Worrying About The Passage Of Time While Aboard A Giant Space Rock Floating Through A Seemingly Endless Universe

I’m in the midst of something. Not a crisis. Something less dramatic. A funk, maybe. I think it all started about three weeks ago.

I was running errands one afternoon, and ended up in my college town. I decided to take a detour and drive through campus, which–despite being only 25 minutes from my current apartment–is something I haven’t done since graduation.

The campus has grown and changed so much, but driving through it felt like muscle memory. It felt impossible to get lost. Every turn I took, every curve in the road, every poorly marked crosswalk jolted my memory. I suddenly remembered the names of streets I hadn’t driven or thought about in almost seven years. I saw students scurrying out of the lobby of my freshman dorm, books in hand. It must’ve been finals week. Ten years prior I was in that building studying for my first finals week. That was the week I became a coffee drinker. A whole decade ago. I stared at the window of my old dorm room. I could visualize the 18-year-old version of myself inside. Her hair is box-dyed a dark brown, likely tied up in a messy bun. She’s sitting too close to her laptop screen–a bad habit that will eventually take a toll on her eyes. Her first pair of glasses is just three years away. She’s sipping an oversized cup of coffee that she’s dumped too much sugar into–an addition to her drink that she will eventually, and thankfully, cut out. In a few hours, she’ll take a break from whatever paper she’s writing to go to the diner with a friend she keeps swearing is just a friend–she doesn’t know yet that that’s a lie.

There are a lot of things she doesn’t know. In some ways, I envy her. She is a type of carefree that you can only be at 18. She is blissfully naive. Selfish, in a mostly innocuous manner. Impulsive, in a sometimes innocuous manner. She has so much to look forward to. She hasn’t even met some of her very best friends. She’s going to fall in love! She’s going to move to New York! She’s going to get bangs!

This version of Cate doesn’t feel so distant, but I feel incredibly removed from her. She appears in my mind like a projection on a screen. She’s right there, but I can’t feel her. I can remember how she felt in terms of adjectives: stressed, tired, nervous. But the actual feeling is inaccessible. For a moment, I thought I might cry, but I wasn’t entirely sure why.


Two weeks after my campus drive, I met up with a friend I met in my freshman year dorm who remains one of the most important people in my life. We sat side-by-side at a bar for hours, sipping wine and giggling, cozy and protected from the rain pouring down outside. Her boyfriend–another treasured human in my life–eventually joined us.

“Maybe 2024 is the year I fall in love again,” I said to them both.
“Or maybe,” he paused to sip his martini. “It’s the year you fall in love with yourself.”
“No,” she whipped her head towards him. “She did that this year.”

Perhaps it’s the emotions of the holiday season, my lingering feelings from my trip down memory lane, or the fact we’re on our second (third?) bottle of wine–but for a moment, I again feel like I might cry. I’m bubbling with gratitude for these friendships. I remember a compliment she gave me earlier in the year. One of the best I think I’ve ever received. “The current version of Cate is my favorite version of Cate.”


On Christmas day, I learned that I’m going to be an aunt in just a few months. Huge, amazing news that left me feeling nothing but warm and fuzzy inside. But, as days went by, I realized the announcement was further stirring up whatever feelings had already been festering in my mind. Only a few years prior, in that same college town, I was in a dive bar racing my brother to see who could chug a pitcher of Natty Boh faster. That guy is going to be a dad with a real, live kid. I am going to be an aunt. My parents are going to be grandparents. Just like the afternoon on my college campus the week before, I felt suddenly very aware of the passage of time.

I expressed these feelings to a friend over dinner last night. She asked me if I thought my internal reaction was a result of feeling like some sort of responsibility or obligation came with my new title. That wasn’t it, I told her. I talked in circles for a bit while I tried to unravel the web of seemingly contradictory feelings dancing around in my brain. I finally landed on a coherent thought. I feel as if I received a promotion I’m unqualified for. As a kid, I always viewed my aunts, uncles, parents, grandparents as adult people who felt like adult people and knew how to handle this whole life thing like adult people should. “I think what it is,” I said to her. “Is that I’ve realized no one ever really knows what the fuck they’re doing.”


On New Year’s Eve, an old, familiar friend came to visit: that panicky feeling. I wasn’t all that surprised given that I had been grappling with a sudden, acute awareness of the passage of time, and this was a night entirely devoted to marking that passage. I was wearing a sequin dress and standing against a wall in a dimly lit bar–looking too cute for a bout of extreme anxiety, honestly. I could feel the panic sitting on my chest. It felt tangible. Thick and sticky–like mud on a shoe. I wanted to open myself up and rinse it away. A drink and a few deep breaths later, it diminished a bit.

Later that night, I was surrounded by family and friends in that same bar watching my brother’s band perform. In the excitement of their set, midnight came and went without a countdown. They did a belated countdown two minutes into the new year. I turned to my dad. “Eh, whatever,” I said. “Time is a construct anyway.”

I think again of the 18-year-old version of me, drinking her sugar coffee in her tiny dorm room, pulling all-nighters instead of just starting her paper when her professor told her to. I decided I wasn’t envious of her. The next ten years would hand her some really tough moments. She has no clue. And while I know that those hard moments will be really hard, I don’t want to protect her from them. If I could warn her in some Back To The Future-esque way, I wouldn’t. There will be times where she feels so broken. But she’ll figure it out and she–I–will continue to figure it out.

At this moment, I am somehow simultaneously exactly the same as I’ve always been and entirely different than I ever was. I am, like everyone else, a product of the emotional and physical wear and tear of life–somehow both a little bit more fragile and a lot a bit stronger. I am often confused, uncertain, and unbalanced. I am sometimes unkind and unfair to myself and others. I am learning, slowly, to recognize that these things are not blemishes on my identity, but important pieces of it. I am more whole because I’ve been broken. And that’s all I know right now.

Skills I Learned From Crying In Public

I’m coming to find that I love a good benchmark. I love marking a milestone with some reflection. New year, birthday, graduation, moving cities, etc. Maybe it’s Labor Day Weekend and the unofficial end of summer, maybe it’s the full moon, but something in me feels like a cycle is ending and it has me reflecting. There are a lot of thoughts shaking around in this noggin’ of mine. I’m going to attempt to share some. 

