuts about them.  Writing them is like getting to live out my dreams.  That is the true prize.  Fame is just the price.

It's possible that I'm full of shit and am still just dying to be famous.  But all I have to do is think about Alana and I shake it off.  Life is good here in Nowheresville.

Saturday, January 23, 2021

Aging with Jane

 I want to be clear from the outset.  I love Jane Fonda.  She's a terrific actress, of course, and I've always gotten the feeling that she would be a great person to have as a friend.  I have also always respected that she acted on her political beliefs, even if sometimes clumsily, and especially because she was willing to pay a price both professionally and personally.

My strongest connection to her is through her workout videos.  There is where she has made her greatest contribution.  She taught a lot of us that celebrities have to work hard to look the way they do. She got a whole lot of us up and at it, getting ourselves stronger and more energetic.  She taught us that fitness is for any any age.  Her workouts for seniors are just as good as those she made when she - and I - were younger.  She is still able to lead a workout without getting out of breath, without losing the count or the beat, giving continual pointers on form, making little jokes, adding oomph and encouragement throughout the session.  The energy and stamina with which she leads are amazing and genuine.  She really rocks.  She has been an inspiring role model for women - in every way but one.

She did not, or maybe could not, teach us how to age with natural grace.  Her beautiful face now looks stern and false after surgery.  Her boobs have been worked on, and it looks as though she is starving herself to stay thin. I understand why, of course. It must be terribly difficult to have so much expected of one, to be so much in the public eye, to have love go wrong more than once.  Maybe it's too much to ask that a famous actress who wants to keep working defy Hollywood and its false descriptions of beauty and let her aging show naturally.  

But it really would have been something if she had.

Monday, January 18, 2021

Just keep dancing

 Okay.  I was dancing my ass off last night to the somewhat pop-y but oh what great percussion Sheppard, and this is the thought that came to me:

I don't know how to relate to my age.  I know the numbers.  I know with certainty that I have more yesterdays than tomorrows.  Somewhere in my brain, the place where I keep things like remembering that something happened in 1016 - or was it 1042?  1066? - that something happened of significance, like the signing of the Magna Carta or something, which was important because it established public laws or democracy or something - back in that deserted attic part of my brain, I know I'm going to die, that everyone who hasn't already will.  I know that.  I'm not stupid.  (Just, apparently, uneducated or - let's go with forgetful.)

But you don't understand.  I'm not old.  I'm 37.  I'm young and athletic and hopeful, full of vigor and emotions and dreams.  I'm not young the way I was in my 20's.  That insecure, colorful, strong, love-hungry girl is pretty much gone, laid to rest by the ministrations of my darling Sweet Hubby.  I'm the version of me who has learned some lessons, suffered some, has started coming into herself, is deciding who she wants to be separate from who others expect her to be.  She is there, here.  I am she.  But I also now have decades more wisdom and stories and lessons learned than either one of those younger selves.

I'm not ready to be old, even though by most people's reckoning I already am.  My body reminds me of that with annoying regularity.   But I don't feel old in my spirit, in my soul, and I'm nowhere near ready to die.  There are things I still want to do, of course.  I want to see more of the world and finish writing more plays.  But mostly I'm not ready because I love it all so much, and there are the people, all the wonderful people who make my life so rich and interesting and who own so much of my heart.  I'm not ready to leave my friends and what's left of my family.  I want to spend more time getting to know the younger generation.  And I can't stand the idea of leaving S.H. alone.  (Also, I'm not completely confident I'll survive his death). 

All of this came to me right in the middle of the bouncily thrilling "Geronimo", came to me so strongly that I trembled and wept.  But there was nothing to do about it, so I kept dancing.  Maybe that's all there ever is to do - just keep dancing.

Monday, January 11, 2021

I demand self-respect!

I have finally decided some of the changes I want to make in my life this new year.  (I don't use the word 'resolution' because it is so laughably associated with almost immediate failure.)  I am going to do my best to become worthy of greater self-respect.

Mostly that means spending more time writing, and that means kicking an addiction.  Okay, so here we go.  My name is Granny Owl and I'm a YouTube-aholic.

I have to say, I picked a hell of a time to try to stop being glued to the screen.  So much is going on politically right now, I could literally sit at my computer all day and not even notice, slack-jawed with fascination at the (sometimes literally) riotous events in D.C.  I delight in the wonderful righteous confirmation of my own feelings from those commentators who agree with me, and wallow in sickening outrage from those who are getting it wrong.  I'm alternately aghast, fearful, vengeful, and, more often than not, filled with disbelief at what so many people are saying and how they behave.  This has been true for the past four years of chaos, ignorance, corruption, and dysfunction in the White House, but the events of Jan. 6 have heightened the stakes to an almost unbearable level.  Will it all quiet down after Jan. 20, or have we seen the beginning of a true civil war?

