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A Different Kind of Disaster
Ok, so the last post was all about things that helped get me plugged into the creative zone. You know what does not help me plug into the creative zone? Disaster preparedness. I’m a bit of a prepper, so when I hear—as we have been hearing, relentlessly, all week—that there is a “potentially catastrophic” winter storm on the way, my nesting gene kicks in. All creative energy is diverted to imagining and anticipating everything I could possibly need in order to survive as comfortably as possible. I’ve been shopping, fortifying, charging, and clearing out for days now and I think I have probably done all I can—Christ knows, I have enough food. Prepping is my coping strategy when anxiety kicks in: anyone who’s traveled with me knows this. Also anyone who’s looked in my pantry. Or my hall closet. It’s not just that I worry I won’t have something I need for an emergency: it’s also that there is a highly specific strain of joy that I experience when something happens and I have the exact right item to meet that moment. Whether it’s a week’s worth of electrolyte solution, a dose of Plan B, or this funny little combination multi-screwdriver-allen-wrench thingy, being able to rummage through my suitcase/closet/purse and pull out whatever will solve the problem at hand is deeeeeeeply my thing. Hermione Granger’s beaded bag is my actual heart’s desire.
So I’m ready, if also somewhat disappointed. I had fun plans this weekend with an assortment of friends, and almost all of it has been scrapped as a result of the incoming snowpocalypse. But this morning, I was helpfully reminded that there are worse things than having to give up your group sauna, or a snowy night bundled up under blankets with somebody you like to snuggle. Because there is a whole cohort of people out there right now for whom this storm might mean not just a few days’ worth of inconvenience, but an actual radical alteration in the course of their lives.
Specifically, I’m talking about people who are going to miss their abortion appointments.
About a year ago (note the timing), I joined the board of a local abortion fund; if you don’t know what that is, it’s a nonprofit that raises money to help people pay for abortion care. I love everything about this development in my life: the people I work with, the work we’re doing, the new experiences and opportunities it’s bringing me. A few months ago, I decided to also become an intake volunteer, which is one of the people who responds to calls to our warmline from people who need help paying for their abortions. After the first training, I explained to my daughter that pretty much the whole job is calling people to tell them you’ve got them covered, and then sending money to clinics.
“So you’re basically like an abortion Santa Claus?” she replied.
“Abortion Oprah,” I retorted. “YOU get an abortion! YOU get an abortion! YOU get an abortion!”
But the reality is, we are much more like your abortion concierge.
Now that Virginia is the last remaining southern state with abortion access up to 27 weeks, the logistical arrangements required to access care are ridiculously (and intentionally) complex. About a third of our callers are now traveling hundreds, even thousands of miles just to access a procedure that takes less time to perform than it may have taken them to get pregnant in the first place. (Seriously: a first-trimester surgical abortion takes about 5 minutes.) Add to that the fact that, if a person is calling an abortion fund for help to pay for their abortion (typically between $600-$1000), there is a very good chance that they don’t have the sort of job they can easily take time off from to spend on multiday travel for medical care. They might not even have a car. Even if they do, the cost of gas for two thousand miles roundtrip is steep. They might also need someone to go with them, because you can’t drive yourself home after an abortion if you had sedation—so that’s a second person who needs to be able to make this journey, or else lodging for the night and Ubers back and forth to the clinic. And if the caller already has children at home—as the large majority of abortion-seekers do—then arrangements need to be made for them as well.
As a result, the logistical planning required to get a person in, say, southwest Florida the abortion they need will only just begin with making a pledge of funding to the clinic where they’ve scheduled their appointment. That part—paying for the abortion—is the easiest part of the process, and if that’s all they need, the whole interaction might take ten minutes, tops. But what good is that money if the caller can’t actually get to the clinic for the procedure? Our intake coordinator recently had a caller for whom she had to book flights from Alabama to Florida to Virginia; she arranged lodging in Virginia and transportation from the hotel to the clinic, and then, of course, the caller’s travel home. We’ve paid three-figure Uber fares to get people from rural Maryland up to Baltimore for abortions. We CashApp money for childcare. We’ve worked with nonprofits that provide free air travel for people who need reproductive or gender-affirming care that’s illegal in their home state. Sometimes you make all these arrangements to get a person from one state to another for their abortion, and when they arrive at the clinic, they learn that they have a medical complication, or the gestational age is wrong, and that clinic can’t perform the procedure. Now we have to figure out how to get that patient to the right clinic for what they need—and take care of them while they’re there. And remember, all of these arrangements are time-sensitive. We don’t just offer financial support for getting there or getting the abortion; we help people pay for food while they’re on the road, for heating pads and ibuprofen, for the second dose of misoprostol and the maxi pads they’ll need for after. And on a weekend like the one we’re headed for, when we have callers who are unhoused and in need of care, we will pay for them to stay warm and safe in hotels until the storm has passed. We are absolutely, as my father always loved to say, doing the Lord’s work—and he would have said it about this, I’m certain, because even though he was an evangelical Christian who personally opposed abortion, he was also an old-school Republican who told me many times that abortion was between a woman and her doctor, and none of the government’s business.
