Of course, over the last few days, I've had several conversations with family and friends in which the election's outcome has been broadly hinted at. But I consider that all to be nothing more than second hand smoke. I refuse to succumb to it. For now I am perfectly content to persist in a state of knowing unknowingness. As far as I'm concerned, a Trump branded version of our present day reality is a siren's call I'm not interested or ready to pay heed to.
Staying true to my news blackout best as I could (notwithstanding headlines on passing news-stands) I spent yesterday in New York City and found many people in Manhattan seem to be similarly inclined. There were demonstrations popping up all over town - with a strong police presence besides. In the subway station at Union Square I saw a wall along a long subterranean corridor that had been entirely papered over with post-it notes declaring Not My President and other obvious truisms. It was a strong reminder of the pop up shrines that had appeared around the City in the days and weeks after 9/11. My friend Robin (who is a therapist) confirms the comparison is apt for her and her patients. Robin says that most of her patients were far more agitated this week than at any time since 9/11. This sense of irreality is apparently pervasive and may soon reach pandemic proportion.
Under the circumstances it's possible to think of not watching the news as just a cheap form of self-medication. Ulysses found it necessary to take more extreme measures by plugging up his ears with wax. For you and me it turns out to be much easier. We just have to get up and hit the off switch, avert our eyes or walk out of the room. If you haven't tried it already you will be pleased to hear that this homespun remedy will prove remarkably effective in helping to eliminate discomfort from the most serious symptoms of your present ailment - even though it remains unclear what role it might play (positive or negative) in the search for a long term cure.
Meanwhile, in the City yesterday I also had a chance to visit a Staples Superstore where I stocked up on a new batch of notebooks. Here's the poem I wrote to commemorate the occasion of my fifth day of news detox, now that I'm feeling a bit more upbeat and the extreme revulsion has all but disappeared:
Markings
Two black and blue
notebooks
I bought at Staples
today
Markings is what it says
On the receipt
That I promptly stuffed
Into my pocket
So eager was I
To make my first
markings
Reflecting our new reality
On the pristine page
As the time for
deductions
May come somewhat later
But time for close observation
Is already here
Because now we all can
feel
The world shifting
into higher gear
Reaching a
supercharged state
Volatile and
uncertain
Yes it’s the super
moon
About to break the
horizon line
(don’t you believe
@NeilTyson)
Everything is swollen
with portent
Far beyond its normal
size
Demonstrators
demonstrate
And agitators agitate
While the media still
bloviates
It’s not just the
ship of state
But all of reality that
seems
To be slipping the
moorings
Commencing to drift
away
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