Sometimes I'll switch to sweet animal videos or musical performances, which are no doubt less harmful to my health and spirit but which can be just as addictive.  

All of this time spent at the screen is, of course, avoidance of writing.  Actually, a lot of what I do in general is done to avoid writing: doing chores, sending emails, exercising, etc.  None of these behaviors is negative in itself, but I know I'm using them all to avoid the discomfort and fear which accompany the prospect of writing.  The big foolishness in all this is that every time I do finally get myself to sit down with blank pages or a work in progress, the writer in me kicks in within half an hour or so and I become lost in whatever story I'm telling.  But no matter how often that has happened, I'm still filled with dread when I know it's time to write.  So I hide in the vivid and varied world of YouTube.

The only promises I know I'll keep are the ones I make to Sweet Hubby (promises to myself always come with negotiations and back doors), so every other day, for now, I am making the promise to him that I will only use the computer for emails, Zoom meetings, or anything associated with writing.  The days I do give myself permission to Tube, I'll work on strengthening the muscle of limits.

Like any true addict, I don't want to give up what I'm addicted to, and I know I'm going to go through some version of withdrawal, which will probably mean getting cranky (poor SH), and I'm going to have to be careful not to tamp down those feelings with food (dang, another addiction).  In fact, even continuing to write this blog is avoidance of working on my plays, so bye-bye for now.  Thanks for your support, which I'm just going to assume I have.  But really, time to stop this and move to a play I'm working on, which, interestingly enough, is very political in nature, so maybe I should watch a few more YT videos, just to fuel the muse.  No no no, stop  now!  Pick up the pages, pick up the pen!  I'm going to write right after I finish this, but I did want to say one more thing.  I can't think what it is, so I'll just maunder on for a bit until it comes to me.  No no no, stop now!  But I still want to

Wednesday, January 6, 2021

A day which shall live in infamy

Today is Jan. 6, 2021.  In the future, there will be a lot of people who won't understand the significance of this day, but to those of us living through it, watching with shock and grief and outrage as our democracy is assaulted both from within and without the Capitol Building, this is a grim day, lightened only somewhat by the results of the runoff election in  Georgia.

As I've sat mesmerized and sickened by the events unfolding in Washington, DC, I keep feeling that I have to have to have to do something.  So I am sending the following letter to those Republican Senators who for four years have been Trump's most loyal champions and enablers, 35 letters in all.  I don't expect to get a response, don't even expect these letters to be read, and I certainly don't hold out hope that they will have any effect.  But I can't not speak up right now.

Senator -----

I am writing this letter on January 6 as I watch with horror the ghastly assault on democracy taking place before the eyes of the world.  I am not speaking only of the protestors who have stormed the sacred chambers of the Capitol.  I am speaking of you and the other Senators who for four years have disgraced your oath to serve the people of the United States by supporting and enabling a President you know to be a narcissist, a bully, a sociopath, ignorant of diplomacy and statesmanship, ignorant of the law.

Did you not foresee how this election and its aftermath were going to unfold?  I did.  Many of us did.  Donald Trump’s temperament, his character, or lack thereof, have been evident since even before he decided to run for office.  He is a child with a small, fragile ego who has been given a very large spotlight, a very loud microphone.

However, Trump is not the problem.  He cannot be anything other than what he is.  But you know better.  You have chosen to give him your support and loyalty.  You have chosen not to speak out against him or call on him to be a better leader.  You have heard him speak and must have recognized his lies, his inaccuracies, his bumbling and ignorance.  You must have recognized what he was turning the Republican Party into.

For four years this country has been traumatized by President Trump and the Republican Senate, by the lack of true leadership and partisanship, most particularly during this last year of COVID, when leadership has been even more desperately needed than ever before in my lifetime.  What is happening today is the consequence of your actions and inactions.  I for one will remember these four years and this awful night with bitterness and great sadness.  I hope you do, too, and that you also feel a heavy burden of regret for what you have allowed this country to become.

I urge you – I beg you to work with Joe Biden to heal the Unites States.  I beg you not to obstruct but to unite with the Democratic Senators so that together you might find real solutions to our very real problems.  We have not yet seen the worst of the economic fallout from this pandemic.  This is not a time for agendas and politicking.  We need leadership, not agendas; integrity, not cowardice.  I am calling on you, Senator ----, to return to your best self.


