I put a color conditioner through my hair this weekend, which dyed the lighter parts of my hair a lovely, pale blue.
I truly, honestly love it. I may just always have blue streaks, now that I've done it. I plan to run the rinse through my hair again tonight to try to darken up the streaks a little bit. Because why not?
I am, of course, not the only person doing things to their hair during this COVID-19 social distancing period. Enough people are doing it that others are writing article about it. And this quote from an article in Allure struck me:
"Hyperfocusing on the physical can be an attempt to escape the emotional; and in the midst of a global pandemic, everyone is experiencing new, sometimes scary emotions (fear, sadness, existential dread) in new, sometimes scary ways (home, alone, with no diversions)."
Even though I do sincerely like how my hair looks with the blue streaks, I think a little bit of escape is going on here for me too. I think that putting a blue rinse through my hair and getting instant blue highlights is also helping me work through my anxiety.
I've had anxiety all my adult life -- probably all of my life, really. I've mostly dealt with it without medications, though there was a period early-ish in my career in which I had a couple of prescriptions to help me get through the day. Changing jobs eventually made the medications unnecessary, but there were many days early in my career when I would need to place a half a Xanax under my tongue just to calm down enough to be able to work.
Anxiety steals your focus and confuses your thinking. It makes monsters and creates invisible enemies. It turns your psychological distress into a perceived physical threat. You really do feel fight-or-flight, but it's your own thoughts that you need to fight or flee, so you feel trapped, causing you more distress. It's an ugly condition. And it's not simply enough to tell yourself to calm down when you're in the midst of an anxiety attack. You have to figure out how to break the cycle. Xanax can do that chemically. But when you're not taking medication, you need other ways.
For me, anxiety is a lot about control, or the lack of it. The less in control I feel, the more anxious I can become, and the faster I can slip into a cycle of anxious dread and full on anxiety attacks.
For the past more-than-a-decade, since I changed my career focus (if not subject matter), I've dealt with my anxiety with lifestyle type stuff: exercise, rigorous scheduling and planning, lists, meditation, the dog, magnesium, Disneyland (for real), wine, chocolate, mint tea, making sure I get enough sleep, setting and enforcing clear boundaries between work and home and self . . . .
That last one, the boundaries, has really been difficult to do during this quarantine time. It's important to do, but with work and home and recreation all being in the same place, the lines are difficult to draw and maintain.
So I think that, this weekend, I drew them in my hair.
The blue: It makes me feel lighter. It makes me happy. I like the way I look. Importantly: This is a thing I can control absolutely. And feeling that certainty, feeling the control, is calming. In a world where there is so little I can control right now, and in which there is so much to fear, having a little bit of control, however frivolous, is important.
And so, it's not just that blue is traditionally a color associated with calm and so my blue hair calms me. This blue is part fashion and part meditation. It is my certainty and my control. And, being that, it delivers to me inner peace.
Have a good week, friends.
Monday, April 20, 2020
Monday, April 13, 2020
The COVID-Telework Diary: Day 29, Beginning of Week 5, Utterly Unimportant Numbers
I'm doing better than last Monday.
In fact, all last week, I did better than I was doing last Monday. Nadir Monday. I think . . . .
The thing about this historical event we are all living through is that it will change us. It has to change us. We have to change in response to it. And change is hard. And forced change made rapidly out of fear and necessity is harder. Psychologically, we aren't built for that. It's bound to take it toll.
I've been thinking a lot about what's not so important and what is. In the "not" column are a lot of numbers: weight on the scale, size of my clothing, number of York Peppermint Patties I consume in a day, number of screen minutes my kid gets in a day after he's finished all his schoolwork, number of projects actually completed. These are utterly unimportant to whether we live healthily and happily.
What is important sometimes does sometimes involve numbers too. Regarding health, for instance, I'm just not worrying about weight and size numbers anymore, but I am going to continue to worry about numbers related bloodwork, blood pressure and cardiovascular health. Those numbers bear no real relation to the size of my clothing and the force of gravity on my body on this early. At best, the relationship between the two is marginal. (How do I know: I've been "overweight" a large portion of my adult life and I can assure you that my bloodwork and blood pressure have been good-to-excellent for decades.) But bloodwork, blood pressure and whether I can walk a mile or more with relative ease are measures of health that seem to matter with regard to how I feel and how I function. So those are what I will pay attention to henceforth.
