You’ve always been the caretaker here

Recently, I texted a friend that I feel as though my life has been suspended in amber since March. You know, like those perfectly preserved insects and fossils? And this photo–taken accidentally as I was handing off our cat in the veterinarian’s parking lot yesterday–somehow captures that sentiment. My hair, I notice, has grown increasingly unruly; aside from trimming my own bangs, I haven’t had a haircut in nearly a year. Perhaps I never will again. Perhaps I’ll simply let it grow, on and on forever, in commemoration of the prolonged nightmare that has been 2020. I once read that the ancient Egyptians practiced a mourning ritual of shaving their heads and beards after the death of a loved one. This not only determined the duration of their mourning, which lasted until their hair grew back to its full length, but also allowed their bereavement to be recognized by others. How to mourn now, our staggering collective losses? How not to stumble naked through the streets? These are the questions that preoccupy me, along with others, many of which have been posed by my daughter on our routine rambles through the neighborhood:

Why are there so many Santas?

How do you fall in love?

Why does the bath make my nose go crazy?

When will you die?

And a personal favorite, voiced with indignation while watching “My Little Pony”: How can a unicorn STAND on a CLOUD? Clouds are made of VAPOR!!

So it appears she’s learning something in online school, after all (not, of course, that unicorns aren’t real, but that a cloud couldn’t support one’s weight?!?). I answer her as best I can, but she’s stumped me on more than one occasion. Per the title of this post, my days feel like a postmodern mashup of The Shining and “Bartleby, The Scrivener”. They vacillate between horror and comedy, rage and abstention. I find myself transfixed by the dead-wall revelry that is Zoom, this terrible flattening of ourselves, yet back away from any human I encounter in three dimensions.

How long can this go on?

The kids are alright

Or at least, they might be. In our doubling down on all things analogue during the pandemic (e.g. puzzles, charades, listening to records, etc.), my six-year-old has recently taken up roller skating. She practices in the empty lot of a now deserted business park, as our own neighborhood roads are too curvy and hilly for comfort. Watching her learn this new skill has been an unexpected delight. Like a newborn foal, she wobbles and lurches on her impossibly long legs before finding her center of gravity and nosing forward, then backward, and, often enough, straight down. Each time, she gets back up with a kind of relish that I’m beginning to understand, myself.

While the difficulties of pandemic parenting are legion, there are some sweet spots. I’m just not always in the frame of mind to appreciate them. But watching her try, and fail, and try again, to skate the other day reminded me so vividly of her first few steps when she was just learning to walk that my own knees gave a bit. I love every iteration of her, I thought to myself. What’s more, I will. This bearing witness, for I don’t know what else to call it, to her growth and change and fledgling autonomy is one of the incomparable joys of being a parent, and I’m not sure I would have experienced it in quite the same way–if at all–had the world not been knocked sideways by competing crises.