Would that such Republicans still existed.
Clinics will keep their doors open for as long as they can, but there are a lot of people with appointments in the next few days who aren’t going to be able to get there—and when accessing abortion requires this level of planning and coordination, you can’t always make all those details line up twice in a row. Chances are, there will be people for whom having to stay home means having to stay pregnant. And that is a heartbreaking reality in a country that loves to tout its family values, but it is also entirely on purpose. The politicians and activists who oppose reproductive rights want everything about seeking an abortion to be as difficult and degrading as possible in the hope that they can shame some segment of people out of their procedures. They do this while proclaiming their protectiveness and respect for women, but pregnancy and childbirth raise a person’s risk for a whole host of life-altering complications, including death by domestic violence and an assortment of medical conditions. No one who doesn’t want to take on that risk should ever be forced to, just as nobody who doesn’t believe in abortion rights should ever be forced to have one.
So this weekend, if you are cozied up in a warm place with people you like (or happily alone) and power for your wi-fi, ask yourself whether it matters to you that every American has autonomy over their own body and freedom to choose their own life. If the answer is yes, and you (somehow) have a few extra bucks, consider donating them to an abortion fund where you live, or the one I work for, or to the National Network of Abortion Funds; support your local Planned Parenthood or some other clinic; or go to Plan C and order abortion medication to have on hand in case you or someone you care about needs it. And I will take a minute to be grateful I’m not traveling two thousand miles this weekend with the storm of the century on my heels.
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Manic Episode





I want to say something—mainly for my own benefit—about what happened to me last week, because it’s the sort of thing I forget about soon after and then convince myself will never happen again, so maybe it will be helpful to put it here, where I can remind myself periodically. I told you I’ve been making some changes in the hope of reviving my cognitive faculties and getting more motivated to write; those things—not checking my phone a billion times a day, working first thing in the morning, reading more—have helped, for sure. Starting this blog has helped enormously. I forget, when I’m not blogging, how much having an audience, with its notions of external pressure, and a place to put things I’ve written where they might actually be seen gets me going. It’s tremendous, really: suddenly, I want to write about everything. But there’ve been other things, too—I’ve been reading a LOT, I’ve been listening to more audiobooks and less news, and I’ve been showing up to the page, as they say: sitting down to write, even just a little, every single day, so that when the idea comes, I will be ready. And I went to a vigil a couple of weeks ago for Renee Good, and all the other people who’ve been murdered, disappeared, assaulted, and detained by ICE.
I like protests; I went to my first around age 12 (we’ll talk a lot more about that in future posts) and have since been to more than I can count. We’ve got quite a history with protesting here in my adopted hometown, and in these times it feels good to do something. It’s encouraging to see other people—hundreds of them—who refuse to accept that this is really the path America is choosing. One of the speakers at the vigil was a minister from a church some of my friends go to. She talked about the idea that Renee Good’s queerness should not go unmentioned because in the context of Jesus’ ministry, it’s important. Again and again in the gospels, you see Jesus aligning himself with the outcasts, the marginalized, those the religious establishment condemns as sinners. He heals them, he hangs out with them; even on the cross, he turns to the repentant criminal being crucified beside him to say, This day, you shall be with me in paradise. (Fun Catholic fact: the Good Thief’s name was Dismas, and he was my first choice of patron saint when it came time for confirmation, but all my friends were going with stupid popular choices like Theresa and Bernadette, and they talked me out of Dismas. So I chose Stephen, the first martyr, instead. I should’ve stuck to my guns.) That this queer woman, a mother and relative newcomer to her community, was willing to show up for the people ICE sought to terrorize is entirely consistent with Jesus’ vibe. As is the fact that she ended up with two bullets in the chest.
