Hope

also known as the final installment of The Fourth Series (read The Fourth Series from the bottom post to this top post)

Life is short.

Or it’s long.

I don’t know.

I’ve written about this idea a few times.

Like a lot of things in life, time is relative.

And when you look at it one way, it might mean one thing.

And when you look at it a different way, it finds itself meaning another thing.

The exact opposite.

That’s when you find the meaning in life in the first place.

That’s when you find the meaning in life to begin with.

Or end with.

Life warps you like this – you are warped in life like this.

Maybe not you. But definitely me.

And I have a sneaking suspicion that many of you

Find yourselves like me.

If you ever find yourself – you know where I’m going with this.

I have a sneaking suspicion that many of you

Are pretty similar to me

I’m not that unique.

Not that different.

Perhaps that’s the problem.

I want to be unique.

I want to be different.

I want to fit in.

But I don’t.

I want my cake.

And to eat it, too.

But I can’t bake.

Or buy it from you.


Michelle wondered how she got to that point. She was in her car, driving to pick up a piece of Canvas art she’d found online and taken notice to the moment she’d seen it. It was just after noon, just after she spent her morning reading on her porch, with the brisk winter air dancing against her exposed skin – the small amount that was not covered by comfort. With her morning coffee warming her up, it was the best prescription for waking her up. Slightly groggy when she’d awakened at nine, she was able to sleep in an hour past the sun’s light rising, and it, too, was time for hers.

The book was The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath. She’d ordered it and consumed it immediately. There were other books she hadn’t ordered on such an impulsive whim and other books she didn’t so quickly take in. Other genres of fiction, self-help, and biographical, historical non-fiction. Ones that sat under her bed or in her closet for months before she could bring herself to read them. Those were in the past months, when she had spent all of her time in her room but didn’t spend the time reading; didn’t spend the time finding the strength or even the desire to find the strength to move from her bed – much less to place her hand over the side and search underneath it for a book she had researched on Amazon, expecting it to be the one to tell her how to have the will power to make it all click, once and for all.

It was a thirty-minute drive in each direction, so including getting out of her car, walking inside, and completing the purchase, it was going to be close to an hour and thirty-minute round trip. Michelle didn’t mind.

Sitting in traffic, Michelle thought about the past months when life just didn’t seem like it was worth living. She remembered when she was a kid and also a teenager, the beach was full of fun and associated with nothing but good memories. Then she recalled over the summer when she drove to the beach at 2am, to sit on the sand and listen to the waves of the ocean, unable to sleep, thinking she was losing it, and being quite sure in this belief. She walked out to the water, to let the tide gently break over her toes. It was so inviting, she stayed there standing for a minute, before returning to her designated spot to sit alone on the sand in darkness. Normal people don’t do this, she fathomed. She wasn’t normal though, she told herself.

Now traveling at an expected speed, Michelle kept her eyes on the road, but while maintaining her car between the dotted lines, allowed her vision to occasionally drift to the streetlights, buildings, and sidewalks, passengers, pedestrians, trees, and birds and other cars and other roads that surrounded her. She contemplated how many thoughts, how many efforts, how many people and lives went into creating these tangible feats like highways and intangible faiths, like the one in the system that regulates the highways. Society as a whole. She marveled at the miracle. Created by creatures that evolved from single-celled organisms, that now are composed of a symphony of interacting nerves, veins, and organs. The body as a whole. She marveled at the miracle.

The artwork she would soon be picking up was a painting of an ocean to resemble a heart rate. She understood the ocean will come and go forever but that the heart rate will one day end. The pulse has a finite timeline until it flatlines.

Going faster now, she was suddenly overcome with a wave of emotion: joy, appreciation, wonderment, and love for the world and even herself. The miracle was beautiful. To see what she was seeing, experience what she was feeling. To be thankful for it all. It was beautiful. She was so grateful for the opportunity to be here and to live it.

Although overcome, she was able to comprehend the situation. While she was better now, she wouldn’t always be. She wouldn’t always be period. But that’s part of life. And while she felt such a deep appreciation of how little could and should have been expected of humans and how far we’ve come, she held such a deep understanding that she would again have her doubts of the genus as a whole.

She pulled over and cried. She wasn’t overwhelmed. She was happy. She was happy to know she was capable of feeling again. And she asked herself why others didn’t take the time to sit back in their car and sometimes think about it, pull over, and cry, too. But then she remembered every person’s timeline is different. And every person is entitled to live it as seen fit. Because one day, that pulse will no longer be seen on the monitor’s screen. The heart rate will flat line. When that time comes, the goal is to be at peace. The objective until then is to live a life how one deems fit, within the tolerable guidelines that we accept even if all are technically, subjectively right or wrong. Whether it’s to leave a legacy, improve the world, have a family, or simply to enjoy the time here; most likely in all cases, to be happy. Even if there is no defined meaning to it all. There are roads we’ve constructed to tell us where to go to pick up artwork. There aren’t roads to tell us how best to lead our lives or the right way to do so. The only real road is the “exit only” we will all one day take.