The number of hugs given and gotten is a happy number. The number of laughs with your family . . . the number of times your child's eyes light up . . . the number of chin licks from the dog . . . the number of York Peppermint Patties to give you joy of them . . . . These are also good numbers.
But number of blog posts about a scary event . . . not so much.
I noticed last week that when I stopped writing so much about this event, I stopped thinking so much about it. When I'm not physically writing, I'm still writing. I put together ideas, words and phrases, sentences, even whole paragraphs, in my head before I even put fingers to keyboard. Because I have a good memory, I can do that and then come back to the keyboard and unload it all. Then I edit. It's how my work-writing works too. Letting ideas form and reform, marinating in my brain, before I ever commit them to paper or the digital screen just works for me. But it also means that my brain is marinating in whatever it is I am writing or intending to write. It's why sometimes my work is so exhausting . . . because I don't just quit at quitting time, when I'm writing something. I can't. That's not how my writing brain works. It keeps working. So any brief I've written for work, for instance, has been written over many days and many moments of so-called free time.
Last week, after my Monday post, I decided not to write any further posts that week. Shutting off that self-imposed task allowed me shut off my brain about the pandemic. I mean, I still thought about it. But I didn't ruminate, marinate, write and rewrite in my head. And that was good for me, very, very good for me.
So I've decided to cut back writing this disjointed history for my own well-being. I'll check in once a week, maybe. Check in, as well, if I have a good story to tell, like The Frog. But I am taking the pressure off myself to write and, really, to perform here in this blog.
I do think, sometimes, in hubris, that maybe this blog would be a useful document in 50 or 100 years to study the effects of the pandemic on regular folks. Maybe it will. And maybe it won't. But if it will, a few fewer blog posts to save my sanity will not hobble any future historian's work. (Hello there, future historian. Creepy, huh?) Mine will be but one drop in a sea of personal narratives about the novel coronavirus/COVID-19 pandemic of 2020. I'm sure that their dissertation or historical extract will not suffer from my writing less, and less often. In fact, maybe the fact of it will be just the anecdote they need for their chapter on mental health. (You're welcome, future historian.)
Stay safe, friends.
In fact, all last week, I did better than I was doing last Monday. Nadir Monday. I think . . . .
The thing about this historical event we are all living through is that it will change us. It has to change us. We have to change in response to it. And change is hard. And forced change made rapidly out of fear and necessity is harder. Psychologically, we aren't built for that. It's bound to take it toll.
I've been thinking a lot about what's not so important and what is. In the "not" column are a lot of numbers: weight on the scale, size of my clothing, number of York Peppermint Patties I consume in a day, number of screen minutes my kid gets in a day after he's finished all his schoolwork, number of projects actually completed. These are utterly unimportant to whether we live healthily and happily.
What is important sometimes does sometimes involve numbers too. Regarding health, for instance, I'm just not worrying about weight and size numbers anymore, but I am going to continue to worry about numbers related bloodwork, blood pressure and cardiovascular health. Those numbers bear no real relation to the size of my clothing and the force of gravity on my body on this early. At best, the relationship between the two is marginal. (How do I know: I've been "overweight" a large portion of my adult life and I can assure you that my bloodwork and blood pressure have been good-to-excellent for decades.) But bloodwork, blood pressure and whether I can walk a mile or more with relative ease are measures of health that seem to matter with regard to how I feel and how I function. So those are what I will pay attention to henceforth.
The number of hugs given and gotten is a happy number. The number of laughs with your family . . . the number of times your child's eyes light up . . . the number of chin licks from the dog . . . the number of York Peppermint Patties to give you joy of them . . . . These are also good numbers.
But number of blog posts about a scary event . . . not so much.
I noticed last week that when I stopped writing so much about this event, I stopped thinking so much about it. When I'm not physically writing, I'm still writing. I put together ideas, words and phrases, sentences, even whole paragraphs, in my head before I even put fingers to keyboard. Because I have a good memory, I can do that and then come back to the keyboard and unload it all. Then I edit. It's how my work-writing works too. Letting ideas form and reform, marinating in my brain, before I ever commit them to paper or the digital screen just works for me. But it also means that my brain is marinating in whatever it is I am writing or intending to write. It's why sometimes my work is so exhausting . . . because I don't just quit at quitting time, when I'm writing something. I can't. That's not how my writing brain works. It keeps working. So any brief I've written for work, for instance, has been written over many days and many moments of so-called free time.