So all of that was swirling around my consciousness at the beginning of the week. I’d been kind of stuck for days working on that post about my childhood fantasy of martyrdom; I couldn’t figure out how to end it, or what the actual point of it was.* But I worked on it Monday morning, then headed off for a walk. Listening to a book about plant intelligence, not really thinking about much of anything. Except maybe one thing, which was a post from my original blog that’s been on my mind recently; it was about trying to run an errand with my kids in the car, and the insanely gut-wrenching conversation about my mother-in-law’s death that my then-6-year-old daughter initiated, which then led my son to weigh in with his own emotional crisis. It was the sort of thing that used to happen to me all the time and I wanted to revisit it but hadn’t yet. I was about to head out to do the grocery shopping when something happened.
Suddenly I had a thought, about the fact that Renee Good died on her way home from dropping her son off at school. I knew that her son was six, and that his father had died, and so I could imagine she’d probably had a lot of the same kinds of conversations in her car that I had had with my kids. And just like that, I had to sit down with my notebook. I don’t know if you’ve listened to the Telepathy Tapes podcast (if you haven’t, you should), but there’s a great episode about creativity in which she examines the question of whether ideas are alive and seek us out; it’s an experience I’ve had before, and I was absolutely having it here. I’ve never thought of ideas as alive, but I do believe that they are out there in some form, maybe looking for a way to become real, and if you can make yourself receptive, they will come to you. And sometimes, they will come exactly as it happened to me that day: fully formed, just waiting to be written down.
I sat down to write the idea that was in my head, the first few lines that had come to me, and the next thing I knew, I had four pages. I wrote them by hand, which I think is really important—typing slows me down, I’m not that fast at it (although my fingers are flying as I recount this lol), but also, typing engages different parts of the brain and I believe it’s not as conducive to connecting with inspiration when it needs to come out. I wrote everything that seemed to be in my head, and then I got up to go do the shopping, but as I was doing putting my shoes on, more thoughts came, so I sat back down and wrote the rest of it. On my way to the store, I didn’t turn on the radio; I wanted to stay in the zone in case anything else came to me. Which of course it did, in the same space it always does: the checkout line. What physics exists in the checkout line that somehow your brain plugs itself into the collective universal consciousness and channels all the ideas? I don’t know, but it fucking does. I made more notes in the line while I waited to be rung up, and I dictated some more in the parking lot on the way to my car. When I got home, I went straight back to my office and started typing—this time, I wrote on my laptop and rearranged, regrouped, revised what I had put down an hour before. And just like that, I had a poem.
A poem, and an absolutely insane emotional high that lasted the rest of the day. Honestly, I think of these experiences as being like little manic episodes, because the rush that accompanies them is for real. I was bouncing off the walls all afternoon, so stoked with joy and excitement because every time this happens to me, it feels like a fucking miracle. It is possibly the greatest feeling in the world. The doubts and the second guessing may come later—yes, it’s imperfect, nothing comes into existence perfect—but that’s fine, it doesn’t matter. As my Muralist friend taught me years ago (and maybe I’ll reshare that post here sometime, it was one of my most popular posts ever on the last blog), the goal is finished, not perfect. So I still shared it, I’m still thrilled about it, and I’m still so grateful to know this kind of thing can still happen in my life. The other night I went to a dinner party, and someone asked me to read the poem aloud, which I’ve obviously never done before. It was a weird and wild experience, and while it did not exactly elevate the “party” vibe, it was still pretty great.
So I’m putting all this here for myself, and maybe also for you, to come back to, as a reminder that the magic does happen when you put yourself in a position to receive it, even when you’ve spent months berating yourself that it hasn’t happened in way too long. Do the things that get your creative energy flowing—maybe even make a list, so you can check periodically to make sure you’re keep at it. Show up to your practice. Pay attention to the world around you. Be ready when the universe responds.
*As for that roadblock, it vanished of its own accord during a phone conversation with a friend, and ended up part of my post about where we are in this country, One Year In, which revolved around the activist training I went to last weekend. Very often, I’ve found, when I’m stuck trying to figure out where a piece is going or how it ends, I just have to wait, and keep living my life, until the thing that completes it happens to me.