She put her car into drive once more. She had hope for the future. She had acceptance for the present. And she had appreciation for the past. For her and for others. Sometimes she’d be in park, and other times even in reverse. But she had hope. She was going to lead her life through the dark times and the good, sometimes alone, self-isolated on the shore, and other times she was going to celebrate the world. And she hoped others would, too. She hoped others would have it, too: hope.


The waves will break

Over the shoreline

The tide’s wake

Left behind

Our finite heart’s flat line

The waves will break

Past all of our time

Our one fate

Left behind

The definite end to our timeline

Hope is all I have in mind

To be okay when I leave my life for the shoreline

Burn It All Down

She opened her eyes.

Breath heavy, but nerves as calm as a secluded river, cold as one almost frozen over.

Voice ready, she began to speak from behind the podium, in front of a crowd of waiting ears.

“One day in the future, not many days from now, the effects of what we are doing to the environment, the Earth – this planet, our home – will be irreversible, and catastrophe will take hold. We are seeing the impacts now, but the impacts now are minor in this year compared to what they will be in upcoming years.

“The polar ice caps will continue to melt, with the one difference being the speed at which they do – the acceleration at which they do. Glaciers melting and breaking off into icebergs. Icebergs melting, too. The heat trapped in our atmosphere giving rise to heightened sea levels, which will sooner or later contribute to calamity, if we do nothing. Rivers will be unable to freeze over.

“And I say we do nothing, and I say we hope it is sooner than later that we see this tragedy.

“Usher it in, and burn it all down,” her voice echoed throughout the room before its reverberation was overcome by applause.

Taylor was speaking at the Misanthrope Convention, whose tagline, “Getting a bunch of people together who hate people,” was a perfect description of the event.

Taylor was one of the guest speakers for the one-day convention. (Two days around other people would be too many.)

After her mid-afternoon speech, it was time for the small group breakout sessions before the keynote speaker and goodbye salute. She found herself sitting alongside nine other attendees, to discuss the different ideas that were brought forth by the convention’s speakers, what they thought of them, and the final address still to come.

The conversation turned to Taylor and her speech, aptly and almost too obviously titled, “Burn it All Down.”

“So, I think one thing the other misanthropes can agree on here, myself included, is we dislike humanity, and it seemed like a lot of this resentment went into your main theme. Can you explore more of your disdain for us?”

Taylor nodded in agreement, and although she wasn’t overly excited to share an unrehearsed response to people she hated and who hated her, when she opened her mouth, the words flowed like an unobstructed current:

“Well, it’s simple. And I’ll try to articulate it in an eloquent manner to allow my quote unquote contemporaries here to understand. When you grow up, for most people, the world seems like an alright place. You learn about the past and some of the atrocities committed in the past, and you don’t ask yourself how they could have been committed, you just tell yourself that’s how people were, how it was, and that’s why the sins of yesterday were committed. You don’t even use auxiliary verbs like ‘used to’ because there is such a complete break between us and them, our present and past, that it’s not appropriate to say, ‘That’s how people used to be, how it used to be, and that’s why the sins of yesterday had been committed.’ You learn about the past and some of the atrocities committed in the past, and you don’t ask yourself if they could be committed today because we are different now than we were then.

“But then when you grow up, when you really grow up, you realize auxiliary verbs won’t even help us now. We are no different today than we used to be during the times of barbarians and cavemen, only with better technology, worse attention spans, and more ways to kill.”

Taylor paused on kill, her controlled anger building.

“Are we empathetic? No. Are we selfish, stupid, and self-centered? Yes. Do we wear masks during a pandemic? No. Do we fight with complete strangers across the world online? Yes. And our countries’ governments do the exact same? Yes. Do we deserve this world that’s been given to us? No.

“And that is the resentment, the disdain, that went into the main theme. Right now, we can’t even come together to mitigate the risks of climate change for our species’ survival. Good. If we can’t do that, we deserve what’s coming to us. Let it happen. Let it all burn down. Let the Earth be a home with a gas leak, and let us be the inhabitants.”


He snapped back to reality. His eyes had been transfixed on nothing in particular, just a point off in the distance, while his mind wandered. He was sitting in a circle of nine people, who were sharing their stories of how they found themselves here – how their vices started, how they knew it was time to get help, and how they strived to get better.

He was jolted back into this actual reality when the question was posed to him, “Taylor, what do you think triggers your addiction?”

He reflected for a moment, needing inspiration to greet him first in order for introspection to arrive.

He answered:

“What feeds my appetite is, when I do reflect for a moment, I see something I don’t like. All I see is a person who isn’t the person I want to be. Someone I can’t stand to be around but I am with constantly.