I want to preface this by saying that I never write these posts for anyone but myself. Meaning, there’s never an intended audience. Mostly because I don’t even know if they’ll be something I share until I actually write them. There’s just certain days or moments when some sort of thought or idea or emotion takes up space in my brain to the point I can’t do anything else until I try and write it down. Usually, this occurs at inopportune times. For instance, right now I am very hungry. But I know I gotta do this now, because it’ll keep distracting me until I get it down. Sometimes, the thoughts feel fairly clear and cohesive when I decide to write. Other times, they are jumbled and I wonder if anything even somewhat coherent will end up on this page. I feel like we’re dealing with the latter today. Whether I share the writing or not usually has nothing to do with whether I feel like it makes sense, it’s usually just whether or not it’s complete. There are a lot of word docs on my computer with half-finished, disjointed thoughts. If you’re reading this, I must’ve whipped something together. But I have a feeling this one might be a bit all over the place, so bear with me. 

We’re going to start this story exactly two weeks ago on August 16, 2023. I was halfway through a workout, out of breath and very sweaty, when my phone rang. It was my best friend’s boyfriend. Seth and I are pals, but not impromptu-Wednesday-afternoon-casual-chat type pals. I knew why he was calling before I even answered. He was calling to let me know he planned to propose to Ciara, and my eyes began to well with tears the second I saw his name pop-up on my phone. I even screenshotted the incoming call in case I needed it for a scrapbook or something later on. 

Let’s rewind even further to this time last year. I was on my family vacation and I cried probably every day. This was confusing for everyone, because I have never been the crier of the family. I have always been the one with the temper. A temper that started at a young age and, though it appears much less frequently these days (#maturity #emotionalregulation), is still feared by many. (Specifically Conor, but I did give him a black eye once so that’s definitely warranted.) All of this is to say that crying has never been my strong suit. Mostly because I hated doing it. I think I’ve shared this before, but crying made me feel weak. I worried about how those witnessing me crying would perceive me. I worried that I wouldn’t be taken seriously or respected by my peers if I cried. (There’s probably a larger rabbit hole I could delve into here about why I felt crying was overly emotional but being a rage-filled child wasn’t??? Might need to bookmark that.) That all changed in 2022 because I was sad basically all the time and I simply could not stop myself from crying. My eyes would leak without permission, whenever they felt like it. Truly a nightmare scenario for me. 

I cried on planes, trains, subways, and in my car. I cried in parks, on beaches, once on a zoom call with my professor (which then prompted a call from my program director LOL.) I mean, I wrote a whole ‘lil post about how much I cried in 2022. I cried a lot, and I stopped caring about how others perceived it because I simply could not control it. I was going to cry regardless, and I really just didn’t have the mental space to also worry about how others felt about it. This was a shift I made without really recognizing I was doing so. It was just necessary for my survival at the time. But despite emerging from a not-so-great moment of time in my life, this shift in my mindset gave me two incredible new skills: 1.) the ability to unapologetically just feel what I’m feeling and 2.) the ability to not fixate so much on what others think. 

Number one has come with a bonus skill, which brings me back to my phone call with Seth and those tears welling in my eyes before I even picked up the phone. Happy tears! The past few months have been filled with happy tears. So many happy tears. Some sad tears, too. But mostly happy tears. Happy tears are really beautiful, and I’ve used them a lot this summer. In July, one of my childhood friends got married, and I cried from dawn to dusk. My mom commented that there were moments when all the bridesmaids were smiling and looking angelic, and there I was ugly crying. Here’s some photo evidence: 

That’s the face of a gal who is learning to let the emotions flow. We’re (the “we” in question is just me. I don’t know why I constantly refer to myself like I’m some sort of support group with multiple members.) working on letting go of the “why am I feeling like this?” and embracing “Okay, I’m feeling like this so let’s feel it.” One of the many things my previous therapist taught me is that emotions don’t like logic. Attempting to talk yourself out of your feelings is a waste of time. And we all do it. Way too often I’ll have a friend preface an emotional statement with something like “I know this is dumb,” or “I know this doesn’t make sense,” or “I don’t know why this is making me so anxious,” or “I’m sorry, I don’t know why I’m crying.” Sometimes the why isn’t that important. The point is you’re feeling some type of way, so just let yourself feel that type of way. And maybe that means tears, happy or sad, anytime, any place (for the most part.) 

Number two in my new skillset is a real doozy. If you’re going to cry in public spaces, you have to learn to stop caring so much about what other people think. But this goes beyond crying alone next to the Christmas tree in Bryant Park while ice skaters twirl around to “(There’s No Place Like) Home for the Holidays.” This skill is applicable to more than just public displays of emotion. 

Not caring what other people think. Easier said than done–especially for those of us with any type of mental illness. And I truly don’t think this is a skill that can be mastered. It’s one that needs to be practiced and nurtured, and sometimes it’ll come easier than others. And when I say this, I don’t mean disregard others’ feelings. I’m solely speaking of the hyperfixation on how we’re being perceived. 

For example, if I were writing this a few years ago, I’d probably be thinking way too much about who might read it. And if I’m thinking about who is reading this, I might start thinking about how well it’s written or if I sound too vulnerable. Once I do that, I start censoring my words and thoughts. The result ends up being just a fraction of what I actually mean or what I actually want to get across. But like I said earlier, now I write these babies for no one, really. And I share them in case you want to read them. If you like them, awesome. If you don’t, that’s fine too. But I’m not going to waste time dwelling on who might be reading this and what they might think of it. Because let’s be honest, we all know how that game goes. Once an anxious mind starts questioning how others perceive you, there’s only one answer it’s going to come up with: everyone hates you and thinks you’re weird and annoying and all your friends are secretly mad at you and they have a group chat without you where they talk about you and everything you’ve accomplished up to this point has been a complete sham and you’re an imposter and everyone knows it. 

But once you learn to not care, just a little bit, wooooo weeeee it opens up a lot of doors. You can be more honest with yourself and with others. You can leave conversations feeling like you got across what you wanted to get across, which in turn allows you to move forward from conflict and let go of anger.  Healthier relationships with friends and family! A healthier relationship with yourself and your emotions! Whoooaaaa!!!! 

I want to be clear: I am not a pro at these skills. They are very new to me. I’m not out here living a worry-free life, unburdened by intrusive thoughts, unneeding of external validation. I don’t think that life exists, at least not for me. I like to remind myself that there is no one in this world who I’d want to spend every waking hour with. Even your favorite person in the world will start to annoy you after a while. Yet, we’re forced to spend every moment of our lives with our own minds. You can’t take space from yourself. You just gotta live with that bitch, and sometimes she’s really toxic!!! And when she’s annoying you, you’re going to start nit-picking. And if you’re annoyed with yourself, it’s very easy to convince yourself that everyone else is too. 

