Monthly Archives: March 2020

The Corona Diaries

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Chapter IV: A New Hope

 

I awakened today to another missive reminding me of the New World Order. This time, it was from my dentist.

The letter said that, despite Los Angeles County’s shut down of all non-essential businesses, the office was permitted to operate by appointment-only (did it ever operate any other way? Were walk-in root canals common?). The county, the letter beamed, had determined “we are essential.”

At first I was mildly relieved. Good to know in an emergency.

Then I panicked. What is considered an essential business? I knew the malls were closed, but I hadn’t been in one of those in months. Same with schools, strip malls and airports. Again, I gave not a shit.

But the email got me thinking about individual businesses. Mom & pop shops. The auto mechanic. The small hardware store owner.

Just kidding. I thought about Jack in the Box. Image result for jack in the box

Where was I supposed to get my sausage croissant with hash browns? Or Tiny Tacos with hash browns? Or hash browns?

I hurried Esme into the batpod (my smart car) and we tore ass down Vanowen Street toward junk food junction, where a McDonald’s, Del Taco and Jack duke it out everyday.

As I neared the intersection, I could see bustle at all three establishments. In fact, the line of cars at Jack circled the building.  How long, I wondered, until more businesses added a drive-thru component? Think about it: How handy would it be to order staple items online at Ralph’s, pay for it, and have it freshly packed and refrigerated when you pick it up? Groceries are beginning delivery service, but wouldn’t it be better have them freshly packed and chilled, as opposed to sitting in the back of a stoner’s Hyundai while he gets to other customers?

Turns out, fast food is essential. Seeeeee, Mom? Told you.

Of course, that didn’t help me with my immediate problem: I was not going to wait in a line that resembled Disneyland’s.

Fortunately, I have what doctors refer to as “crapdar.” I can innately sense where junk food is being distributed, either in frozen, fast or microwaveable form. And I my crapdar had, months ago, ferreted out a Jack in the Box a little further north, tucked next to a shuttered car wash and adjacent to an Amtrak railroad line. I’ve always loved it, not only for its hole-in-the-wall emptiness, but I love the sound of a train. It’s the mainstay of any city surf, and I can hear it from my house. At night, the city surf can be as soothing as any beach, if you listen soft enough.

And, sure enough, there was no one in line. I ordered my Tiny Tacos and hash browns. As we waited, a train rumbled toward us.

The warning bells sounded, the barriers dropped. Traffic began to pile, waiting for the train to pass. It did, whistling loudly as it crossed the intersection. There was not a soul aboard.

Still, I drove home happy — particularly as I passed the dumbasses still in line at junk food junction. I recognized a couple cars that had not even made it to the order window yet.

As I pulled into the garage, it hit me: Those routines we follow, the habits we form, the familiar motions that serve as a security blanket against virulent winds. Many of those exist still. Right here. Within our reach. Maybe it’s a person. Maybe it’s an animal. Maybe it’s tiny tacos.

Regardless, recognize them. Embrace them. Celebrate them.

That is the true essential.

Wasted Away Again in My Coronaville

 

I got a text this morning: My medications were ready for pickup at CVS.

Unlike, say, toilet paper, for which you can find crude substitutes (Kleenex, generic sandpaper tissue,  unwitting bunnies), there’s no substitute for Mycophenelic Acid. I had tried so sign up for home delivery, but they must be overloaded at CVS: the system kept crashing like the DOW.

There was no getting around it. I would have to venture out. Into stores. Mingle with masses.

So I geared up before heading out. I guess this is the new normal. Shower, scrub, forego lotion (My skin is dry as hell, but figure a warm, dry animal picks up fewer germs than a warm, moist, sticky one. Who knows? Corona probably loves desert mammals.).

Next, time to tool up: I have dozens of rubber hospital gloves from my many stays. And, like hotel stays, I help myself to the freebies, including toilet paper. People tease me for rationalizing the theft, to which I reply: I figure they’ll screw me over in the bill, anyway. So, in a way, that’s my TP. Now I see I should have hit more lodgings.

So on with the gloves, beneath a pair of cloth gloves. Follow that with a face mask I pocket, along with extra masks and gloves in the car. I bring my iPhone and ear buds, either to wend to music or cover up two more face holes. At this point, who knows?

The drug store is a breeze. So easy, in fact, I head to the grocery store. What could possibly go wrong with pushing your luck during a pandemic, I figure.

The grocery store was PACKED. I drive by once to see the exiting pedestrian traffic, to determine if I should shop looking I’m like Doogie Howser, M.D., prepping for surgery. Image result for doogie howser surgical mask

Only a few were wearing masks, so I entered just in gloves. Still, I was concerned walking in that I’d get that look that screams Oh, you believe the fake news, huh?

Instead, I was surrounded by believer. Zealots, even.

