So I hear that people are having mental and emotional problems under the pressure of isolation, plague illness, losing their jobs, losing their homes, losing their loved ones, seeing wildfires making the sky an impenetrable fug of smoke that we have been warned not to breathe - and now Ruth Bader Ginsburg has died.
Rest in peace, mighty
warrior. Thank you for everything.
Now the inglorious
leader has stated his unwillingness to give up the oval office if he loses
the election. He has been saying this since 2017, but we are taking it
seriously now.
This election and its
outcome are a BIG DEAL, but this is not the time to despair and give up, dear
hearts.
If you had any doubts
before RBG passed, before you-know-who announced his intentions of being
president for life, before Republicans broke a foaming sweat in their haste to
get a conservative justice on the Supreme Court before the election, you know
now that you need to step up to the plate. Our country, our whole world, our
lives and the lives of our children and their children are at stake.
What can you do? For
starters, VOTE in the coming presidential election. Vote and encourage others
to vote, especially younger people. Vote. It might work.
Wear a mask. Do good
deeds. Encourage the discouraged. Be kind.
Then there is the
weather. Even those of us who embraced the science of climate change are
surprised at how soon and how virulently changes have set in.
Many of us did not
foresee all the hurricanes, tornadoes, wildfires, and temperatures up to 120
degrees Fahrenheit (49 degrees Celsius) in places in California where I used to
live, fifty years ago.
This summer when the
entire West Coast caught on fire, a plume of smoke that looked like a genie
released from a lamp in satellite pictures moved up and over and around us.
Suddenly we were in lockdown again, because of smoke. I started to feel like I
was in solitary confinement, albeit a comfortable and plugged-in solitary
confinement.
It is happening fast
- the ice shelves and glaciers of Antarctica and Greenland are melting, and one
article I read speculated that when all that water is released it could raise
sea level ten feet.
Ten feet. I have been
trying to imagine how that would play out on the island.
Probably the end of
campfires at KVI.
The ferry docks would
have to be moved or raised.
Would the Burton
Peninsula become an island?
The debate about
whether Vashon and Maury Islands are one or two islands will be over – two
islands, dude, and how shall we get from one to the other when Portage is under
water? Ferries? A bridge?
If Maury becomes an
independent island, will someone re-open a market and post office there? Am I
the only one who thought that closing those was a dumb idea?
I look down the
ravine behind my house to where it opens into the Sound, and wonder, gee, if the
sea level rises ten feet, how far up the ravine is the water going to come? If
there is a tsunami, will it come up the ravine and all the way to the top of
the bluff? You know, where I live?
Beach house owners –
condolences.
Residents next to the Fauntleroy dock will no longer complain about the ferry traffic congestion, because their houses will be under water.
But I digress.
Many things we have
had to do out of expediency during the pandemic have turned out to be positive
changes that will stick around.
For example:
telemedicine. How much easier is it to talk to a provider from home rather than
drive/catch a bus to Seattle for an appointment that lasts fifteen minutes? Not
to mention parking fees and ferry fare.
Online school gets
mixed reviews. This is a challenge most parents, teachers, and students never
expected to face. Those of us who homeschooled before computers and the
internet feel your pain. A little.
Many people are saying,
“I want to go back to the way it was before.” Yeah, me, too. Life was so much
easier in so many ways before the weather became homicidal, before the pandemic
hit, before the land caught fire, before we had a president who is certifiable,
who unleashed the hounds of violent racist hell, who would like to see a
renewed Civil War, and who is backed up by what is no longer the Republican
party.
We took normal life
for granted, didn’t we?
We know that we are
never going back. We must adapt to climate change and Covid-19 and terrible
politicians, see it through, and ride it out.
So, pray to God and
row for shore.
And VOTE.
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