Just last week I called my friend Trish and said “Breaking news: Everyone hates me.” Those moments still happen, probably more than I’d like them to. But it helps me to remember that progress isn’t always linear. Things will ebb and flow. I know I’m still holding onto some anger and resentment. And I know there’s going to be a time in my life where I feel really shitty again, and there will be days when I really hate myself. But, there’s some comfort to be found in attempting to not take yourself so seriously and remembering that no one else in the world is as fixated on you as you are on yourself. Sometimes you just gotta look yourself in the mirror when you’re feeling like the scum of the earth, give yourself some finger guns, say “that’s showbiz baby!”, and keep on truckin’. 

Anyway, I really gotta eat something now. 

The Halfway Point

One night in early January, I was feeling exceptionally melancholy. I had just returned to New York after several weeks home for the holidays. I was ready to be back in the city. Being back in Baltimore had been delightful, but I was feeling maxed out on feelings. Warm, loving feelings from time spent with loved ones–yes, but also all the feelings that come from time at home.

There’s stress. Maybe from actual conflict or maybe from the fear of conflict–like your mind and body is continually on the defensive just in case someone decides to make a passive aggressive comment after a few glasses of egg nog. Maybe you just have no idea what to get mom for Christmas and it’s December 22.

There’s anxiety. Good and bad, but always annoying. Maybe from the build-up to seeing people you haven’t seen in awhile, even if it’s something you’re looking forward to. Maybe it’s from a routine text from that hometown SLC (stupid little crush) that makes you spiral like a teenager. Or, maybe it’s just from a prolonged period at your parents house in your former bedroom that is now a multipurpose room.

There’s grief. Maybe it’s grieving the loss of someone, an absence unavoidably noticeable by an empty seat at the family dinner table. Maybe it’s grieving what was or what is. The acknowledgement of loved ones getting older, the whisperings of selling the family home, or just the realization that things will never again be how they are right now.

Like I said, I was maxed out on feelings. As I welcomed in 2023, it was time to do what my friend Trish and I like to call “Run away to New York.” It’s not that innovative, and pretty much all in the name. It’s simply the act of leaving all your hometown holiday feelings at home and running back to your second home without properly processing any of the aforementioned hometown feelings. This is not at all a scientifically-backed solution and to be completely honest, it doesn’t work at all. But it’s a nice idea in theory.

So, back to my melancholy night. It was a chilly evening, as winter evenings in New York tend to be, and I was heading home from a show on the Lower East Side. My AirPods were in (Transparency mode for safety, don’t worry mom!!) and I had one of my Spotify Daily Mixes on shuffle. I had been distracted all evening. It felt like I had one foot in New York, and the other lingering in the feelings–because I guess I really thought my geographic location would allow me to rid myself of unprocessed emotions. But here they were. Stress, anxiety, grief–the bitches were back. Or did they ever leave?

It’s very easy to pretend you’re in a movie montage when walking in New York, especially while wearing leather pants and a pea coat. If this was a scene in a movie, it’d be the crossroads our character finds herself in right before her big break! She’s feeling confused, uncertain about the future. She’s a bit down, but not necessarily depressed. There would definitely be a meet-cute or big job offer in the next 20-30 minutes of the film. For me though, the next 20-30 minutes involved a pensive walk down Bleecker Street, a respite from the cold in the warmth of the subway station, and a quick ride uptown on the six with all the usual late-night subway characters. During this brief trip, a song I had never heard before came on. It wasn’t until the first chorus that I really noticed the lyrics.

Take me home, I feel homesick
I don’t know, where I’m going
Too many faces, but none I know
And I’m alone on the Subway home
On the Subway home

Part of my melancholia, I think, had to do with the start of a new year–especially on the heels of an incredibly emotionally taxing year. I had set an expectation for myself. We’ll call it a redemption year. No longer burdened by some really heavy shit, I’d do all the things! Be so successful! All the outfits I planned in my head would turn out looking exactly how I envisioned when I put them on! But, alone on the subway home, I decided it was time for me to go home to Baltimore indefinitely. A decision made solely for financial purposes, but one that still felt right.

You might be thinking “Cate, is this really another story about leaving New York?” To that I say no, dear reader, it is not. You might be thinking “Holy shit we’re this far in and you haven’t gotten to the point yet?” To that I say no, dear reader, I have not.

Fast forward to June 8 at 3:47PM (aka this very moment.) My hometown has once again become just home, no longer a comfortably familiar, yet escapable, holiday destination. Some of those hometown feelings are still exclusive to the hometown. For example, worrying I’m going to run into my ex at Harris Teeter. But others are just life feelings, life emotions. Ignorable maybe for a period of time, but never truly escapable.

I’ve cozied up to the emotions. I’ve learned to let them have their moment. Partially, because I have a lot more time alone now. I used to hate time alone. Probably because that’s when these feelings and emotions were the loudest, and I didn’t know how to cope. My mind was not my favorite choice of company–a real bitch to me at times to be completely honest–which would result in me feeling incredibly lonely. I started seeing being alone and being lonely as the same thing. Now, I spend more time alone than I probably ever have in my life. My mind simply cannot be avoided, but we’re on better terms. I was shutting her down for awhile, but we’re coexisting fairly well these days. I am very often alone, but very rarely lonely.

I also realized that these “holiday emotions,” as I once referred to them, didn’t have the opportunity to exist for a long time. The heavy shit and the big emotions I dealt with for most of the previous year took precedence, forcing these smaller, but no less significant, emotions to take a backseat. These–we’ll call them backseat feelings–are not overwhelming and all-consuming, as many of my emotions were for so long, but they are there. And I don’t run away from them, because I know they’re persistent and will make themselves known eventually. I let them have their moment to shine, I feel them, I process them, and I let them go.

Things in my life right now are status quo in the best way. The presence of my backseat feelings means the heavy stuff has become lighter. I’m no longer in emergency mode. I have the mental and emotional space to stress about minor things–a passive aggressive comment from a family member, an ignored text, or maybe the day-after regret of being a ‘lil too generous with your credit card at the bar. And, as weird as it may sound, I think that type of status quo stress and anxiety is something to celebrate–be proud of, even.

Six months into the year, and I am grateful for the status quo–though I’m still trying to let go of the part of me that is constantly waiting for something to go wrong. It’s a work-in-progress. I also know that it has not been a status quo six months for a lot of important people in my life. Three of my closest friends lost their dads–and I’ve watched them navigate a new, complicated, difficult, and very un-backseat feelings version of grief. There is truly nothing I, or anyone, can do to remedy this type of grief. But again, I am once again thankful for my status quo–for the freed up space in my own mind that I can now offer up to the same people who let me take up some of their emotional and mental space when I needed the storage. I hope that, in some way, I am able to help them carry those heavy feelings and that slowly, over time, the emotional weight becomes a bit lighter. And then we’ll keep returning the favor back and forth for our lifetimes. It’s really great to have people you love so much that love you so much back.