“And when I look inside myself, there are three miseries I keep revisiting that make me want to crawl into a dark hole and never return, like a coward who can’t face the visible truth and instead retreats into darkness, hoping for but too scared to enter the void on his own accord.

“The first, it’s like I have everyone fooled. Everyone who thinks I’m a good person. Not that everyone, or anyone for that matter, thinks of me often enough or knows me well enough to hold a true opinion. When I’m reassured of being good, if good has an objective definition, I just know I’ve fooled them again and their reassurance is coming from a place of blind love and not truthful facts. Which only serves to confound the situation because then I start to wonder if it’s imposter syndrome, and maybe they’re right… at which time I realize they’re wrong and remember what I’ve always, secretly known, and that is I am a bad ‘insert non-subjective definition here’ person.

“That’s the second hang-up. I’ve known it, worried about it, and contemplated it for such a long time, but at the same time buried it until it rises from the surface, not been concerned with it until it makes itself known, and compartmentalized it until it hurts others and I continue the trend of hating who I am.

“That there is number three. How I’ve known this, and I’ve done nothing about it, and still don’t see how I will do something about it. This, this just might be the worst of them all. No, this is the worst of all.

“That’s what triggers me. Triggers me to do what I can to forget who I am. To forget what I hate. To be home and enter an alternate reality in which I don’t have to think anymore. To be out, wearing my best clothes as a charade, to post online my best life as a façade, surrounded by people I don’t know if I can stand, with a drink and drug in my hand. I just like to forget who I am. It’s easier to pretend to be something you’re not than to actually make an attempt and put in effort to become someone better than you currently are. It’s easier to forget.”

The circle was taken back by the starkness of the response. These circles were meant to be safe spaces, where a person with a problem could share their feelings freely and openly without judgment, but even then, the answers were not typically this free or open. Candid overtook comfortable. This was real self-hate – truer than self-loathing, and less of a woe-is-me mentality than self-pity.

When it was time to share in front of the larger audience, of around 30 in total there that night, Taylor jumped at the opportunity, as if what he had just disclosed was an epiphany and not simply a confession, known for many years but just now only said aloud.

“I’ve thought about these words prior to stating them tonight. I’ve told myself, and I’ve told others, that humans are good people, and we need to do what we can to make the world a better place for the greater good. And recently, I’ve recognized I was incorrect in this belief all along. If there’s one lesson the global reactions to a pandemic have taught me, it’s that we are not good people.

“Similarly, I’ve outwardly presented a consistent appearance, and that is that I’m good people. But unlike with the world, I didn’t need to learn that this was false. There was no recent revelation. Inwardly, it was a fact cloaked in fiction.

“And when you know that both you and the world suck, there isn’t much more to hope for than to burn it all down.”

He overlooked the crowd, which was silent. He prayed they were no longer free of judgment. He wanted them to be his jury. To decide his fate. To let him take the easy way out. To be his jury and executioner.

He thought of Meursault waiting for the jailer to escort him to his death. Taylor, too, felt the indifference of the universe, but unlike Meursault, he did not just resign himself to the end: he actively wished to be one of the spectators greeting himself with cries of hate when the time comes.

“So, in my home, I hope a gas line’s age leads to wear and tear. And I hope that wear and tear allows gas to leak from the line. And be it a candle or cigarette, I hope there’s a reason to ignite a flame. And with it, the sky will fill with a painting of red stars on a black canvas, ashes falling to the ground like snow. With me inside, at the time, there will be no place to go. It’s easier to burn it all down than it is to grow.”


||||||||||||||||


Question:

Do you ever think about that song, “I Hate Everything About You?”

Plot twist.

It was written in front of a mirror.

Double plot twist.

It wasn’t, because the next line is, “Why do I love you?”

Nonetheless –

Your depression isn’t an excuse to be a bad person.

“My depression isn’t an excuse to be a bad person.”

(And me hating myself isn’t an excuse to be a bad person.)

Am I truly one, though?

Probably, but I’ll never be able to objectively decide.

Maybe I just have everyone fooled, though
everyone who thinks I’m a good person
everyone except the select few
who know
the truth

put down the book
finish the line
become so entwined

So, it’s probably best to err on the side of caution
And believe myself when I look at myself in the mirror and tell myself I’m a bad person

put down the book
finish the line
it’s all it took

Believe me
When I look at myself in the mirror
Tell me I’m a bad person

put down the book
finish the line

Burn it all down
This poetry will finally end in due time
///
Shit poetry will finally end in due time

Baby

I’ve been living at my current apartment complex for almost 1.5 years.

This is only the second time I’ve resigned a lease in my short (but somehow long-seeming) life. I like to experience what it’s like living at different places and within different parts of the city – although it’s just been a single city. And I have no aspirations to own just yet, or more accurately, for quite some time. I like to know that I can go wherever, whenever, but the irony is not lost on me that I have not yet taken this self-made offer up and made the move.

But my own comfort is not the not point of the story. In fact, it’s my discomfort that is.