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One Year In
When I was a little girl, I dreamed of being a martyr.
Like, literally, I dreamed of dying for the One True Church. From the day I joined it as an incoming third-grader at St. Rose of Lima parish, Catholicism took over as a core aspect of my identity. And I know how it sounds: pathetic, a little bizarre, possibly indicative of some mental health issues, but if you know anything about Catholic doctrine and/or the psychology of nine-year-old girls with divorced parents and prominent Leo placements, it actually makes quite a lot of sense. Martyrdom is the highest achievement to which an ordinary Catholic can aspire. Martyrs are heroes: their stories are told and retold down the ages, they get feast days and prayer cards and dominion over aspects of life that correspond to their agonies. Martyrdom gets you attention! Respect! Admiration! Martyrs are ballsy and courageous, whereas regular saints are mostly pious and annoying. It’s also a vastly more attainable status than regular sainthood, which requires a lifetime of poverty and service and probably also misery. To be a martyr, all you have to do is die.
The problem, obviously, was that when I was growing up in 1980s Cleveland, Ohio, there were precious few things for which a little Catholic girl might hope to be martyred. Nobody was persecuting Catholics that I knew of—in fact, it seemed to me in those days that everyone in the world was Catholic (except for my dad and his family, who adhered to some weird alternate version of Catholicism called “Protestant” that sounded the same to me but in certain critical, though incomprehensible, ways…was not). After extensive research and investigation, I was forced to conclude there were only two ways I was likely to qualify. One was to follow in the tradition of virgin martyrs like 11-year-old Maria Goretti, who was canonized after fighting off a rapist whom she then, with her final breaths, forgave for stabbing her fourteen times (preserving one’s hymen: consistently among the most reliable paths to sainthood). The other option was to carry a life-threatening pregnancy to term, and die refusing an abortion. For obvious reasons (no rape; no stabbing; actual sex; the prospect of months being fussed over before death), this option seemed preferable.
Obviously, neither of those outcomes materialized. But fast forward a couple of decades: I read a book called In the Spirit of Crazy Horse by Peter Matthiessen. It’s the story of Leonard Peltier and the American Indian Movement, and a series of terrible events on the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota, and I couldn’t put it down; my mother-in-law made fun of me for bringing it on our family beach vacation, because it was not light reading. Up until I read that book, I had never been able to imagine valuing anything in the world more than my own life. The drive to martyrdom had been about attention, recognition—it was about wanting to be one of those beautiful, serene girls on the holy cards and the stained glass windows—but it was also about belonging: to something bigger than yourself, which is what Matthiessen’s incredible book spoke to in me. As I burned through his chronicle of life on the reservation, and the history that led up to it, the struggle to survive a genocide and the drive to maintain an identity and a culture that generations of white men had worked to erase, I got it. I understood that there were things more important than individual lives, and understanding that made me yearn for it, in a way. We are all of us, inevitably, doomed to die. If it has to happen anyway, wouldn’t it be preferable to die in the service of something vast and irreplaceable, for the betterment of the people I left behind? Wouldn’t I much rather die resisting tyranny than by, I don’t know, choking on a blueberry, or falling down the stairs?
My friends, I’m thinking it might be time for all of us to start to asking ourselves what we would be willing to die for.
This weekend I went to a training organized by a couple of local activist groups. I’ve been to quite a few since they started offering them last summer, and when they started back in May, the sessions were held in a church basement; there’d be a potluck first, followed by the training, and there were probably 30-50 people any given week. Saturday was my first time back since August; they’re meeting in a new location, a big church downtown that also houses a homeless shelter, and when I got to the church, there was a line out the door. The sanctuary, by the time we got started, was full. I’d guess there were a couple hundred people packed into the pews, eager to learn about what they should do if they came upon ICE harassing their neighbors.
It was incredibly encouraging to see so many people there, less than two weeks after Renee Good’s murder. The group leader asked people to call out the emotions they experienced when they learned about the shooting, and the immediate responses were fear and outrage. Everyone in that room, I suspect, was scared. Is scared. Nobody wants to end up slumped over their steering wheel, or bleeding in the street. But they were also furious, and horrified, and determined not to let this really be the path we choose.