SO, here we are, nearing the end (I promise) of my disjointed emotional reflection essay. It is the sixth month of the year, and the halfway point always feels like a good time for a check-in. June also happens to be my birth month, so I am also closing out my 27th lap around the sun–another reason for some reflection! I don’t really have a good way to conclude this bad boy, so I’ll end with a few bullet point thoughts on/lessons from the past six months.

– Emotional regulation > emotional avoidance
– Reframing your idea of success can do wonders for your well-being and self-esteem
– Natty Boh is a good beer
– The NHL season is really long (spent time with a record number of Canadians this year)
– Why did Succession, Ted Lasso, and Mrs. Maisel all have to end at the same time?
– Taylor Swift is an incredible performer
– Cliche statement but it really resonates with me in this current chapter: Life is short and unpredictable and you should just tell people how you feel. Tell the people who are important to you that they’re important. Say I love you! Send a ‘lil cute text! Remind your friends how wonderful they are! Do it all!

One Time I Lived In New York

Two years ago, I was losing it. I had just signed a lease for an apartment in New York. I had two weeks to pack up my shit while also working while also kicking off my second semester of grad school. On top of it all, I was also absolutely terrified of moving. Like, panic attacks everyday type of terrified. My dad asked what I was scared of and I listed all the things. All the “what ifs” that were plaguing my mind. He said “Listen, you’re never going to regret going. But you’ll always regret it if you don’t try.” And I think I knew that deep down, but needed to hear it from someone else—more specifically, I probably needed to hear it from my dad.

So, one February morning I boarded a train with one of my lifelong friends, with nothing but a dream and a bottle of Ativan in my pocket!!! (That’s a lie. There was an entire moving truck.) What followed were two of the best, most transformative years of my life. 

Today, I’m on a train headed in the opposite direction. The city that now feels like a second home is growing smaller in the distance. And I’m crying on the train because it’s so hard to leave. I never thought it’d be so hard to leave. 

To be frank, everything I told my dad I was scared of happening actually did happen. I had some of the hardest months of my life in New York. But I survived it. And today, sitting on this train headed back to my home city of Baltimore, I can say that I feel more whole than I ever have in my life. 

I realize it’s a cliche to be a 20-something writer who lived in New York for two years and say things like “The city changed me!” Put me on a fire escape with a journal and a pack of Newports and you’ve got the quintessential New York transplant stereotype. But, I don’t think New York changed me. No offense to the beautiful rat-infested city, but it’s just a city. New York simply acted as a catalyst for my ‘lil self-growth journey. New York didn’t change me, but I changed in New York. Or, maybe change isn’t the right word. I just grew into a better, stronger version of me. And maybe that could’ve happened in Milwaukee or Iowa or Fort Lauderdale (lmao), but thankfully it happened in one of the coolest places ever surrounded by some of the best people I’ve ever met. 

Yesterday, I hugged my roommate and dear friend of 20+ years goodbye. I simply could not have done the past two years without her. Having lifelong friends is so special. Having life long friends that move to a new city with you and turn into tremendous roommates is even cooler. She’s seen a lot the past few years. And I am so grateful for her and all of the silly, stupid antics we’ve gotten ourselves into. Some really cherished mems with that one!!! 

Last night, two of my favorite humans helped me finish packing and we ordered pizza and had a slumber party in my living room. Two years ago, I barely knew these gals, and now I cannot imagine living life without them. We barely slept at all and we felt delusional all morning. When the movers left and my apartment was emptied, we had breakfast at the diner and laughed until we cried. They hugged me goodbye on the corner of my street next to our favorite chicken nugget spot. I walked to Penn and took 3 million pictures of my favorite neighbor (The Empire State Building.) And now, here I am, shedding a few more tears on Amtrak. (This is not the first time I have cried on Amtrak.) 

But, today is not a sad day. It’s actually a really great day. All the sadness is because I have all these people who I love and who love me, and it sucks that I won’t be near them. Truly, that is something to celebrate. And, I’m headed back to my sweet, sweet Baltimore. Which is filled with more people who I just adore. This is really a win-win situation for me. 

As you can see, I’ve got a lot of feelings today. I am also very sleep-deprived and kinda feel like I’m living in a simulation today. But, the moral of the story is that I am simply filled with gratitude for all that I’ve gained that past two years. It’s been one hell of a ride. Until next time: I love ya, New York.

I Cried A Lot in 2022

Holy smokes! It’s been awhile since I’ve popped on here. But I, like many others, am facing the ceremonial end-of-year reflection period, and it seemed like a good time to (finally) write a few things down.

This year was a real doozy for me. The first week of 2022, my seven year relationship came to an end in a Kohl’s parking lot. So, clearly I really started things strong. What followed was a lot of tears. I’m sure I garnered some sympathetic looks from other drivers who may have witnessed me belting Taylor Swift behind the wheel, while frantically wiping away tears so that I could actually see the road. (Luckily, I headed back to New York the following week where I cried on public transit–which is much less hazardous than behind the wheel.) I cried all the time. If you’ve been in my life awhile, you know that this is not my usual vibe and it was an extremely difficult thing to get accustomed to. Shoutout to my roommate who found me dozens of times just going about my day with tears streaming down my face. She did a really good job pretending that such behavior was completely normal and not uncomfortable for her at all. She’s a really good person.

Anyway, what I learned shortly after my breakup is that my post-breakup recovery would be 900 times more difficult than I could’ve imagined. Which isn’t to say I was expecting it to be a walk in the park. But I truly did not anticipate the extent to which my heartbreak would infiltrate my life. I think I always felt that the term heartbreak seemed a bit dramatic. And it is, but it’s accurately dramatic. Because heartbreak feels as dramatic as the word sounds, which I’m sure anyone who has gone through it can attest to. It is painful and sometimes debilitating–mentally, emotionally, and physically.

Heartbreak is grief. Which I learned would also mean much more than grieving the end of a relationship. I would not just be mourning the loss of the person I thought was my person, I was mourning the loss of the person I was with that person. I was mourning the loss of a future I envisioned for myself. I was mourning a sense of self, and safety, and comfort.

