Dispatches from A Pandemic: When Time Runs Out

It’s as if the world has all been given a year or less to live. And we can’t even live out our days as if they were our last. Stay home. Don’t travel. Hawaii’s been closed for months, no Tahitian getaways on the schedule. No vacation planning or airline miles redeemed. Solitary confinement. “The only thing worse than Solitary,” texts my dad, who’s been on quarantine lockdown at his senior living community for six weeks, “is going back to Solitary.”

Like death row prisoners, we enjoy our last meals on earth.

**

March 16: Our health club closed its doors for the first time ever in their 40 year history. My last gym workout: hard and heavy in a near empty weight room, then a 20 minute swim. My friend Marcie swam for hours. Gliding through the silky blue water. The only one left in the pool. We both knew it was over.

**

“Everything I use to calm my fear and anxiety and stay sober—gyms, meetings, even grocery shopping at Whole Foods—has been stripped away,” moans Caroline B in the empty cyberspace of a virtual AA meeting.

Also: “Alcoholics will always find a way to drink, quarantined or not.”

**

Life has taken on the timeless quality of a casino; a memory care ward; mile 37 of an ultramarathon. Seconds pass like hours. We have all this time on our hands, but are crippled by inertia. The numbness this futureless state, living with no end in sight, not unlike my mother’s daily life in Alzheimer’s World..

The spaces between moments grow deeper. Time knows no hour. And now that we have an unlimited supply, time has become a commodity.

Dispatches From A Pandemic: Needless Things

  • Multitasking: Seems unnecessary when we have so much time
  • Clocks: We live in the moment. Does anybody really know what time it is? Does anybody really care ?
  • The News: Unless you absolutely thrive on worst case scenario speculation
  • Marathon Training: All races cancelled or postponed indefinitely. But hey, we can still run.
  • Restaurant Reservations: We’ve surrendered to curbside takeout. And, baking.
  • Vacations: For obvious reasons.
  • “Safe Travels” Greetings: See above.
  • Business Suits and Jimmy Choos: lululemon and Nike expecting a record profit this quarter.
  • Petsitting: We shelter in place, work from home, stay at home. Walking our own dogs. Cancel vacations.
  • Date books: Empty squares on a calendar. There. Is. Nothing. Happening.

prince charming

18 years today,
that long ago trip to City Hall in black tights, plaid skirt, a turtleneck—
not how you’d picture a wedding. My second
was the storybook one that lacked the storybook ending:
a harpist, ivy-covered trellis, golf course stretching
beyond the immediacy of “I do’s” on a Saturday afternoon (was it Saturday?)
green and rolling and lush like me
full of pre-ceremony Chardonnay, my hair
in an elaborate French twist. The dress
pure and white and
simple, showcasing chubby arms with unformed muscles
yet to be carved as they are now from twenty-one years of diligence and delight.

Third time’s the charm, I say and this brings wonder. There were
2 before:
2 husbands
2 weddings
2 failures
1 death—

And then,
1 miracle. Eighteen years is a record
a PR, we’d say, as runners, racing through life seeking the right path—
Mr. Right, found like a lost cat returned. I never put up
a poster

or want ad, it just
happened one day
in a charmless meeting hall. The man in Adidas
preaching sobriety to newcomers.
And when I asked, are you a fellow runner? he half-smiled—
never imagining the course
our lives would take.