11 A
Since the weekend I've been carrying dread like an unborn child. Literally... the quasi-physical heaviness of a pregnancy, without the joy, without the future. The relentless bad news, the threats to human freedoms and everyday security. It's overwhelming.
I watched a kind of forum on human empathy-- and identified as one of those people who prioritizes others-- known popularly as a 'people pleaser' which is not really a positive thing. We do no good either for ourselves or others, yet it's built-in-- layered-- a little like a second heart which doesn't serve or beat, but simply aches. There is no surgery for this; I suppose a high dosage of meds would temper it, but my friends know overstrict emotional self-parenting makes me reluctant to even use aspirin.
My Irish nanny told me at the age of four not to tell my parents but I was a natural-born Catholic. I asked her all kinds of questions about things, and I was perpetually preoccupied with the reviving of dead insects, plants, birds... tearing up in Church at the hymns and prayers, obsessed with but unable to fully fathom the Jesus story. I watched magicians pull rabbits and living things from boxes... the personal metaphor of my personal hat somehow implies this secret belief that something mystical is hidden there-- that life is not all objective-- music, most of all, maybe.
So while we cannot all be heroes, we can perhaps be conjurors... we can be fixers or healers. Watching a concert at the Central Park bandshell Tuesday evening I realized how completely altered I was with each piece-- as though I physically melted into the cosmic architecture... I could almost sense the composer and his vision. To be a musician is such a blessed thing... how I miss the gigs of old. Even those sweaty crowded dive bars-- to be part of the crowd-shaping thing... it was a blessing.
And the actual heroes... well, they are passing with acceleration. Rick Derringer... we all disagreed with his politics in the end, but I had ties to him through various people I worked with. One night he came into one of those east village bars in the days when cabaret laws enforced a three-people-only-rule onstage. We were a well-working trio... Rick, to participate, sat on a barstool across from the bandstand, plugged in and played like a phantom genius inhabiting our amplifiers. I tried to remember that, and to honor his passing.
There are times when politics must take a back seat. The irony of that plane crash yesterday-- in a second we recognize tragedy... the enormity and horror of a scene like this... the human grief... the families... and yet daily we hear news of missiles and war, and equally devastating destruction-- death and hideous injuries... and we digest this. What is wrong with us? How have we grown immune to the architecture of suffering on a large scale? Because it doesn't affect our neighborhood?
I read and I read. I watch way too much television. I have friends who tell me they don't watch news... it's too terrible. I cannot help feeling this responsibility-- just to know, and yet I cannot help. I also spend an inordinate amount of time reading books... they are both comforting and alarming... the past has taught this generation little; we seem to be repeating the same mistakes in different clothing. There is no DNA to identify a situation, but the parallels are disturbing. The suppression of freedom-- the support of freedom to be racist and uncompassionate... what is our human responsibility? If a nation decides to attack another, it's a hideous barbaric choice. But still there are good people on both sides; and one cannot condone anti-semitism because the actions of Israel are aggressive and inhumane. No religions teach this kind of thing.
People like me, my psychiatrist friend tells me, get cancer. They suffer and cannot exorcize what compels them to live inside this chronic empathic cloud. If it's not one thing, it's another. I worry. My son is my absolute source of light. He, fortunately, has not inherited my emotional impairment. He is smart and forward-thinking and extremely functional. Hats off to him, truly.
Yesterday I tried a local pharmacy-- sick of the lines and the monopoly of these huge drugstore chains and the whole profitable medical industry. It is right by a local mosque; the owner is Muslim and so kind. When he walked from behind the counter, I saw he was a huge man, with a terrible disability... unidentifiable. I immediately invented this narrative that he'd been somehow beaten and tortured in a torn country and survived with a twisted architecture. Painful to see him walk... and yet he was happy and smiling and grateful for my tiny business. When I got home I realized my prescription was nearly at expiration. I will not complain. I know this is wrong-- I'll simply wait and get a refill eventually. This is medicine; this is a business... and yet for me it is not. I have adopted the pharmacist into my massive family of those for whom I worry.
11A. I hate flying... the slightest turbulence gives me terrible anxiety. In 1988 I took Pan Am flight 103 the night before that horrific crash; I felt like a survivor in a way. But I cannot imagine processing the miracle of walking away from a wreck like yesterday's. One man. Defying a lethal diagnosis... dodging an executioner's bullets. It's unfathomable... the burden of being that person, if you're someone like me-- how to process, how to return a massive 'favor'... the one home that survived the fires in a neighborhood destroyed... the one standing tree after a tornado. Nothing compares. Inexplicable.
Many of my friends have no religious beliefs. They take a scientific perspective on death as a full biological stop. How does one explain the rapture of music? I don't know. The thousands of movies that interpret and explore an afterlife-- angels and heaven and ghostly hauntings. Like a hunting dog, I have often picked up the scent of previous lives, the déjà-vu. I wonder if the passenger in 11A sensed these things.. how his life will change. Already real estate brokers are asking a premium for 11A apartments. People are booking the seat first... they could charge a premium.
I'm hoping somehow to unburden myself of this weight. Not hopeful because the news is cumulative; problems outweigh solutions. Sicknesses far outnumber cures... and will continue. Death will relentlessly equate births... one cannot exist without the other, really... sort of a paradox. We can only hope that each of us provides a little relief to someone-- sharing a sandwich, proverbially. It's contagious, kindness... really the only thing we can control-- our personal space, the way we manage it. A different kind of pandemic... maybe it's my ingrained vague version of Catholic belief... and the importance of mercy-- to feed the hungry, shelter the homeless, etc. And maybe the victims of the plane crash were taken to heaven... but 11A was given a mission. We are all, those here reading-- given a daily second chance. Trying to decipher mine, today.
Labels: anti-semitism, Catholicism, Central park, church, Death, empathy, guilt, Indian plane crash, Israel, Mercy, music, Pan Am, politics, Rick Derringer, seat 11A, starvation, sympathy, tragedy, war
2 Comments:
Nice!
Thank goodness there are still people who have empathy and generosity as an innate feature. I am not sure that life without pain is even life at all, and putting others before oneself was one of Jesus's most adamant commands, how ever much the modern world condemns such selflessness as a survival strategy. You carry on being you and feeling those ecstatic moments of emotion for the billions who are incapable of such an elevated contribution to the embellishment of the shop soiled and shell-shocked reality of existence in the 21st century
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