If you’ve ever had to write anything, you’re probably familiar with what is almost always the longest and most frustrating part of the writing process–something I like to call the word doc face-off. This is the period before anything has actually been written. It’s when you sit on your computer with a blank word document trying to come up with something to write. Like that episode of Spongebob when he’s attempting to write his boating school essay. Maybe you write a sentence, but then decide it sounds stupid so you delete it. Until inspiration strikes and you’re actually able to put words on paper, all that’s there is a blinking cursor on a blank page waiting for its story to be written. For the majority of 2022, I felt like a blinking cursor. Lonely and confused and uninspired and sometimes completely directionless. It left me anxious and insecure and really, really sad.

Again, if you know me well, you probably know that emotional vulnerability–much like crying (not a coincidence)–has never been my strong suit. I’ve always felt that being emotionally vulnerable was too risky. Like I was exposing a weakness that could be taken advantage of. A year ago, writing something like this and sharing it with whoever decides to read this would simply not happen. Which obviously means ya girl did some growing, because here I am doing the damn thing.

I can’t pinpoint when the shift occurred, probably because it happened slowly over many, many months. But there was one day in late-August while I was on vacation with my family when I came to terms with the fact that I was still looking for someone else to help heal my wounds for me. I was searching for closure externally from someone who had made it very clear that he no longer felt I was entitled or deserving of his time. So, I sat alone on the beach in the late afternoon, and I cried until the front of my sweatshirt was very damp. (I had become much more comfortable with public crying at this point.) My salty tears mixed with the salty air and I started to feel a bit lighter, like the weight of some of my sadness was washed out to sea. And then I stood up, red-eyed and puffy-faced, and I walked back to our vacation rental and I had a glass of wine and life continued on and I was okay. I would be okay.

There were sometimes (a lot of times) this year where it felt like I was moving backwards. I had to confront a lot of things and feelings I’d been avoiding. I had to learn and unlearn a lot. I had to find new ways to cope with my anxiety and panic. I had to figure out how to better care for myself by myself. But eventually, the blinking cursor on my blank word doc started moving across the page with little to no deletions. Eventually, I stopped trying to get back to my old self and started cozying up to the new me, and she’s actually pretty cool.

Is there a moral to this story? Not really. Other than the fact that I’m now finally able to put some of this into words, and a little less afraid of vulnerability. And also that I’ve come to find that when love leaves you in one way or another, it’s always replenished. I’m not sure I can adequately put into words the extreme gratitude I have for the friends and family (and my brilliant therapist) who helped put me back together this year. It truly was a group effort, and definitely not an easy one.

So, here’s to a new year, and stepping into it a little more whole and a lot bit stronger. As my good friend Kohl’s often says: expect great things.

The Next Plague Is Going to Bug You

Ah, New York City in the summer. Hot, humid, sweaty, and smelly. After what’s felt like a lifetime, many New Yorkers are now vaccinated and ready to finally emerge from their quarantine cocoons and spread their post-pandemic wings. But beyond city limits, something else is emerging. Not to be an alarmist, but the next plague is upon us, and it’s straight out of the book of Exodus. 

Unfortunately, no, this is not a joke. As if the past year hasn’t been enough of an apocalyptic nightmare, many states are just a few weeks away from an actual plague of locusts. Okay, technically they’re called “periodical cicadas.” When soil levels reach 64 degrees Fahrenheit, billions (not hyperbole) of these horrendous creatures emerge from the ground where they’ve been chilling for the last 17 years and take over the world (at least that’s what it feels like). There are several “broods” of periodical cicadas across the United States, which come around every 13 or 17 years. Sometimes their presence can go largely unnoticed, but the brood that is emerging this summer, known as Brood X, is famous for being one of the largest swarms of cicadas in the world. 

If you think New York in the summer is uncomfortable, you’ve likely never experienced a “cicada year,” as they are more commonly known. I, unfortunately, know the horrors of Brood X personally. When I was 10-years-old, I experienced my first and only cicada year. My parents warned my siblings and I about what we would experience that coming summer. The last time Brood X emerged was the year my parents got married, and my mom told us stories about their wedding photographer having to remove cicadas that had latched themselves to her lace veil. We braced ourselves for the impending invasion.

In late spring the first signs of Brood X began to appear. As they started tunneling their way out of their underground hibernation, small holes appeared in the flower beds beneath the trees in our yard. My sister and I attempted to solve the issue by spending an afternoon filling in all the holes with soil. But, much to our dismay, our best efforts to deter Brood X were unsuccessful. By early June, here were giant bugs everywhere, 2-3 inches in length with horrifying, red beady eyes. They’d fall from trees onto my head, or food, or into my drink. I can remember riding my Schwinn down the hill at the top of my street, with the hot June air dramatically blowing through my side-pony and The Lizzie McGuire Movie soundtrack blasting from my Walkman, when, out of nowhere, my Disney Channel-worthy summer montage would be interrupted by a cicada hitting me square in the face—the collision was usually lethal for it, and always gross for me.

Cicada years are so bad, in fact, that in 2004, I swore I would live somewhere cicada-free when they emerged again in 2021. Which is why I’m urging you to wait a few more months before you venture beyond the safety of New York City. 

Oh, what? You’ve been looking forward to escaping the sounds of the city? Yes, between the sirens, construction, drunk yelling, and upstairs neighbors doing whatever the hell they do up there, there is no shortage of noise in New York City. But I would argue that being woken up at the crack of dawn to the sound of giant bugs screaming for sex is slightly worse. The mating call of these cicadas—an obnoxious high-pitched buzzing sound—can reach 100 decibels. For reference, city traffic and leaf blowers are typically between 80-85 decibels. 

And if you believe there is nothing worse than having water from an air conditioning unit drop down your back as you walk down the street, I can promise you there is something worse. I think you know where I’m going with this. Imagine trying to walk from your car to your house, and, all of a sudden, an ugly, winged, red-eyed insect drops from a tree and falls on your head, or down your back, or, at the very worst, into your cleavage. 

Perhaps the only thing worse than the actual cicadas, is the cicada merchandise. During cicada years, the cicada theme seems to be every local businesses’ marketing tactic. There are cicada t-shirts, cicada jewelry, and cicada figurines. Local bars attempt to incorporate cicadas into the names of their specialty drinks or the clever little quotes they put on their sidewalk chalkboards. And as if everything about a cicada year isn’t fucked up enough on its own, some people will actually make cicada food. No, not cicada-themed food. I mean actual snacks and dishes containing cicadas. I’m talking chocolate-covered cicadas, candied cicadas, cicada kebobs. A few years ago, one ice cream shop in Missouri actually sold ice cream containing candied cicadas, an endeavor that health officials quickly shut down. 