4.5 months ago, new neighbors moved in next door. Not a single neighbor, not a family, and not a couple, but rather a single mom and a baby. I don’t know the full story behind them, but I know she is young, and the baby, well, obviously the baby is young. And while I do not (and physically will never) know what it’s like to be a single mother, I appreciate the loving challenge it might be.

I could never really hear my previous neighbors: a young couple. I don’t think they were actually home often. The perfect neighbors.

Nearly immediately since my current neighbors moved in, I was greeted by screams of cries on a near-constant basis. Okay, maybe near-constant is an exaggeration, but daily, sometimes multiple times per day, for at least 15 minutes but more frequently an hour (and usually around 5 or 6am), I could hear it. I pay $1,500 per month for just amenities apparently because these walls are thinner than paper. And I know paper well – my skin tone is whiter than it.

I can’t necessarily complain about a baby. Not at least to the front office. What type of monster complains about a baby? I did talk to my neighbor though. It didn’t particularly help. But hey, at least it was acknowledged, I guess?

But this, also, is not the point of the story. (I am truly the master of plot twists.)

In 2020, it goes without saying there’s a lot going on. (Oh well, I guess I’ll say it anyway: there’s a lot going on.)

Sometimes 10 years contains nothing exciting for history; other times, 100 pages of textbooks can happen in one. We are living in the latter this year.

And sometimes I wonder to myself, even when I am aggravated by the crying and screaming*: in what kind of world is this baby going to grow up? What kind of world are we leaving for this baby, for our children, for the future?

*This is not a metaphor for how we’re all crying and screaming right now, but that, too, could have worked.

And so I originally set out to write an essay about this topic, and to go into the wars we’re fighting, the planet we’re also fighting, the pandemic we’re facing, the economic anxieties we’re feeling, and the people we’re failing. It seems like such little is being done to combat any of these, and although life as an average is probably better now than it was many years ago, the average life isn’t currently good enough compared to what it should be, given the success in innovation we have experienced. And at times, perhaps with the success of social media and growth of global media, it seems like we’re just getting worse.

However, when I thought more about this subject, I realized, for me, on a personal level, this idea originates prior to inception (or conception). The question isn’t, “What world is this baby going to grow up in?” But instead is, “Do I want to bring a baby into this world?” I didn’t have a choice in whether I wanted to be brought into this world. I don’t plan an early departure, but sometimes I wonder if I would’ve ever made an entrance, given the choice.

Depending on the writing at hand, the piece should potentially be relevant to all, relatively speaking. This – this is personal to me.

And that’s it. I could elaborate this further, but I’ll keep it short and sweet. After all, sometimes life seems short and sweet, and other times, it seems long and bitter.

When I look around at what’s going on in the world in the present, learn the pain that occurred in the past, and ponder the direction of the future, I wonder if it makes sense to subject someone to life.

When I reflect upon my own issues, my internal battles in becoming who am I today, if who I am today is even a good person, my ignored conflicts, struggles, and demons, the weight of the realizations I’ve come to while maturing exponentially in only a short amount of time called the late 20s, and my personal views resulting from it – I wonder why I would try to do that to someone else. Someone else who didn’t ask for it.

Life is short and sweet until it’s not. And when it’s not, it feels so damn long and bitter.

Empathy

Oxford Languages defines “Empathy” as the ability to understand and share the feelings of another.

It also defines “Unoriginal” as lacking originality; derivative, which is an apt description of an essay that begins by stating how a word is defined in the dictionary.

I personally define it – empathy – as the ability to think of how my words, actions, or general demeanor towards someone might affect them or be interpreted by them, what my expressed emotions or outward feelings might do to theirs internally. (Certainly, empathy also means putting yourself in the shoes of others who might be impacted by the steps of others and not just your own; but in this context, it makes the most sense to focus on the former for the purpose of this piece.)

The word has not been around for long, only coming into existence about 100 years ago, yet the concept has been with us since the beginning of human nature – not that we’ve been around for long, either.

Ironically, the term initially described the projection of one’s own self onto others, such as one’s feelings or movements onto objects and creatures in the world around them. In other words, the feeling I might gain watching a mountain rise in the distance as I come closer to its base.

But then, prior to that, sympathy was the closest we got. And therein lies the problem: although “Empathy” is available in our vocabulary, we do not come close enough to this characteristic in our normal lives. It’s easy to show sympathy for someone whose parent just died, especially when you the know the person, because all sympathy requires is for you to feel sorrow for the individual – because you know it’s sad when a parent dies; this is common knowledge.

But it’s much more difficult to exhibit empathy for someone who is not only in a situation you may have never experienced, but one you may never experience or haven’t previously given thought to.

