It is disconcerting to watch our blessed country tear itself apart and to see so many public figures, both left and right, committed to permanent dread and dismay, but I did feel that the January cold snap was a very good thing. Our autumnal December was disorienting and then I was in Kansas to do a show when the polar blast hit, a bracing Antarctic chill, and I felt the wind off the prairie — like being whacked by a two-by-four. It was a moment of reality and one is grateful for that. It was as if the planet was saying, “I’ve heard enough of your bellyaching about politics and the price of gasoline and social media and the state of public education — let me show you what actual suffering is like.” A warm van was waiting to take me back to the hotel. I was profoundly grateful.
The next morning I sat eating generic scrambled eggs and sausage and fell into convivial conversation with a couple from Oklahoma who were in Kansas for a friend’s wedding. I believe conviviality is more common when the temperature drops into single digits: total strangers drawn to each other by mutual suffering. “Traumatic bonding” it’s called. The two of them were hunters and gun-lovers. “Praise the Lord,” I thought. My friendship demographic has gotten awfully narrow as I careen into old age — I know too many English majors, no farmers or truck drivers — and it had been ages since I last conversed with gun-lovers: we don’t have many on the West Side of Manhattan. I enjoyed meeting them. They were very very nice people. She has an arthritic right shoulder and likes the AR-15 because it doesn’t have the recoil of other rifles. He is mechanically minded and loves the weapon’s design and precision. I put my oar in and mentioned that I feel safer in New York City with its large number of Unitarians and Reform Jews, all of them unarmed, than in Minnesota, and that I miss the old days before public schools became fortresses. They nodded. They hunt because it provides them with excellent meat with no nitrites or other additives, which they like. We parted on friendly terms.
I think the arctic blast facilitated our civility with persons whose opinions are crosswise to our own. The Florida boy who is setting the tone of incivility is no mystery: he is thriving, as cult leaders always have, by giving his followers an enemy, by setting brother against brother. He thrives on being despised by millions of people; the critical media is going down the Up escalator and he laughs at them in passing.
The Oklahomans said goodbye and I took a look at the Times, the headline “On the Ballot in Iowa: Fear. Anxiety. Hopelessness.” It made me happy not to be an Iowa Republican. I lived in Bettendorf for a year when I was a toddler and my life has gotten better and better ever since I left. I’m not especially fearful except that RFKJ might walk up, hand extended, and I’d feel obliged to shake it. I used to be anxious about dying young but now I’m 81. Like most Americans I am a stranger to hopelessness. Hopelessness is not a good motive for falling in love, raising children, or writing a novel. Or for voting.
The decent thing to do if you’re hopeless is to get good and drunk and stagger down the street spouting nonsense about vaccine and the FBI and see if anyone cares to put you into treatment. If not, problem solved.
At the airport, looking around the terminal and seeing all the flight cancellations and delays, I could see how cheerfully Midwesterners react to mutual inconvenience. It brings out the best in us. Clumps of strangers stood around happily complaining. One band of travelers had been stuck on a plane for several hours because the boarding door froze shut. I could see that this story would be told to everyone they meet in the next two weeks.
I’ve been doing shows on the road during this latest era of discontent and out of simple stubbornness I’ve walked out onstage and hummed a note and sung “America” and “America the Beautiful” and the audience was happy to sing with me. My audience includes some prickly conservatives and a good many condescending liberals and broken-hearted woke but they all know the words, and they sing beautifully together. Florida Boy begins his rallies with recorded music: not many people know the words, it’s just noise.
Florida Boy's recorded music is worse than just being "recorded music", not like his bizarre "dancing" to Y.M.C.A. What he plays is the recorded music of his choir (or band) of traitors, seditionists and felons who recorded themselves from prison singing something that he praises as he calls them "hostages." In a news article about his New Hampshire spewings, I read a quote from him in which he said that he has (paraphrasing from quote that is not in front of me now): "91 indictments, more indictments than Al Capone; you know Al Capone - probably the greatest mobster of all time. " He didn't say "worst mobster" or "notorious mobster" or any of the possible applicable adjectives. He said "greatest mobster." And for this "mobster" people in NH and NYC lined up to cheer and clap and get themselves quoted, yet again with these words, "He's doing it for us."
Wasn't there something in the Bible about scales on the eyes? About evil somehow putting scales on the eyes (reminiscent of the snake, the serpent, that ruined paradise)? Can't we send out an army of opthalmologists to check the eyes of the cult members, see if the scales can be removed?
Or even better: can't Florida Boy be sent to some really, really secure location back in Florida, and soon, somewhere where he can practice his "Be Best" mobstering alone and leave our country, and the world, out of his nefarious schemes?
And if the notion that trauma brings people together, why isn't the poisonous miasma he has spread over the country - profoundly traumatic - bringing citizens together instead of having the opposite effect? Honestly, I don't think it IS well with HIS soul and he's making all the rest of our souls pretty dang un-well, too!
Now you've gone and done it Garrison, you've made my day once again. This morning's writings have just the right amount of Subtle sarcasm about the upcoming election and the underlying tone of "the big lie" to satisfy my need for honesty, which is in very short supply. What got me out of bet this morning so early you may ask? Well, it is a posting I viewed just before going to bed last night by a front office worker at our very Catholic church here in Fremont Nebraska. I only spent a few seconds trying to understand the thrust of the document but what I gathered it was advertising was that the January 6th episode of three years ago never really happened, it was all a hoax. I've been seeing and hearing rumblings recently pointing in the same direction and have assumed is part of the plot to bring him back. I arose with the intent to take miss holier than thou to the woodshed for a bit of truthful spiritual conversation, I've now decided too not. Thanks, Garrison, for your words that talked me down off the ledge. rroeder