The good news is that the Brood X nightmare doesn’t last long. The party typically starts in late May. After they mate, the male cicadas die (#dramatic), and the females follow suit once their eggs hatch. The new cicadas then head underground where they’ll hangout until they harass us again in 2038. By mid-July, the only evidence left of Brood X is their exoskeletons, which they leave behind as a fun little parting gift. So thoughtful. 

Brood X will pop up in 15 states, including parts of New York. But, miraculously, the cicadas are considered extinct in New York City. (I guess even they hate the city in the summer.) New York City is a cicada-free haven. While there are plenty of things to hate about summertime in New York City, giant, flying, yelling, red-eyed, sex-crazed bugs are not one of them, and I think we can all consider that a win. 

Getting Lit: How One Iconic Christmas Tree Became Twitter Famous

It was late November, 2010, when Matt Haze saw a photo of a 74-foot Norway Spruce strapped to a large flatbed truck. The tree was leaving its home of Mahopac, New York, a town of less than 8,500, and making the 50-mile journey to New York City. This lucky tree scored the job that many saplings dream of but only few achieve: becoming the Rockefeller Center Christmas Tree. 

In many ways, the story of the Rockefeller Center Christmas Tree is a typical rags to riches tale about a small-towner making it big in New York City. But this particular Cinderella story is (sorry) evergreen. Despite the repetitive nature of the tale (small town tree gets lit in the big apple), the lighting of this tree still seems to captivate the nation each year—even earning an annual primetime TV special. But this wasn’t always the case. In fact, that day in November ten years ago, Haze thought that the tree was missing an opportunity. Like any big celebrity in the digital age, it needed a social media presence. 

Haze took matters into his own hands and created @30RockTree, the unofficial Twitter account of the Rockefeller Center Christmas Tree. Its Twitter bio says it all: “Like I need to tell you who I am. The original social media influencer. The photos lie. I look better in person.”

Holiday tree outline

The world’s most famous Christmas tree has some fairly humble roots. It all started on Christmas Eve in 1931. Much like 2020, the United States was nearing the finish line of a less than ideal year. It was the height of the Great Depression, The Dust Bowl was plaguing much of the southern portion of the Great Plains, and to top it all off, the end of Prohibition was still two years away. In need of some holiday joy, workers at the Rockefeller Center construction site all chipped in to buy what would be the first Rockefeller Center Christmas Tree: a 20-foot balsam fir adorned with homemade decorations. Two years later, the first official Rockefeller Center Christmas tree was lit. Now, once a year, the tree becomes one of New York City’s biggest celebrities. 

The story of a small town tree being suddenly thrust into the spotlight was what caught Haze’s attention, who was relatively new to the city when he started researching the tree’s history. “The story about the tree itself becomes part of the ambience,” says Haze. “It comes from this small town, and this family donated it, and you realize it’s kind of made into a big star. It’s as if you’re taking a nobody from a small little town into New York and making it a big star. And I realized there’s a whole character with that.”

On the outside, the tree exudes elegance. Draped in over 50,000 lights and topped with a Swarovski crystal star, there is likely no tree as glamorous. But don’t let looks fool you—the tree’s online persona is a bit rough around the edges (and not because of the pine needles). “Currently being adorned with an amazing crystal star that’s worth more than your home and weighs more than your emotional baggage,” one tweet reads. 

The tree isn’t afraid to get topical. Case in point: a tweet from earlier this year. “Since there’s no crowd here to boo Mayor de Blasio, I dropped some sap on his head. You’re welcome, New York. ❤ u,” the tree tweeted during the December 2, 2020, tree lighting ceremony, which, like most traditionally large events, did not allow a crowd this year. 

Today, the tree’s Twitter account has more than 13,000 followers. That number was considerably smaller until just a few years ago. Things started to pick up in 2017 when Metro New York, a free daily newspaper now known as AM New York Metro, published the headline “The Voice Of The Tree” on its front page, along with a photoshopped image of Haze’s face on a Christmas tree. While the story helped earn the tree’s twitter account some attention, it was a public feud with another Rockefeller Center celebrity that really gave its following a boost.

Holiday tree outline

Despite having some of the best real estate in Manhattan, the tree still has plenty of complaints about its neighbors. “To the NBC employees in 30 Rock peeping out their window and staring at me: That’s creepy. Get back to work,” reads a tweet from 2014.

The online sass towards NBC employees is what sparked a Twitter “feud” between America’s favorite Christmas tree and America’s favorite weatherman, Al Roker, following the 2019 Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade. It started when a parade volunteer in a butter costume kept interrupting Roker’s live shots. The butter battle quickly became viral on social media. “Fun fact: I paid the stick of butter to annoy @alroker on TV. Oh, it’s on, my friend,” @30RockTree tweeted following the incident. Roker responded five days later: “I am coming for you, thank you very mulch.” 

It’s no surprise a quarrel between two of New York’s highest-profile celebrities quickly gained press. A few days after the feud began, it was a topic of conversation on the 3rd Hour of TODAY. “You’ve been in this war with the tree since the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade,” said Dylan Dreyer, one of Roker’s co-hosts. “Well, the tree started it,” replied Roker. 

This year, Roker took the first shot. “Oh, how I have been pining for you, @30RockTree,” he tweeted the day the tree arrived at its holiday home in Rockefeller Plaza. The tree struck back: “We’re all happy you are home recovering from your surgery, but needling me with a ‘u up?’ text at 1:36 in the morning? Go to bed.” 

Holiday tree outline

Managing fame is not an easy task, and Haze now knows this firsthand. The job of social media manager became increasingly more difficult as the tree’s social media following continued to grow. It was no longer a one man job. Managing the online reputation of such an outspoken and notable figure required a team. Luckily, a long-time friend of the tree was willing to help out. 

Robyn Roth-Moise is a born and bred Manhattanite, a photographer, and the great-granddaughter of the renowned New York architect Emery Roth. The Rockefeller Christmas Tree has always been special to her. Roth-Moise began ice skating at Rockefeller Center at the age of three, and often skated  at the tree-lighting ceremony as a child. She is still a season pass holder at the Rockefeller Center Ice Rink. 

It was around 2015 that she first stumbled across the @30RockTree account. Her time spent at the ice rink meant she had plenty of access to the tree, which made it easy for her to snap pictures. She started tweeting the photos and tagging the tree, and eventually became the unofficial photographer for the unofficial Twitter account of the Rockefeller Plaza Christmas Tree. It wasn’t until 2017 that Haze and Roth-Moise first met face-to-face. Keeping with the theme, they made plans to rendezvous at the Rockefeller Center Christmas Tree site. 