The next hour or so was spent on the actual training, which focused on how to monitor police interactions with the community. There were four rules we’re asked to follow, and the first rule is, Don’t look away. When you see the cops roll up on someone and start asking them questions, pay attention. Take a moment to observe: is everyone ok? What’s happening here? Is this situation about to escalate? Rule #2 is, Don’t make it worse. We talked about how not to trigger cops, when and how to film them, how to support the person being targeted, and what to do afterward—for the target, or with the video. We were encouraged not to scream at or verbally assault federal agents, but also to “respect diversity of tactics,” which I felt was an elegant way of acknowledging that sometimes screaming at them is really all you can do.
Near the end of the session, our leader returned to a point that I know she makes often at these trainings: that none of what we’re talking about is theoretical. Here in Charlottesville, we know this. We’d been living with the realities of 45’s America for months before Unite the Right descended on our little town, and we know that those same Proud Boys and neo-Nazis who terrorized us with torches in 2017 are now employed as masked federal agents breaking down doors in Minneapolis; throwing teargas canisters under family minivans; smashing people’s car windows and dragging them out, unconscious, in cuffs. We have seen what counter-protesting can cost a community, and we know that when push came to shove, the police did not protect us. They put on their riot gear and formed corridors with their bodies to keep the Klan safe from us, and they stood by doing nothing a month later when the “alt-right” returned for a long-planned weekend of brutal violence, and murder. As we approached the end of the meeting, our leader reminded us that standing up for your neighbors against ICE can get you hurt. It can get you killed. Each of us needs to consider what level of risk we are willing to assume.
I think about it all the time. The other day my daughter was telling me about a video she’d seen where a family in Minneapolis had a Door-Dasher beg to be let into the house because ICE was after her. They did let her in, but eventually the threats and intimidation from ICE wore the homeowner down, and she sent the woman outside, both of them sobbing, distraught. I immediately proclaimed this homeowner a terrible person, handing a woman who’d looked to her for help over to federal agents. I was horrified, judgmental. But later on it occurred to me: what if that woman’s kids were in the house? What if ICE was threatening them? What would I do in that position, if ICE was threatening to arrest or assault my children, or my dog? ICE agents have shot people’s pets, even when they were safely restrained. Would I send someone out to be arrested if I thought that cops were going to kill Roxy?
I suspect none of us knows what we’d do in a crisis until it arrives, but here’s what I know right now: I don’t want to die. Like, at all; I have an amazing life full of people, places, and things I love, and I hope to continue enjoying it for many years to come. But also? I have an amazing life. Full of people, places, and things I love. Already, at this point, I have experienced more joy, more privilege, than a lot of people get in a whole lifetime. I could go on and on explicating my precise feelings on this subject, but the nutshell is: it’s enough. I’m not finished, I still want more, but honestly, I can’t ask for more. I don’t want to get hurt, or maimed, or emotionally disabled by a traumatic assault, but I also don’t want those fears to be what drives me. Those fears are what Stephen Miller is counting on. Those fears are all he’s got. I want to think bigger than fear: about who I want to be in this moment, what I value, and what matters more than my comfort, or even my life.
Maybe this is what Catholicism and Leonard Peltier were preparing me for.
We Americans are part of something vast and irreplaceable. For all our country’s flaws and shortcomings, all the many ways that we’ve failed to live up to our ideals, those ideals are precious, and worth preserving. Traveling has given me a perspective on this country that I didn’t have before—our friendliness, our absurdity, our unrelenting optimism; we’re like children in the household of the world, adorable and entertaining, but frequently destructive and generally oblivious to anyone else’s point of view. However ironically we stumbled into it, however poorly we’ve manifested it, this nation was founded on something beautiful that the world needs: a presumption of equality. A belief in the inalienable rights of every individual. The idea of pursuing happiness. And more recently, the creation of a government that exists to serve its people; to provide them with the basic necessities of life so that they can be free to pursue whatever happiness means to them. All of this is still possible. But it’s slipping away from us, and wresting it back won’t be easy. One year in, on this Martin Luther King Day, I think we have reached the point in the story where everyone who cares about this country and its future has to wrestle with the question of what they’re willing to do to save it.
