It’s a little like losing your life while still being alive, this experience.
Behind me a small line had formed....A family was looking for books for their kids to read. I felt like I was in a metaphorical breadline - a breadline for feeding the brain and the soul.
When you look out & see the empty streets & sidewalks & shuttered shops, a friend tells me, see it as solidarity - everyone doing their best to keep themselves & everyone else healthy....Even so, I can’t deny how sad & disorientating the absence of life in these once busy streets seems.It's only a small volume. A slim slice of life as we are living it now, by someone who has a tender eye for detail, for the unusual and the routine. Hayes is a thoughtful man who reflects on how is feeling throughout this time as well as documenting the impact on some of those around him.
In the enforced solitude and silence, you can sometimes hear yourself replaying moments in your life, things said or not said, done or not done, love expressed or not expressed, all the gratitude you’ve ever received, all the gratitude you’ve ever felt.He captured some of the feelings and moods that I also experienced during our Sydney lockdown. The moments of anxiety as well as the odd moments of peace - being able to listen to an individual bird sing, watching a skateboarder roll down an empty street from his apartment window...
Because I’ve worked at home for years now, the mandate to stay home and work from home is, I imagine, a little easier for someone like me. I’m also a loner and an introvert (except when it comes to strangers), which helps too.
Even so, there are times when I feel spooked - not scared but spooked.However, what I found most endearing or comforting as I read How We Live Now, was the sense of solidarity that we are all in this together, and the reminder to live our lives now. Our collective here and now may not be the one we planned for or expected, but this is what we have right now.
Because what IS is what matters most. What was will only make you blue in New York.
This is our life. We are living it. And that's all we have ever been able to do - to live in the world we are in.
Wishing that things were 'normal' or talking about when things go back to 'normal', will only lead us to despair. This is our normal now. We're living it. Whatever happens afterwards, will be different to what went before. This experience will change us all, in big ways and in small. We don't know what or how yet, but change is one of the few things guaranteed in life. Covid-19 has simply been a real in-your-face reminder that this is so. If we fight against it, we can become bitter and disappointed. However, if we accept it, and let go of our desire to control everything (one of the hardest lessons I've certainly had to learn as an adult) we can learn to roll with the punches and find some grace in just being, here, now.
And like Hayes, I am curious to see what's on the other side.
I am climbing the walls here. But I also know I am among the most fortunate: I have a roof over my head, food in my fridge, and my health to be thankful for. So, if this is how we have to live - with masks and gloves and almost no human contact for several more months - then so be it, this is how we have to live. I just want to see what's on the other side of this f***ing mountain.
- The Plague | Albert Camus
- How We Live Now | Bill Hayes (non-fiction Covid-19)
- The Stand | Stephen King
- Moloka'i | Alan Brennert (Leprosy)
- All Fall Down | Sally Nicholls (The Black Death) YA
- Hamnet | Maggie O'Farrell (The Plague)
- Oryx and Crake | Margaret Atwood
- Year of Wonders | Geraldine Brooks (Great Plague of London)
- The Pull of the Stars | Emma Donoghue (Spanish Flu)
- A Journal of the Plague Year | Daniel Defoe (Great Plague of London)
- Intimations | Zadie Smith (non-fiction Covid-19)
My Current Plague Reads:
- A Distant Mirror: The Calamitous 14th Century | Barbara Tuchman (non-fiction The Black Death)
- How We Live Now | Bill Hayes
Up Next:
- Pale Horse, Pale Rider | Katherine Anne Porter (Spanish Flu)
- The Decameron Project: 29 Stories from the Pandemic | The New York Times (Covid-19)
Just requested this one. I read and enjoyed Humans of New York and (the more recent) Humans, which sounds like it has a similar format and emphasis.
ReplyDeleteI haven't tried the Human books, Deb. I think they have more photography than Bill's book. But I enjoyed this and Insomniac City for the vignettes and you can also visit Bill's website to see the photos better.
DeleteI'll be reading A Distant Mirror in 2021. What do you think of it so far?
ReplyDeleteI've only read the first chapter so far...I'm trying to finish several other non-fiction titles that have been by my bed for longer first.
DeleteWhat an interesting book. I have read three of your plague/pandemic books so far (The Plague, Oryx and Crake, and A Journal of the Plague.
ReplyDeleteI think reading about it makes us understand better how essential isolation is.
Thanks for your review.
That's a lot of pandemic books you've read. I read 2 this year: The Pull of the Stars and The End of October which felt like plenty with my headspace during this. Also Station Eleven years ago and Oryx and Crake. It gives perspectives reading these ...
ReplyDeleteI just added Insomniac city to my TBR, I'm not too eager to read about covid now, but it will probably change in a few months :)
ReplyDelete