Roth-Moise acknowledges that the tree’s taunting can be off-putting to some. But for her, it’s part of the charm. “I know that there are definitely people who had to get insulted. But then you have no sense of humor, if you’re getting insulted.”

With Haze now living in Puerto Rico, Roth-Moise, along with a small team of unnamed sources close to the tree, are his eyes and ears on the ground. While Roth-Moise primarily handles photography, other sources feed Haze important information, which allows him to get ahead of potential stories.

Sometimes, part of the job involves dealing with bad press. And, for a symbol known for bringing hope and joy, there may be nothing more humiliating than getting bad press in a year already bursting with negative news. 

Holiday tree outline

What does it take to be a Christmas tree? Essentially, there is only one requirement: to look good. This year more than ever, many were craving the joy and familiarity brought by the beautiful and sparkling Christmas tree at Rockefeller Center. Which is why when the 2020 tree was finally unveiled after its road trip to the city, New York, the nation, and the world were in utter shock. The tree, like many of us this year, looked disheveled, tired, and all around sad. 

After a series of negative articles were published about the tree’s not-so-festive appearance, Haze was tasked with reputation management. “Rockefeller Center’s scraggly Christmas Tree deemed ‘a metaphor for 2020,’” read a Washington Post headline. “Peak 2020: Early Christmas cheer hilariously crushed by ‘saddest’ Rockefeller Christmas tree,” declared USAToday. Twitter users drew comparisons to the Charlie Brown Christmas Tree. More criticism erupted when images emerged of branches being added to the tree. (“They always trim it and add fake branches. They do that every year. That’s nothing new,” says Haze.) @30RockTree clapped back: Yes, they’re adding branches to me. I’m getting extensions. So what? Who in New York City hasn’t had a little work done? (anyone that says “not me” is lyyyyiiiiing).”

Haze admits that being the social media manager for such a public figure is no easy feat (it also doesn’t pay well). There were several years where he considered completely throwing in the towel. His reasoning for keeping up with the account for so long is solely based on the joy it brings others, specifically after this year. “It’s not about me, it’s about the people that read it,” says Haze. “If I can add a laugh for people, if I can be able to share that with people and they get a kick out of it, then great. That’s definitely worth the time.”

When the tarp and scaffolding were finally removed, this year’s tree proved the critics wrong. The tree emerged from the makeover just in time for its primetime special, looking as camera-ready as ever. Over 1,500 miles from Rockefeller Plaza, Haze was stationed in his living room, live-tweeting the tree’s commentary of the event for the tenth consecutive year. When the festivities concluded, @30RockTree posted once more before calling it a night, tweeting out the before and after of its 2020 transformation along with a few words of wisdom.  

“It’s been a rough year. Our world was turned upside down. You may feel like how I arrived here two weeks ago. I feel you. But remember one thing: If *I* can do this, so can YOU. Now go make it happen.” Sporting its classic multicolored lights and signature crystal star, America’s favorite Christmas Tree was ready to provide some much-needed holiday magic. All it took was a little sprucing.

In 2020, I’m Surrendering to the Holiday Season

I’ve always been against premature holiday decorating. I’m the person who announces “It’s only October!” when I see ornaments and lights lining the aisles of Target before kids have gone trick-or-treating. Don’t get me wrong, I love the holidays. As soon as the Thanksgiving leftovers are distributed, you’ll find me breaking out my Christmas pajamas and blasting Mariah Carey’s “All I Want For Christmas Is You.” But, to me, November is an integral part of the holiday season. If December is the headliner, November is the opening act. 

The problem is, this is not the November I wanted. The November I wanted was on a couch with my girlfriends, drinking cheap wine and complaining about our mundane problems. The November I wanted was punctuated with a crowded Thanksgiving table, groaning when my mom would delay the meal by making us all go around and say what we are thankful for. The November I wanted was followed by a December in New York City, watching cheesy holiday movies on the couch in a too-small apartment. 

But the November I received is much different. Today, I sat at the desk in my childhood bedroom at my parents’ home in Baltimore. A press conference from the Maryland governor played in the background. He’s warning us about the surge of coronavirus cases. “The weeks and months ahead will be difficult,” he said. Every so often, my phone would buzz with an election update. This just in: two days later, the race is still too close to call. The reality is, there will be no cozy nights with friends or crowded Thanksgiving tables this November. In a year when the norm is exceedingly abnormal, I’ve decided to break my own rules. 

What I’ve realized is, I am craving the familiarity that comes with the holiday season. There’s something comforting about seeing the same old ornaments, illuminated by twinkling white lights on a tree in my parents living room. It’s the type of comfort triggered by the things that never fail to bring joy. Like a lifelong friend, it’s a feeling you can depend on. It’s the same comfort I felt hearing a Springsteen song when I was feeling homesick in college or eating my mom’s spaghetti and meat sauce after a bad day. It’s the type of comfort that feels steadying when everything else is spiraling. It’s nostalgic, but less melancholic. It feels normal.

Perhaps the normalcy of it all is what makes it so comforting. It’s the same way a Springsteen song or a spaghetti dinner doesn’t transport me to an exact childhood memory, but rather a myriad of moments or meals spent in the backseat of the family minivan or seated at the dining room table. There’s no singular, extraordinary holiday memory that brings comfort. Instead, it’s 25 years’ worth of Decembers filled with conventional but joyful moments. And after the year we’ve had, we all deserve to indulge in those simplistic and dependable joys. Which is why I’m waving the white flag. My war with premature Christmas decorating is over, at least for 2020. I look forward to the November when my biggest quarrel is once again the holiday décor in Target. But, until then, I plan to surrender to life’s ordinary comforts, and that includes putting on Christmas pajamas before Thanksgiving. 

COVAL-19?

Last Monday, my mom coughed. My sister and I looked at her with wide eyes and slowly backed away six feet. “It’s just allergies,” she said. 

That night my mom found out that she had been in contact with someone with COVID-19. The following morning her cough got worse, then came the fever, so she called her doctor. Her doctor sent her to a drive-up test site, where my mom received the sinus swab that she claimed “wasn’t so bad.” She was told to self-isolate until she received her test results, which they said to expect in 3-4 days. 