One such scenario recently occurred for me. I was at best naïve and at worst ignorant to have not contemplated it months into a pandemic: I was talking to my parents, who I have seen sparingly during these strange times even though we live in close proximity, and they were discussing how depressing it’s been for them to not leave the house except for the essentials. They’re beginning to get up there in age (as the idiom goes when you don’t want to disclose an older friend or relative’s age), and so they’ve been taking safety precautions seriously. And when they told me this, it made me realize how I hadn’t thought about them in this regard, at all. Sure, I figured my parents, like most people in this nation and the world right now, are going through their own struggles, but I’d been concentrating on mine, what I’ve been going through and how I’ve felt about it, how it’s affected me, and how it’s had an impact on my life and once normal (or weird, depending on who you ask) lifestyle. At no point until this conversation had I thought to myself: “I wonder how being stuck inside almost all hours of every day makes my parents feel? I know how it makes me feel, which is what I’ve been paying attention to.” And this made me rethink what was essentially my selfishness here and in other ways. My parents were basically locked inside to avoid the risk of becoming infected with a potentially fatal sickness, unable to live their lives how they would like to, a disruption in how they otherwise would. I, on the other hand, was still out and about, with some minor precautions in tow but not enough to alter my life to the extent of it being hindered.

At this juncture, one reading might comment that if someone is quote unquote scared, then that person should stay inside and let everyone else go about their day and life. This is not the mind of an empathetic person. An empathetic person would pause to consider the reasons a person chooses to not take the risk, understand that the person is not excited to effectively halt their life, and be aware of the fact that this person still probably has to make trips outside for certain essentials – the risk of which is compounded by the actions of everyone around them. Then at this time an empathetic person would formulate a more informed and less selfish or stupid (I will not mince words) response.

Now I could be empathetic, too, and ask myself why a person might make such a selfish or stupid comment in the first place. Is the person upset they lost their job as a result of the pandemic? Is the person unhappy with themselves and accustomed to using social events as an escape from whatever is causing them to be unhappy? Surely, both of these are factors we must take into account. One is where community – since we can’t count on the government – can provide its support. The other requires introspection. But how can a community provide its support if the community doesn’t demonstrate empathy? And how can one be introspective if a stigma around mental health exists, or affordable and available care doesn’t exist, or one is simply lazy? The root cause runs deep.

I guess the key to being empathetic is to think through other people’s experiences from all different angles, since we all have different experiences. Yet who has the time to dedicate to this endeavor, when each of us is struggling to keep our heads above the surface? The key can only unlock the door if the door is not under water.

So, I do not blame those who are not empathetic for their lack of empathy, but I do not absolve them of their fault, guilt, or issues they cause or lives they hurt with their lack of empathy.

I digress: I could continue to speak to examples relevant to the COVID-19 pandemic, but such examples are low hanging fruit on the tree with the roots that run deep, and so I will further explore other situations that were preexisting to the current condition we find ourselves in… and I will tie the essay up with a story about the pandemic because I can’t help but share an anecdote.

Accordingly, this observation can be taken beyond the scope of the COVID-19 pandemic into our former lives when things were “normal.”

Our empathy (or lack thereof) is most readily apparent in the tribalism our political theater consists of today, as the most prime and primal example, but it also exists in other ways, and let’s not fool ourselves: our country and every country now and ever has always had a penchant for tribalism in political practice. Rather than look to solve our own problems, we look to provoke them, and in so doing we place the issue on the backs of others as if they were the ones that created it. We don’t try to see their point of view; we don’t try to see them at all, pretending they don’t exist as humans with thoughts and feelings and struggles and hopes and emotions.

This is equally observable on both sides of the tribal aisle, and it is evidently multiple layers thick, we realize when we slice the outer shell. I might look at someone who is cheering on the deportation of human beings (and often times degradation associated with it) and mock the compassion and intelligence of such individuals for being able to forget that these faceless and nameless people whose lives are being uprooted for worse are, in fact, human; but then to prove to myself I am not a hypocrite, I need to ask myself why such individuals are seemingly taking joy in this so-called winning – the why (and how) is more important than the what. But again, that doesn’t absolve them from being unempathetic, and again, I digress.

Now that I’ve tried and likely failed to prove I’m not a hypocrite, I can dive deeper into the subject of people being dicks. (I’m sure there’s a more appropriate title for which to label the general, indirect noun of people, but are we so deserving of a different name when this slur suits us so well?)

The other hellish haven for empathy’s antonym is social media. It’s so very easy to forget other people are real with the anonymity the online world provides, even when its friends and not strangers, and even when we can see the person’s name and picture. In this fake view we’ve constructed of reality, we’re tuned into our own presence and honed-in on our echo chamber. When we see a dissenting view that challenges the one we have crafted into a piece of our personality, our automatic judgment is to judge the person or thing causing us to question ourselves. At this time, the ability to understand and share the feelings of another disintegrates like the fragile picture of ourselves falling to the floor. We lose the capacity to be considerate and resort to take-downs that no one wins because we both end up on the ground. (And not to stray too far from the topic at hand, but everyone always has an opinion.)