Last night, my friend was telling me about that morning’s sermon at her church service. She said the minister encouraged people to formulate a saying—like a mantra—that they can come back to whenever their resolve wavers, or they feel afraid. Something that will remind them, not of their personal worries, but of the larger project we’re each a part of (whether we like it or not). Something, I assumed, that you can say to yourself when ICE comes tumbling out of an SUV. My first idea was (as usual), Well, we’re all gonna die anyway! Then I thought of the prayer of St. Francis, always one of my favorites: Make me an instrument of thy peace, that where there is hatred, I may bring love. When I was a child, the nuns at St. Rose’s encouraged us to repeat to ourselves, The Lord provides for His children. As a child with a greater-than-average inclination to worry, that one worked for me for years. The options are infinite, we can all find something to encourage us, remind us what’s important. This morning I thought, maybe I’ll try something smaller, more specific. Maybe this weekend gave me a mantra without me noticing.
Don’t look away.
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Fucking Bitch
I’m thinking that “fucking bitch” needs to become the “nasty woman” of the second Drumpf administration. Let’s put it on t-shirts and coffee mugs and get it tattooed on our forearms. Let’s just decide that Fucking Bitch is the status to which we now aspire, and the energy we bring to our collective efforts.
I’ve watched a lot of the videos from Renee Good’s murder, and I struggled, with each new clip, to understand what happened to make that man—fully armed, swaddled in Kevlar and camo, anonymized by his mask and glasses—feel so threatened that he had to fire three bullets at close range into a fucking car. Because let’s face it—and I mean no disrespect when I say this—Renee looked kind of absurd in that moment. She had the look of a mom who was still in her PJs, still with bedhead and morning eyes, who put on boots and a coat to drop her kid off with the accompanying childlike trust that she would not have to see anyone or interact with the public in that state. Like we all have, some uncountable number of times ourselves. She looked like a woman who left the house fully expecting that twenty minutes later she would be back in her kitchen with a second cup of coffee.
Let’s just pause there for a second.
Fuck.
So why? What got Jonathan Ross so incensed that he put that bullet in her? I watched all these videos and I couldn’t really make sense of it: yes there was a lot of noise (noise would definitely make me shoot someone), there were cars and it was kind of chaotic, but seriously? That’s why he had to kill someone’s mom? Has this guy had no training for the job he currently holds?
And then I saw the video of her wife.
I watched Becca Good walk around the car with her phone, mocking all the ICE agents. Cracking jokes about switching license plates, asking Ross if he wants to go toe to toe, telling him to go get some lunch. Calling him Big Boy. I watched it and I felt my body tense, my heartrate rise, because now I knew what was going to happen—not from watching the other videos, but from half a century living life as a woman. I knew, without having to see him, what effect her mockery was having on him. That might have been the moment, honestly. When she talked to him like he was a child who needed a sandwich and a nap, I honestly think that was the moment he locked in. She condescended to him. She made him feel small. All the weapons and Kevlar in the universe can’t compensate for the feeling of smallness, not when it’s coming from a woman, not when it’s coming from some fucking bitch. I don’t even think Renee is who he was talking about when he said that; I think he was talking about Becca. I think that bullet was meant for Becca.
Was it Margaret Atwood who said it best? Men fear that women will laugh at them. Women fear that men will kill them. Because they do. Over and over and over again, they fucking do.
For making a small man acknowledge his smallness, Becca Good ended up pacing the sidewalk with her wife’s blood all over her, trying to make sense of what just happened. But we have all been fucking bitches at some point in our lives, probably for making other small men acknowledge their smallness, and now we are a nation ruled by small men whose smallness is rolling over the landscape to crush us all. Maybe it’s because I’ve reached the stage of life where women are assumed to have run out of fucks to give and begin embracing their witchiness (though witchiness has always been a component of my vibe), but from this point forward I think I want fucking bitch to be the energy I bring to every gathering, and to the world at large. At this point, fucking bitches are probably who we need the most.
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On The Hazards Of School Drop-Off
No one warns you
about the hazards of school drop-off:
the way you think you know where you’re going,
just a short hop from here to there,
but the world is always changing and you can
find yourself somewhere unrecognizable
just beyond your own front door.
The detours often start with a question—
What does a heart attack feel like?
Are you and Dad going to get a divorce?
Do you think you’ll be scared when you die?
It’s the unforeseen interruption
(at a traffic light
a drive-through window
sitting in the pickup line, awaiting big sister)
of one’s own thoughts, or some small passenger’s,
that breaks through the crust of ice you skate through your days upon
–the errands, the memories, idle fantasies, things to-do—
and punches a hole big enough for you
to fall through.