The rest of us (my dad, my sister, and I) felt fine, but we still had to self-quarantine. Since we were already working from home, our routine didn’t change much. I attended an online birthday celebration, hosted a PowerPoint party on Zoom, and Maddie and I made great progress on our puzzle. The big difference was that we couldn’t go anywhere, not even for necessities. It seemed doable since the results of mom’s test would only take a few days, but then my brother Chris needed a ride to his CT scan and none of us could take him. And then we ran out of dog food and milk, and my mom ate her last piece of chocolate, and I finished my bottle of wine (a true tragedy). But, even these little dilemmas could be solved. My brother Conor was able to change a meeting and get Chris to his appointment, and a few angel humans in my life dropped off a big ol’ pile of food (and a bottle of wine!) while I waved from six feet away.

Meanwhile, mom was feeling really icky. Her symptoms checked every box for coronavirus: fever, persistent cough, chest tightness, shortness of breath, loss of smell, and fatigue. Anyone who knows my mom knows that it’s not easy for her to 1.) sit still for a long period of time and 2.) not be around/talk to people. But she did both of those things pretty well, which is how I knew she really wasn’t feeling well. At this point, we were all convinced she had it. It was just too much of a coincidence otherwise. But, six days after her test she received the results: negative. Cool! Great news, right? Ehhh the answer is tricky. 

When my mom received her test results she was told that just because her test was negative doesn’t mean she is in the clear. She was directed to continue self-quarantining until her symptoms were completely gone for three days. I was perplexed. Obviously, no medical test is 100% accurate. There is always room for error, including false-positives and false-negatives. But in the midst of a global health crisis, accuracy seems more important than ever. While my mom is a smart and reasonable human, there are many people in the world who aren’t who might perceive a negative test result as permission to resume everyday activities. And if that person’s test is a false-negative, think about how many people they could be infecting. So, what causes a false-negative and how common are they? All of these swirling thoughts led me down a rabbit hole. Keep in mind that I am not a scientist, and this research was done on my phone, in the dark, and at approximately 11:30 p.m. With that little disclaimer, here’s what I found…

Apparently, there are several reasons someone with COVID-19 could test negative, including how the test was done and at what stage in the illness a person is tested. If the person administering the test doesn’t get a good sample, the test result could be negative. If someone is tested too early into the illness, the test result could be negative. 

I’ve seen a picture of the COVID-19 test, and it honestly looks like they’re trying to get a swab of your brain. If you’ve seen the picture, you know what I’m talking about. While my mom said it was a little uncomfortable, a friend of hers who was also tested said it was extremely uncomfortable. Maybe it’s a difference in pain tolerance, or maybe my mom’s test wasn’t administered properly. My mom was also tested almost immediately after developing symptoms, meaning she may have not had much virus in her system at that point. If she was tested a few days later, it may have been a different story. 

Because there are so many different tests being used by so many different laboratories, it’s not clear exactly how accurate the test is. The estimates range from 70 percent to close to 100 percent accuracy, meaning that there is potentially a 30% chance someone with the illness could test negative. Obviously, there are many variables and a lot of “what ifs” that go into all of this, which is why mom’s negative result didn’t give her any sense of relief. The good news is, she is feeling much better. It’s been about 9 days since her symptoms started. While the cough, fatigue, and shortness of breath are still lingering, the fever has dissipated. 

Does she have COVID-19? Who knows. Maybe it was a false-negative, maybe it was a really big and weird coincidence. My point is, stay home. And don’t just stay home, stay home and don’t have people over. Don’t even have a person over. Because no one really knows if they have it or if they don’t, and making assumptions could cost someone their life. Just sit tight and binge-watch Tiger King. 

Seriously though, watch Tiger King.  

It's Rona's World, We're Just Livin' In It!

Shakespeare wrote King Lear while in quarantine, and I am writing this blog post. Two pieces of writing of equal value and importance, right?

Wow. The world is a bit abnormal at the moment. I, like most of humankind, have found that my routine has shifted recently. There is a lot to think about and reflect upon, so I decided to attempt to work through some of my thoughts, feelings, and observations the best way (and probably only way) I know how: writing some words. So, here we are.

On January 23rd, my older brother was hit by a 1900-pound steel beam. My naïve little-self thought that would be the most absurd thing that happened this year. (He’s on the road to recovery, by the way. He’ll be back on his feet soon enough, but for now he’s wheeling around like a champ.) But, as we all know by now, 2020 is shaping out to be a total shit storm. It’s been almost nine weeks since the first case of COVID-19 in the United States was reported, and each day since has been a little bit more disruptive and anxiety-inducing than the last. While most of us are taking every precaution necessary to protect our physical health, our emotional and mental health are going through the ringer.

To start, the fear of contracting the illness is constantly looming over our heads. Everyone is talking about it all the time. Here I am complaining about it, but at the same time I’m still talking about it. But how can we escape it? Our entire lives at the moment are shaped by this pandemic. The usual coping strategies don’t apply anymore. We can’t just get out of the house, go see a movie, spend some time with friends, etc. We are anxious about everything. We’re worried about getting sick, we’re worried about getting other people sick, we’re worried that other people aren’t doing enough to keep themselves and others from getting sick. We’re worried about our jobs, our bills, our toilet paper. We’re worried about worrying too much.

And it’s not just ourselves we’re worried about. We’re worried about our friends and family who have had to postpone weddings and funerals, or are out of work, or missing out on their last semester of college. We’re worried about our relatives in rehab facilities and nursing homes who are unable to see visitors. We’re worried about the kids who are out of school, the seniors who won’t have a prom or graduation ceremony, and the parents who won’t have pictures to frame from those milestones. We’re worried about the mental, emotional, and physical health of our loved ones. We’re worried about getting through this.

And while those articles and social media posts offering suggestions for self-care during isolation are well-intended, they aren’t always realistic. Puzzles, while a wonderful activity, are not going to fix this, and meditation is tough to fit into the schedule if you’re a parent who is now working from home and homeschooling three children. Being chill is tough when you feel like you’re living in a Roland Emmerich film.

My point is, this sucks. Though the degree of suckiness may differ person to person, we’re all dealing with an uncontrollable and uncomfortable disruption in our lives. If you’re looking for ways to cope with all the doom and gloom, you’ve come to the wrong place. I don’t have the answers. I’m not sure anyone does. There is a lot of uncertainty, and that’s really scary, and frustrating, and annoying. Do the puzzle and some meditation if you want, but don’t forget to feel all those feelings you’re feeling. Also don’t forget to wash your hands and practice social distancing. Anyway, we’ll get through this. In the meantime, enjoy these pictures from my hibernation. I have to go work on my puzzle.  

Stay safe.