I would never consider giving empathy to the devil, yet for some reason we treat our fellow humans like the devil in this respect. I wish I could say it’s just on the internet where we see this anomaly (ha) occur, but no, we’re seeing instances of unempathetic actions in our daily lives. (Of course, the most prominent examples find a home online.) I witnessed one such instance firsthand, and have had the fun of being a background character in others.

***

About six weeks ago I got into the elevator on the ground floor of my building to head up to my apartment on the seventh floor. The lease management company had recently issued a mask requirement within the common places of the complex – lobby, gym, club room, and elevators. This lease management company is strict about enforcing its policies, too.

Anyway, this was early July, soon after I made a trip to the ER due to shortness of breath, a lingering long-term effect that persisted for weeks after I had “recovered” from COVID-19 (I finally can confidently say I feel alright again).

And so I got into the elevator, and six other people got in with me. It wasn’t a particularly small elevator, but it also wasn’t especially large, either. Three of the six are wearing masks. One man in his late 30s, who was wearing a mask and scrubs, asked the group of three why they weren’t wearing masks. It seemed like a reasonable question for two obvious reasons: one, employees at the strict lease management company are not afraid to enforce the rules, so it’s less resistance just to do it; and two, there’s a chance wearing a mask does help mitigate the risk of spreading the virus, and even if it doesn’t, it at least shows an individual acknowledges another individual as being a real, living, breathing person (for now). I personally wouldn’t have asked the question because I usually shy away from conflict and generally am not in a mood to talk to strangers… but still a reasonable question nonetheless.

The indignant response of the condescending group of three, two males and one female, included an eye roll, stare, and glare, and the first of multiple comments being: “Well, you’re wearing your mask so aren’t you safe?” With a smug undertone in the young woman’s voice. (Oddly enough, I couldn’t decide if the combative, immature emotion she spoke with was a result of her truly believing she was besting him in this situation, or if it was actually her realizing she was full of shit and just acting out because she’d been called out. If someone is willing to be that rude about this issue, I have to imagine they at least realize wearing a mask isn’t to protect you but is to protect the others around you, because the alternative is that they have an opinion on a subject they know nothing about; but let’s be real here, they probably do have an opinion on a subject they know nothing about, and they probably do realize how a mask works and just don’t give a shit about others.)

I was standing there in disbelief, as I expected the answer to the question to either just be silence or an, “Oh, my bad,” and we all carry on with our day. My disbelief then grew greater with the group of three’s next few ignorant comments, which were in retort to the man mentioning how he was a doctor who treats COVID-19 patients daily. The one comment that stuck out to me the most was one of the group mockingly replying, “Good for you.” (Side-note: When did we decide to be so proud of our ignorance? Have we always been and it’s just easier to notice now, or are people just emboldened now? And why was this group so happy to celebrate their ignorance, wearing it like a badge of honor, displaying it for us to see?)

I know this sounds like the longest elevator ride ever – I’m just not a concise writer when I don’t want to be.

Eventually, after an eternity of awkwardness, the elevator beeps and the doors begin to open for floor number seven. I decide to depart with a one-line anecdote – my personal and at the time very recent experience – which was a lot for me to do, since as I noted, I’m not into the whole entire conflict thing or talking to people I have no interest in, such as this group of three. I simply say:

“I just had to go to the ER as a 29-year-old male with no preexisting conditions. Good luck if you catch it.”

Apparently I did not realize I was in America. I came to this conclusion that I did not realize I was in America, thanks to one of the gentlemen pointing it out to me, raising his voice to do so while I walked out of the elevator into the hall. If only I could thank him now for his service and his sacrifice.

The sad thing is, he was right. We do live in America, and this is what Americans (and if we’re being honest with ourselves, humans the world allover, although perhaps in other fashions) are doing and how we are acting. We’ve turned what shouldn’t be much of a debate into a crusade against reason and compassion because both inconvenience me and get in the way of me getting my way, even when it’s at your expense – if you’re reading this, you should bow down to me – because we’re unempathetic assholes. It’s not justified, nor is it rationale or logical, but none of that matters – here we are. This is where we’re at.

(Now I wish I could have thought of a comeback along the lines of the above. But sometimes it’s best to just let it go. I can’t be clever in real time, but writing is therapeutic. You can’t let the unempathetic people get to you. It will drive you mad, into being a misanthrope. I’ve thought about becoming one. A cynic, I positively am.)

I’ve come to believe wearing a mask is a litmus test.

I will leave it at that.

***

So on that note, after talking about dicks, I guess it’s time to wrap this up. Puns aside, I mean, do we really want more unempathetic people in this world? If this is how the majority of individuals are, do we really want more people in this world?

To be honest, this isn’t how the majority of individuals are… but sometimes it very much seems to be very much like that. But perception isn’t necessarily reality; appearances can be deceiving, as the phrase goes.