No one prepares you for the hazards of school drop-off,
the way the backseat is precisely far enough
(in space, and time)
for monumental questions to form,
and otherwise unmentionable truths
to emerge.
But over time you learn
to trust them more than you fear them.
You find a way
to hold your breath until you learn to swim,
to let yourself look at the unspeakable thing, answer
the unknowable question.
There’s safety in the space between front seat and back;
whatever is spoken there can’t hurt you.
You come to love the way the drop-off keeps you sharp,
keeps you on your toes,
shows you things you didn’t know about yourself,
your small passengers,
the world through which you all move.
The unforeseen becomes your friend:
another tool in your mother’s toolkit,
their weight and heft familiar in your hands.
No one tells you, the problem with school drop-off
Is that the skills don’t transfer.
You think you know this landscape,
but the screaming voices and the blaring whistles,
the battering rams breaking down doors
raise a different kind of question—
What are we doing?
How did we get here?
What kind of person do I want to be?
Then the safety of the front seat makes you cocky;
makes you believe
(like they do)
that you have superpowers—
that you can answer any question,
solve any problem,
heal any wound,
simply because of who you are to them.
That your sweet smile,
and your lilting voice
That’s fine, dude, I’m not mad at you
will be enough to overcome whatever this is,
Get out of the fucking car
to keep you skating, keep you breathing.
But you are nothing to these people;
your magic has no power here,
so the ice breaks,
crackcrackcrack
punches a hole,
Fucking bitch
and you fall.
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Back To The Beginning
Once upon a time, I had a blog. It was called Make It Stop!, subtitled “Baby Book, Bereavement Journal, and Rough Draft For My Magnum Opus,” and if you’re reading this now, as we’re just getting started, then chances are you read that one, too. Its existence was bookended by the two most cataclysmic losses of my adult life: the death of the mother-in-law, and the departure of my husband. Several years ago, I started listening to Anderson Cooper’s podcast series on grief, All There Is. He said something early on that reminded me of what Cheryl Strayed has said about Dear Sugar—that Sugar is the temple she built in the place where her mother had been, the monument she created to that love and that loss. I think that this is one of the most important exercises in the work of grieving: to create something out of our devastation. And that got me thinking about what I have created out of my own grief.
I started the original Make It Stop! on a whim one January day in 2009 after my then-husband and I had taken all three kids to the Baltimore Aquarium. It was an exhausting, hilarious, ridiculous day that surely accounted for the epidemic of strep throat that burned through our household the entire month of February, and I absolutely had to tell someone about it. But the person I would normally have told about it was dead. Helen died on June 24, 2008, and though I didn’t realize it until many years later, I emailed her almost every single day. On the days I didn’t email her, I probably talked to her on the phone. She was the person I brought all those stories to, and there was no one else in the world besides my husband and my mom who cared as much or was as invested in those stories as I was. Helen was my mentor, my advisor, the person whose input mattered most to me, because she was a mother who I felt had done it right. Which is not to say she was perfect, or that she never hurt my feelings or did things that irritated me; she did. But far more often than that, she made me feel like I could do this too; I could be the mother I wanted my kids to have. That’s not even the most important part, though. The most important part was that she loved my kids as much as I did, and so sharing their lives with her was a way to reexperience and (if necessary) transform every moment of joy or frustration I had with them, like a prism refracting the sun into all its gorgeous wavelengths. Helen was never going to sit there blank-faced at the end of a story and say, Huh. That’s weird. She was going to feel my outrage or my delight or my complete fucking bewilderment exactly as I did, and then she was going to put it into the larger context of motherhood in a way that reassured me we were all going to be alright.
When we lost her, that need didn’t just go away. Those stories kept happening, and the words kept collecting inside me with nowhere to go until I got to a point where I knew that if I didn’t let them out, they would strangle me. So I started my blog, and for the longest time, Helen was the person I spoke to in every entry. Each post was directed to her, and the ones that weren’t to her were about her. That was the temple I built in her absence. That was where I took my grief. For the next two years or so, I wrote vast, rambling essays about motherhood, grief, life in the DC suburbs, politics, current events, and everything else I had an opinion on. I didn’t promote my blog much, because I was always worried about who might read it, but it enabled me to continue to feel like a writer even when every moment of my waking life (and a great deal of my sleeping life) seemed devoted to tiny people whose needs were endless and who definitely did not give a shit about my work. It gave me a place to put things that happened to me and things I felt, and it enabled me to produce some writing that I am, to this day, really proud of, and really amazed to be able to say I did. I credit Helen with all of it.