One woman shopped in full winter apparel: coat, hat, gloves, muffler, scarf around her face. One man held a mask to his mouth while he one-handedly placed groceries in a basket. Another man, either  amused or angry, zipped through the aisles in a dirty t-shirt, cargo shorts and sock-less sandals, huffing as shoppers created traffic jams to accommodate social-distancing.

But most unnerving was the look on the faces of shoppers. No one made eye contact in that store. It became so apparent I made a nuisance of myself, pulling out the ear buds and trying to look every person in the eye and smile as they passed. No one noticed, though I’m sure it caught the attention of the security guards who now patrol the aisles, either to enforce a capacity limit or billy club toilet paper rioters. And that’s not hyperbole. Someone needed to smack some sense into these suburban survivalists:

Luckily, there were no brawls over butt wipes that day. But the lack of eye contact bothered me long after I left the store.

This is where we typically shine, isn’t it? Remember the first responders? The school- and club- and church-shooting fearless? The annual parade of Hurricane heroes?

Not here. Not yet. Maybe we are nesting with a vengeance. Maybe the last three years have been a not-so-subtle message: You’re on your own. Maybe we just need time getting a rhythm down with the New World Order.

Whatever the answer, I made a final stop at my equivalent of the Cheers bar, 7-Eleven. Nobody knows my name there, but they know my face.Image result for cheers bar norm

“How are you, brother?” I heard in a Middle Eastern accent. “Sorry for all the boxes.”

The store, like Ralph’s, was shoulder-high in boxes as suppliers tried to get goods to the distributors.

At the counter, the familiar cashier looked me in the eye and smiled. He began to pull out out plastic bags. Normally, they’re 15-cents a pop. But this cashier usually bags mine for free, unless the manager is around. Yeah, I’m kind of a big deal.

But as he tried to open a bag, his gloved hands could not get a grip on the plastic. He wore larger, bulky rubber gloves, the kind hot dog vendors wear when slinging weiners.Image result for hot dog vendor

“I should have gloves like yours,” he said, pointing to my latexed hands. Yeah, I thought, medical-grade shit is always high quality. I could probably be a black market glove dealer.

Instead, I put them to another use. “Do you mind?” he asked, gesturing at the still-closed bag.

“Not at all,” I said, opening the bag easily, courtesy of the Valley Presbyterian Center.

So we stood there, as the line grew behind us: He, carefully packing the bags, while I waited and opened each one.

“Thank you my friend,” he said. Again, eye contact and a smile.

Sooner or later, we’ll all find that rhythm again.

The Upside of Corona

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It’s hard to tell lately whether I’ve got COVID-19, or am just so depressed watching the news I make myself sick. Regardless, it’s hard not to see the latest alert (Breaking News: More Dead!) and just turn off the goddamn TV, play something loud enough to drown a literally virulent world, and settle in with your vice of choice. Or vices.

But a recent discussion with our Liminal Times editor — a bona fide scientist — got the HB thinking there may be an upside to corona. Several, actually:

  • People have started washing their hands. And sneezing into their elbows, and giving people their personal space, and thinking twice about going to work sick. Will we forget most of it? Probably. But we’ve heard plenty of conspiracy theorists griping about the over-inflated threat of coronavirus. That the flu kills 50,000 people a year. Good; those tips work on the flu, too. You know what’s never over-inflated? Becoming informed.Image result for coronavirus handwashing
  • The workforce will adapt to home-work more quickly.  We were already headed toward a work-from-home society, but so grudgingly it put us far behind other nations. Geezers like myself still don’t know how to work the InterTubes, and businesses remain skeptical about letting employees out of the building. Now neither have a choice but to adapt, and quickly if they want to stay afloat.Image result for coronavirus work from home
  • The Earth thanks us. According to the EPA, motor vehicles collectively cause 75 percent of carbon monoxide pollution in the U.S.  Collectively, cars and trucks account for nearly one-fifth of all U.S. emissions, emitting around 24 pounds of carbon dioxide and other global-warming gases for every gallon of gas. Have you been on the highway lately? We didn’t lessen our carbon footprint; we stripped down to bare feet. Image result for traffic jam 405 101

It’s silver-lining hunting, granted. But how about this nerded-out SlapFact: The average number of “good quality air days” in China’s industrial Hubei province increased 21.5% in February, compared to the same period last year, according to China’s Ministry of Ecology and Environment. InterTubes!

Like any worldwide existential threat, there’s downside to all of this thinking: We’re instead wiped out as the virus becomes airborne and we become skin-walkers.Image result for walking dead

However, we’ll leave that to the 24/7s. Have you watched lately? They should install an in-studio fainting couch in case Wolf Blitzer gets the vapors.Image result for wolf blitzer breaking news

But if we make it, we can come from this stronger. And don’t worry. You can still settle into your vices.