Expressing empathy means showing you care, showing interest, acknowledging pain, and being supportive, because you can assume the highs or lows another person is feeling. When we ignore others in their struggles or their hopes, do we express empathy?

And as I go struggling with the appearance that people just don’t care anymore (or maybe “anymore” is incorrect or unneeded), I also go hoping our humanity will unite us and our empathy will be bright before us, shining until the sun burns no more.

If we fail to do this, we won’t be around to see that final horizon.

Please note I do not set out to be self-righteous in what I write or think. I have my faults and my blinders. But I have thought about this topic in conversations in my head, and so it was time to write my craziness into word – a Microsoft Word Document, that is. My only advice is that in a piece about how we should be more empathetic, I should use the word “my” less. My only other advice is to just remember you’re not alone: there are likely many people who are going through what you’re going through now, or have gone through it or will go through it; and similarly, there are likely many people who are going through something you’ve never experienced or even contemplated – please, do not forget about them. Put yourself in their shoes, regardless of whether they fit, to know what it’s like to wear them.

Waiting (for the Elevator)

Ring.

Beep.

Some high-pitched noise that tries to sound pleasant but comes off as shrill.

Ring.

Beep.

Is it here?

These things, he thought, as he pressed the round, raised button to go downstairs from his condo floor.

“And will I have to make small talk? Please, I don’t want to make small talk. At least with a mask on they can only see my eyes.

“But my eyes tell so much.”

As fear of talking to people he didn’t care about sought to overcome him, a different thought overtook his mind.

“What is the life that will be presented to me when those doors open? Who will the person be who’s standing in front of me?”

He wondered about their lives, their stories, backgrounds, futures, and desires. If something was currently going wrong that day, or better yet, if something was actually going right. His imagination was intrigued even though the doors hadn’t opened.

He hadn’t seen them, he didn’t know who they were, but he was fascinated with the concept of who they might be.

He hadn’t seen them, he didn’t know who they were, and soon they would see him.

Worried again, he contemplated with anxiousness whether the situation may be returned in reverse. But before falling into the trap of thinking so much of himself that strangers would think so much of him, he realized just this. There’s no reason to be overwhelmed in a life that underwhelms us so often.

He further assured himself the barrier between tenth floor foyer and two door elevator would be enough to provide protection from them getting to know him, the one-inch gap he would have to cross over to enter the contraption. Somehow it seemed like the long, slender hall was completely separate from the eight-by-eight feet square space. Even with the doors open, he decided they couldn’t see him.

Still, he wanted to see them. And he wondered what their lives and their stories may hold.

“What if it’s a doctor, a nurse, bartender, or teacher? Deadbeat? No, a deadbeat couldn’t live here. Deadbeat on their parent’s money? More likely.”

He thought to himself as eternity awaited him; it felt like eternity, at least, waiting, watching, wondering.

“Will they have a family? Be single? In a relationship with someone they love? Stuck in a dead-end marriage with a dead-end job with someone they love but who doesn’t love them back? Ah, unrequited love, just like high school.”

It was now taking some time, a noticeable amount of time, for the elevator to arrive at his floor and the doors to open. The elevators in this building were fast, but often one or more did not work. How much does he pay to be inconvenienced? How much does one pay in life, he reasoned.

“There are so many endless opportunities, it’s truly astounding and amazing and invigorating to think of all the things one can be! And enticing and exciting and… upsetting to think of all the things I could have been.”

His internal voice trailed off in his head, his jubilant attitude turning downcast, wide eyes shutting and ear-to-ear smile fading.

“I… I could have been anything. Well, maybe not anything, but many things. Not this.”

He searched his inner soul: thoughts and feelings he hadn’t experienced in some time, but the pain of which he knew all too well, familiar when recalled from the deep caverns of his mind.

To be fair to himself, it’s not like he lived a bad life. He had a good job – whatever that means; a good condo, good car, good friends. He was as complete as one could be without the ‘l’.

But looking back, is this really where he wanted to be at this point in his life? Standing in the hall, waiting for an elevator in this condo, about to drive his car to his job so that he can afford this condo and car and buy drinks with drinking friends he wouldn’t invite in on a non-night out?

Retreating from his mind, looking back: at the elevator door, still not open, forcing him to be alone with his thoughts. Is this really where he wanted to be? Can’t someone from another room on his floor walk up? God, small talk would be preferable.

Purgatory, this truly was.

“When did it all go wrong? Was it ever right? Oh, who I could have been… who could I have been?”

His brain began to repeat the loop before he caught himself again. This time though, instead of pain, it almost went to pleasure – to get off on the high of fantasizing of who he could be and what he would be doing at this given moment if he was someone else, in lieu of becoming depressed he wasn’t someone else. The adventures that await. Hell, it almost gave him a kick of dopamine.

“It’s too early in the day to be day-dreaming.”

Standing in hell, waiting for the elevator in his condo.

“I’d rather be asleep. Damnit, I need my black double shot coffee.”