And then on November 28, 2012, my husband told me he was moving out of our house. Although he wouldn’t come out and say he wanted a divorce for another ten months—and a memoir’s worth of events transpired in just that interval—it was clear from that first conversation that my life was about to change. I took a new job that day: Chief Over-Analyst at Can This Marriage Be Saved? It paid nothing, the hours sucked, and in the end, my position was eliminated, but I killed myself at it for almost a year. Until October 3, 2013, when I received some news that put an end to that contract, and also others far more dear to me. I wrote a lot during that year of separation—nearly 200,000 words in my journal, almost all of it about my marriage. But I never wrote another word in my blog. In early December, 2012, I posted a final entry in which I let my readers know I was going away. I knew there was no way I could write publicly about what was happening, and I also knew there was no way I could not write about it. So I closed up shop and went back to writing only for myself.
It was a necessary move, and in the decade that followed, I wrote multiple memoirs’ worth about divorce, adultery, and betrayal; I completed probably a dozen short stories and essays; I finished a novel that is, in fact, long enough to be two; and I also continued raising three young children and living a life that’s included some of the deepest grief and the realest joy that any human being has a right to hope for. So I was busy. I was happy. I was bereft. But I missed blogging dearly, and I missed all of my friends who read my work, and so ten years later, I started a new one.
The second blog was also, in its way, a response to overwhelming grief. For all that I am grateful for in my life today, all the things I have now that I couldn’t have imagined or hoped for, I will never stop grieving the loss of the family I waited my whole life to have: the one I created with the person I loved, trusted, and wanted for my own right up until the very end. That it ended the way it did will never be ok. But that ending also helped make me the person I am today, and gave me the life I have now. It is, as Stephen Colbert so beautifully described it in an interview I have reread a hundred times, the miracle of learning to love the thing you most wish had never happened. What punishments of God are not also gifts?, he quoted Tolkien as saying. Those two losses—my mother-in-law and my marriage—are two of the greatest gifts in my life. They enabled me to find myself again in Make It Stop!, to write the novel I’m so proud of, and to produce a lot of other work I hope the world will one day see. And then they enabled me to write a lot of new work in my second blog, some of which we are already revisiting here (like this intro! Now new and improved for blog #3!).
But there was always a problem with those first two projects, and that problem was that they were only for a very select audience. I wrote about things that were deeply personal, but that also involved other people. And I always feared what would happen if the people who featured in those writings ever read them. Anne Lamott famously said You own everything that happened to you. Tell your stories. If people wanted you to write warmly about them, they should’ve behaved better. Which is all well and good, except when you have to read their emails, or answer the door when they show up on your porch. I wrote some more things I’m really proud of in that second installment–not just about my divorce, but also about my family, my creative process, and my mom’s death. But I think after her passing, I was kind of burned out on writing about my life. I moved on to other projects: a second novel, some more short stories, and also a comically absurd amount of traveling. And then This Motherfucker, the 47th President, actually won an election and I think I can speak for a lot of us when I say that for a while there, I just kind of went within. There was a long stretch of just trying to keep my head above the ever-rising waters of terrible news, and then suddenly it was 2026, and I don’t know; something shifted. I decided it was time. For what, I’m not totally sure.
Here’s what I’m thinking right now: more of this—meandering meditations on whatever happens to be on my mind (it’s kind of my specialty…). Probably a lot of screaming into the void re: American fascism. Thoughts on the administration, the resistance, and hella posts about abortion. But still some memoirish stuff, travel writing, blasts from the past, possibly even the occasional poem. Who knows?! Life has a way of throwing curveballs; we could wind up anywhere. Whatever it is, my commitment to this newly-revised version of Make It Stop! is that I’m done trying to curate who sees my work. I’m done hiding and writing in secret. Whatever I write here, it’s here for the world. Welcome to you new readers, I hope you’ll help me figure out where we need to go. And welcome back to all of you who’ve been with me from the start. I’ve missed you ❤️