We
started the New Year in the dark. An ice storm had hit during the sleeping
hours, and when I woke up at 5:30 in the morning the lamp flashed off and on,
then off. Our emergency lighting came on. I immediately called the electric
cooperative to report the outage.
In that
moment, I regretted that we still did not have an automatic switch on our
generator. The generator shed was practically in the yard, but with a layer of
ice, neither one of us was capable of traipsing across the yard to light the
dark.
At
daylight, we called for reinforcements, and Harold’s cousin came and flipped
the switch. Our neighbor who used to tell us when the electricity came back on
has a generator too. Through our conversation with the neighbor, we learned
that the cooperative had an app for that.
Ice is
a good example of treacherous beauty. Looking out at the glistening trees and
icicles from a warm house is a feast for the eyes. Trying to drive on slick
roads, or to walk on an icy sidewalk, is dicey.
I’m not
ashamed to admit that I used to be petrified to drive on ice. One time when Jim
was in the early stages of dementia, I had him drive me to work. I trusted his
driving much more than mine. I eventually learned to navigate the car on
ice-covered roads, but it made me nervous. The first hurdle was getting up
enough speed to go up the grade to the east. Sometimes, the best plan was to
head west and go down into the dip and up the hill.
I’ve
spent my life trying to light the dark. Even during the darkest times of
dementia, I sought the bright moments—when Jim’s eyes lit up when I walked in
his door at the nursing home, when the shower went well and he enjoyed the
Rubber Ducky song, or the rare times he spoke.
The
past year was filled with personal darkness. I lost two beloved
sisters-in-law and a brother-in-law. I lost friends and saw other friends cope
with their own dark days. We grieved together, and we found the strength to
live with the loss and walked into the light together.
Our
country has fallen into dark days. We’ve watched in horror as the pandemic swept across our nation, sowing denial and harvesting lives. Covid-19 claimed
the lives of celebrities, and more painfully, our relatives, friends, and
neighbors.
We are
a country divided. Too many choose politics over family, extremism over
reasonableness, hate over love, conspiracy over unity, and unfortunately
darkness over light. Polarized social media and opinion news programs have
further divided us. Each of them preaches to the choir inciting distrust and
violence.
For
those of us who lived through the sixties, we’ve seen this before. The Vietnam
War was a huge divider in this country. It was a life, death, and patriotic
struggle. The war ended and eventually, the country healed.
I don’t
know about you, but I don’t want to live in the darkness of disease and civil
unrest. The only way out of this darkness is to keep moving toward the light.
Copyright
© January 2021 by L.S. Fisher
http://earlyonset.blogspot.com
#ENDALZ
3 comments:
Wish that 2021 would be a better year for you and all other carers throughout the world.
The pandemic has made us struggle enough, now it's time for us to strike back and show that we are not easy to be defeated.
That's for sure, Nathan! That is my hope too. Maybe with the vaccine, life can return to normal.
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