Saturday, January 2, 2021

The great big psychic hole

So.  A new year has arrived, and with it comes an unusually keen sense of relief, of the promise and possibility of new beginnings, better choices, more sanity in government.  In spite of the fact that 2020 will go down in American (and possibly global) history as one of the worst years ever, for me and my loved ones, it actually hasn't been all that bad.  This was the first year in a while in which no family member died, and none of us contracted COVID.  We celebrated an engagement and a pregnancy.  There have been regular Zooms for games and conversations to keep us all connected.  Sweet Hubby and I have relished one another's company, and both of us have accomplished enough to feel that the year was well used.

But 2020 has ended for me with the feeling of a big gaping hole in my psyche or soul or whatever part of me registers non-physical discomfort.  That hole is in the shape of a unanswered, possibly unanswerable question: How is it possible that Trump still has so many ardent, fervent, passionate followers?

I can sort of understand staff and Cabinet members becoming his lapdogs, since he notoriously fired anyone who disagreed with him.  (And who didn't see that coming, "You're fired" being the phrase that made him famous when he hosted "The Apprentice"?)  I can sort of almost understand members of Congress going along with him because his time in office and their majority in the Senate allowed Republicans to carry out their agendas with basically no interference from the President, Trump being more interested in tweeting and showboating than in leading.

But why do so many regular citizens regard him with such unquestioning, energetic adoration?  My brother, ever on the search for a balanced look at both sides of every question, has reminded me that Trump did have some accomplishments while in office.  But every President accomplishes something, and no President I've ever been aware of has had followers who were so rapturously, vehemently, slavishly his acolytes.  The equation is all out of balance.  He is widely considered by thinking  people to be the worst President in history, yet he has the most devoted followers.  Even Kennedy wasn't regarded with the unbridled worship Trump's fans give to him.

Does it come down to the fact that he was a TV star and we in this country are way too swoony over celebrities?  But Reagan was a movie star, and although he had many champions, they were not so uncritical, so cult-like in their regard for him.  Is it the fault of Fox and OAN, those shameless, hatred-spewing, conspiracy theorists whose only agendas are to tear down the opposition and stir up their listeners' grievances?  If that's the case, the question persists: Why do so many people choose those channels as their echo chambers?

Why doesn't it bother these people that he boasts about grabbing women by the pussy, that he openly mocks people with disabilities, that he is ignorant of historical facts, that he will maunder on and on at a rally about how long it takes to flush a toilet, that he endlessly brags about how smart he is and how he knows everything better than anybody else, that he comes up with cheap little nicknames for people he doesn't like?   Why didn't his behavior in the first debate with Biden disgust even his fans?  Would they tolerate that childish, disruptive, bullying behavior from anyone else?  So why do they from Trump?

Why didn't his mishandling of the COVID pandemic cause them to doubt him and turn away?  And now, when he continues to make baseless claims about the election having been stolen, when almost 60 of his lawsuits have been dismissed in courts, when even the Supreme Court, including his 3 appointees, refused even to hear his case, how can so many people still believe he is in the right, that he's the man they want representing them in the world and leading them through the next four years?

I just don't get it.  And this is coming from someone who prides herself on understanding human behavior.  Even if I'm wrong, I can always at least come up with a story that makes sense to me about how someone is acting.  But in this arena, I'm mystified, and that mystification leaves me frustrated and outraged.  Is it just that they made their choice back when he was a fresh and stimulating new face, and now they simply don't want to admit how terribly wrong they were?

I'm curious to see if this fervor dies down soon after he is finally out of office.  I expect there will always be those who follow and champion him, but it's possible that once he doesn't have quite so large a microphone and spotlight, once Biden has brought back actual governance, Trump exhaustion will finally set in even for those who loved the excitement and controversy their MAGA hats provided them.  But it's also possible that the sickness and rot he has either caused or exposed in this country will fester and grow, become more violent, infect the next four years of discourse and social interactions.  One thing I've come away from 2020 with is the absolute certainty that I have no idea what's coming next.  No matter what pictures form in my head about the future, I finally realize that they are simply what I've made up in order to have some sense of order about the world.  But really, I just don't know how Trumpism is going to play out or whether the Senate with work with Biden or obstruct obstruct obstruct.  I certainly can't predict the trajectory of this country's economic recovery, especially given that we have not yet experienced the worst fallout from this time of pandemic and political disarray.

Still, it's a new year, and not knowing what's coming actually gives me some ease and a sense of optimism.  I keep saying to myself and to anyone else who will listen: Better days are coming.  Gosh but I hope I'm right about that.  Who knows, maybe I'll finally come to understand Trumpism.  What a relief that will be.