Last week, after my Monday post, I decided not to write any further posts that week. Shutting off that self-imposed task allowed me shut off my brain about the pandemic. I mean, I still thought about it. But I didn't ruminate, marinate, write and rewrite in my head. And that was good for me, very, very good for me.
So I've decided to cut back writing this disjointed history for my own well-being. I'll check in once a week, maybe. Check in, as well, if I have a good story to tell, like The Frog. But I am taking the pressure off myself to write and, really, to perform here in this blog.
I do think, sometimes, in hubris, that maybe this blog would be a useful document in 50 or 100 years to study the effects of the pandemic on regular folks. Maybe it will. And maybe it won't. But if it will, a few fewer blog posts to save my sanity will not hobble any future historian's work. (Hello there, future historian. Creepy, huh?) Mine will be but one drop in a sea of personal narratives about the novel coronavirus/COVID-19 pandemic of 2020. I'm sure that their dissertation or historical extract will not suffer from my writing less, and less often. In fact, maybe the fact of it will be just the anecdote they need for their chapter on mental health. (You're welcome, future historian.)
Stay safe, friends.
Monday, April 6, 2020
The COVID-Telework Diary: Day 22, Beginning of Week 4, Anonymous 49.6 Year Old Female
I've been having a hard time.
I'm scared. I feel safe in my house and I feel like my family is safe. We have developed systems here that I think are the best we can do to keep ourselves safe in our house. It has been more than three weeks since we have really had to go out into public at all. I haven't been anywhere beyond my neighborhood (other than a recreation drive in the car) since we started shelter-in-place, and the only place my husband has been is the drive-up window at the pharmacy to pick up our son's and his mom's medicine. Anything and everything else we need we have delivered.
But we can't be here forever. We won't be here forever. Eventually, we will have to go back out into the world. And there will not be a vaccine to protect us. Our systems won't protect us out there. We will have to develop protocols to come back into our house. My husband can dress fairly casually to work. I will be in a suit most days. How does one sanitize a suit?
I made two face masks this weekend. It was hard. The fabric is thick, which is a good thing, and I'm terrible at pleats. (Plus, the tension on my thread got screwed up on the second one, which slowed me down, but I fixed it.) I need to make more, though. I need to make at least enough to last each member of my family for a week. That's a lot of masks -- 21 masks. It's going to take a long time to make those masks. And, yes, I know that two-ply cotton masks (even if they are made from high-thread-count Laura Ashley sheets) are not tremendously effective at stopping the virus, but they're better than just relying on our nose hairs to do the filtering before the air gets to our lungs.
I have a very public-facing job. I am literally in court nearly every week, sometimes multiple times a week. And those courtrooms are filled with people. Sure, the Court is going to video court soon and my office is going to telephonic meetings of creditors. But, again, that can't last forever. Can it last until there is a vaccine?
Will there ever be a vaccine?
I input my information into the COVID-19 Survival Calculator. Here are my results (which were somewhat amusingly entitled "anonymous 49.6 year old female"):
I'm scared. I feel safe in my house and I feel like my family is safe. We have developed systems here that I think are the best we can do to keep ourselves safe in our house. It has been more than three weeks since we have really had to go out into public at all. I haven't been anywhere beyond my neighborhood (other than a recreation drive in the car) since we started shelter-in-place, and the only place my husband has been is the drive-up window at the pharmacy to pick up our son's and his mom's medicine. Anything and everything else we need we have delivered.
But we can't be here forever. We won't be here forever. Eventually, we will have to go back out into the world. And there will not be a vaccine to protect us. Our systems won't protect us out there. We will have to develop protocols to come back into our house. My husband can dress fairly casually to work. I will be in a suit most days. How does one sanitize a suit?
I made two face masks this weekend. It was hard. The fabric is thick, which is a good thing, and I'm terrible at pleats. (Plus, the tension on my thread got screwed up on the second one, which slowed me down, but I fixed it.) I need to make more, though. I need to make at least enough to last each member of my family for a week. That's a lot of masks -- 21 masks. It's going to take a long time to make those masks. And, yes, I know that two-ply cotton masks (even if they are made from high-thread-count Laura Ashley sheets) are not tremendously effective at stopping the virus, but they're better than just relying on our nose hairs to do the filtering before the air gets to our lungs.