He retraced the steps to how he got here: from his room to this space and from his birth to this place. He couldn’t pinpoint the exact date and time it all went wrong. Maybe one month ago, one year, a decade, a day. Perhaps 1/1/2011 or 8/8/2007. 12:13am or 7:06pm. All he could make out is, over time, no coffee turned into coffee with creamer then to black coffee to one shot and now two. There’s got to be more to life than me waking up and requiring my fucking black double shot coffee.

“And what is taking this damn elevator so long?”

He was starting to not care anymore about the life on the other side. There’s a possibility he never cared in the first place except for his own relative comparison, a jealousy of greener grass and a reminder of his own shortcomings; he’d never be tall enough to climb the stairs up and take the tumble down when needed. No, he’d make plans for another day, not even in his real life journal that he didn’t even keep, but jot them down in his memory, a day-dream he’ll revisit from time-to-time in the car and again on runs or while going to sleep and wish he could actually visit in his dreams.

He could’ve been anything, he figured. Arrogant, he was. But although he was arrogant, he was also insecure, and although he couldn’t have been anything, he was still something, not nothing – no matter how often he tried to tell himself he was.

It was true he (or she) could have been very many things. As life continued, though, he reasoned he must continue to be the one thing he has known, to remain on the path he has chosen but did not pave, to keep going forward on this journey with the hope that eventually it’ll lead to happiness and fulfillment. He had pushed the button to go down. What was taking this damn elevator so long?

Ring. Beep. A high-pitched noise that tries to sound pleasant but comes off as shrill.

“Who will be in the elevator when the doors open, and will I have to make small talk?”

The laminated stainless steel doors opened, receding into the sides of the machine. He brought his attention up from the ground to eye level.

And he saw no one.

The elevator was empty. Potentially it’ll lead to life and be full tomorrow.

“I guess this is my reality. This is who I am. I am a no one. I am nothing. I thought I’d done so little with my life that I could have seen any number of individuals in the elevator and pondered a life like theirs and be envious with my desire. Apparently, I’ve done so little there aren’t any individuals to see.”

He moped, his dejected brain contemplated the button to push: G for “Ground” might as well have read RB for, well, you know. He selected it, and down he went.

He didn’t realize he had eight other paths to choose from, still, even at his age.

Ten floors, including the one he was on, the rock bottom, and the eight between. This didn’t count the many more above. The many lives above. The many stories in the building. The many stories to be told.

The elevator doors closed in front of him. He acted like they shut automatically, but they only shut because he pressed the button.

He was boring. He was normal. He didn’t understand the reason the word “extraordinary” existed since he was just extra ordinary. He wanted to be someone else: to either sell his soul and become powerful or feed his soul with creativity and charity. He was stuck between the two. Stuck is a compliment, because truthfully, he was too lazy to go all in on a commitment. Getting high on the thought was the single form of effort he could put forth.

The elevator lifted him momentarily before beginning its descent down. Just another 10,440 times and he’ll be dead.

Only he could permanently lift himself up.


He’d repeat the same routine tomorrow.



Could it be the one who I’ll marry? Is this really how we’ll meet? In an elevator, a story we can tell our kids and their kids if we’re still revolving around the sun by the time we’ve gained enough financial security and “adult”-like maturity to adequately plan for, afford, and raise kids in the first place. Ah, I can’t wait until I can accomplish all those things with someone I haven’t met yet but will really marry in a year or two. Indeed, that will be quite the story.

He’d repeat the same routine tomorrow.

If I was a famous _, I’d be on _, _ing _ _ _.

If I was a famous singer, I’d be on tour, playing shows for millions.

If I was a famous actor, I’d be on television, acting in big hits.

If I was a famous athlete, I’d be on ESPN, catching passes from Brady.


If I was this, if I was that.

Businessperson. Entrepenuer. Start-up. Painter. Venture capitalist. Politician. Mover. Shaker. DJ.

If I was this, if I was that.


He’d repeat the same routine tomorrow.

Let me get high imagining myself as this and that, how my tour would go and how I’d curate my shows.

Let me get high and not actually do anything but write subpar, bland prose.

Let me get high imagining myself as this and that and those.

And not actually do anything about it.

Not actually do anything to make it happen.

Because getting high for a moment is good enough until another distraction comes up, until you’re standing, waiting for an elevator, and no person comes up, no stranger for small talk, and there’s no small talk for yourself, only your problems that make you think you need help.

So get high for a moment. But not a high off a drug, unless that’s your thing. No, the author is speaking metaphorically.

Seven continents of billions of people. No one unique. But everyone has their stories. And I’m here waiting for the elevator drinking my double black coffee. So many things I could have done. So many things I could still do. But I’m here waiting for the elevator drinking my French vanilla hazelnut double black coffee. Who the fuck put these two flavors together.


He’d repeat the same routine tomorrow, except with a house blend double black coffee. Maybe iced, if he was feeling particularly risky.