I have a very public-facing job. I am literally in court nearly every week, sometimes multiple times a week. And those courtrooms are filled with people. Sure, the Court is going to video court soon and my office is going to telephonic meetings of creditors. But, again, that can't last forever. Can it last until there is a vaccine?
Will there ever be a vaccine?
I input my information into the COVID-19 Survival Calculator. Here are my results (which were somewhat amusingly entitled "anonymous 49.6 year old female"):
The 52.9% infection risk scared the shit out of me. Basically, I, who have been sheltering in place with all the precautions I can think of -- we wash the dog's feet after every walk, FFS! -- have a 53% chance of getting this disease. But the mortality risk and survival probability were heartening. From what I have read of first hand accounts like this one, though, having this disease is awful, even if you're not hospitalized.
I had the flu in March of 2017 and there were a couple of days when I really could not move without great effort and I had fleeting thoughts of "so this is how this bug could kill someone." And compared to what I have read about COVID-19, that really bad case of the flu I had for merely a week was a walk in the park. I don't want to get this disease. I don't want my husband or my child or my parents or my in-laws or my brother's family or my friends or my work colleagues or even those other lawyers that I may not like very much to get this disease.
Nevertheless, I'm bending my mind to the idea, attempting to accept the idea, coming to terms with the idea that one of us will probably get it. Maybe more than one of us. And the best I can hope for is . . . we suffer a miserable two to four week illness at home, not requiring hospitalization, and that we do not spread it further?
So, I've been having a hard time. I've been depressed. I've felt a little hopeless . . . a lot hopeless.
I cried when I walked the dog this morning. Not single-tear-down-the-cheek crying . . . audibly sobbing, that was me, as I walked the dog. Not loudly, but audibly. Like, if there'd been someone on the other side of the street walking their dog, they'd have heard me and looked in my direction. Mournful.
I guess I am in mourning. But for what? For my old life, my pre-novel-coronavirus life? The halcyon days when I could scratch my eyes, pick my nose, and do facepalms with impunity? Maybe I'm prematurely mourning the loss of the safety I feel in my home now, the loss that will come in a month . . . or maybe two . . . when we have to go back into out there.
I even told the people at work on our MS Teams chat (which is now and, I think, shall ever be, an omnipresent distraction on my desktop) that I was not doing very well this morning. It's not like me to own stuff like that very often. I'm as stiff-upper-lipped as a girl from East Texas can be, I suppose. I push a lot of stuff down. Probably not healthy, but I do it. But I couldn't keep it down this morning. I couldn't keep it down as I walked the dog and tried to image going back out into the world where, to me, the novel coronavirus is everywhere. I couldn't keep it down when I logged onto work and it was all just too much.
Almost immediately, one of my lovely colleagues sent me a private message commiserating and trying to buck me up. Another two with whom I regularly text, took it to private texts and urged me to take care of my mental health. All three of them were just what I needed. I felt better. We are all suffering. We have our ebbs and flows. Today, I ebbed and these three wonderful ladies flowed toward me. One day, it will be my turn to flow toward them. We all, every one of us, need each other now in ways we never have. Now, is the time to lean in, but not in the way Sheryl Sandberg meant several years ago. Now, is the time to lean into and on each other. I think it's the only way we get through this.
Friday, April 3, 2020
The COVID-Telework: Day 18, I'm so tired.
By Wednesday, I am tired. It is hard to get out of bed. It is hard to walk the dog. It is hard to do my job. It is hard to be a substitute teacher for at-home school. It is hard to stay focused on anything. It is hard not to lose my patience with people or things or animals. This thing we are doing is hard.
Things that make it easier:
Things that make it easier:
- Hugs and cuddles.
- Coffee.
- Chocolate.
- Ice cream.
- More hugs and cuddles.
- Fun books to read.
- Star Wars, anything.
- Specifically, Star Wars: The Clone Wars, Season 7.
- Cheese.
- Tortilla chips with salsa.
- Ranch dressing.
- Dried pineapple.
- Walks with the dog.
- Watching the Boy play.
- Reading the Boy's writing, which is surprisingly good.
- Text messaging silliness with my friends at work about work and about not-work.
And one more thing: checking on others to make sure they are okay. That makes it better, makes it easier. Try reaching out to someone else and check on them. Make sure they're okay. It will lift your spirits.
Have a good weekend, friends. Hang in there. Stay safe.