Patsy Porco

Posts Tagged ‘2019’

2022: New Year, New World?

In 2022 on January 1, 2022 at 6:03 pm

Human beings as a group are eternally optimistic. Every January 1, we express joy and hope for the new year. We put the year that just passed behind us and look ahead, expecting health, happiness, and wealth.

Time doesn’t work that way, though. Most things have a beginning and an end … except for time. It keeps on going for us until we stop going. Then it continues on for those who are still here. That’s a bitter pill to swallow.

When someone we love dies, we wonder how the world can continue on, but it does. We can’t even begin to fathom a world that doesn’t include us. But, we will leave for good eventually and everything will be fine, or not fine, but it won’t be our concern then. Or, at least not from an earthly perspective. I don’t know what goes on in the afterlife. I know there’s a connection between this life and the next but I’m going to wait to find out what it is. I have enough to concern me about surviving this life.

Last January 1, I’m sure I had great hopes for 2021. The previous few years were awful, so how bad could 2021 be? Don’t ask that question … ever. The fates will provide you with an answer if you tempt them. In 2019, I lost my husband unexpectedly. In 2020, the world closed down when COVID-19 started killing hundreds of thousands of people. Businesses were closed, jobs were lost, people couldn’t pay their mortgages or rents or feed their families. It was a hell of a year.

We all thought 2021 would bring a respite, both personal and public.

We were deluded. In 2021, the year started off with a citizen-led insurrection at the U.S. Capitol, which shook our collective core. How could this happen in the United States of America? We soon realized that our nation was deeply divided and we needed to find a way to come together and be the United States that most of us thought we were.

The year also kept many of us in a constant state of anxiety: Are the new vaccines safe? Which would be worse, catching COVID or the side effects from the vaccines? What is the Delta variant and what can it do to us? What is the Omicrom variant and what will this mutation of the virus do to us? When will the virus stop mutating? Why won’t people get vaccinated? many of us asked. Others stayed steadfast in their belief that they either had immunity from when they had COVID or that the vaccines were more dangerous than the virus.

Personally, 2021 was a disappointment. I lost both the top of my big toe, and my job, in March. On March 29, I dropped a heavy deck door on my toe and sliced off the top of my left big toe. On March 31, my company dropped a big door on my psyche and my wallet when they downsized me. Additionally, my siblings and I did monthlong shifts all year long in Ohio, taking care of my elderly mother, until we could come up with a permanent solution. (We’re still working on it in 2022.) In September, I lost my mother-in-law, who was the anchor of the family. I did get a good job in October, which was a blessing. So, 2021 wasn’t a total disaster for me, but I wouldn’t want to re-live it.

It’s 5:45 pm on January 1, 2022, and I’m still in my pajamas. I guess I’ll get dressed and greet the new year. I hope it’s worth the effort. I guess I’ll know this time next year.

Good/Bad 2018

In 2018, Humor on December 31, 2018 at 8:49 pm

All over social media there are people saying that they can’t wait to see 2018 end. They say it was a horrible year and good riddance to it.

Let’s all take a breath and assess 2018. Something good had to have happened this year to each of us. In fact, I think that almost every event can be perceived in both a negative and a positive light (if you look really hard), so I’m going to attempt to find some sun amidst the darkness.

Screen Shot 2018-12-31 at 8.41.41 PMWhile 2018 presented challenges for me and my family this year, it also brought us our fabulous dog, Duke, whom we adopted from a local shelter. If we hadn’t gotten Duke, I wouldn’t be sitting at my laptop right now, listening to him emit sounds similar to a balloon slowly losing air. I also wouldn’t be enveloped in a cloud of gas so noxious and thick that I will have to fight my way out of it. But that’s the price we pay for having a hilarious, fun-loving, affectionate, and loyal dog. We love him to pieces and he loves us right back. We just don’t take him out in public.

Also in 2018, my commute to work got longer by 2 subway rides. This added about 20 minutes to my trip and will probably subtract years from my life. I used to take one train ride into Manhattan, but then my company moved and I could no longer walk to my office from Grand Central, at least not in a timely manner. Now, when I arrive at Grand Central, I have to elbow my way through dense crowds of people taking pictures of the astrological drawings on the ceiling, race down tunnels and stairs to the Times Square shuttle track, and push my way into a jammed subway car. When we get to the Times Square stop, I catch a train downtown to my job. The Times Square stop is like an underground carnival, where you can watch amateur musical and acrobatic performers, buy newspapers, vinyl records, and rolling papers, or join a cult. On every shuttle to or from Times Square, you will be unwillingly or unwittingly entertained. There is sometimes a man who takes up four seats with a portable keyboard and who plays songs and sings during the short ride. Other times, you get on the train and don’t see anything out of the ordinary and then the doors close and someone sitting all alone will start belting out songs at top volume when nobody expects it. This can be very jarring to your nerves, especially if you haven’t had enough coffee yet. Sometimes a dodgy group of men will appear from another car and start clicking their fingers and tapping their toes and proceed to rap a song they’re composing on the spot. The performers always request donations as the doors of the train open, but if you plant yourself by the door when you get on, you can escape before they get to you. But, despite being part of a captive audience and having to endure a longer commute, I eventually arrive at a job that I love and work with people who are really nice. And there’s free coffee. Of course, after my enjoyable day in the office, I have to repeat the above-described commute in reverse, during the afternoon rush. But—and here’s another upside—I only do this once a week because I am allowed to work from home the other four days. I left that information out until now so you could feel sorry for me, at least for a minute or two.

While the next thing happened in 2017, it affected 2018, so I’m including it: In the summer of 2017, during a party we hosted in our yard, one of our picnic tables fell through the deck. The adult table wasn’t affected, but the kids’ table hit the deck, or actually crashed through the deck onto the ground a few feet below. Only one child was sitting at the table at that time and fortunately he wasn’t hurt. He kept eating his hotdog as we hauled him up through the splintered wood. Then we moved the childrens’ table next to the adults’ table, which was on more stable decking, and continued on with the party. A year later, we finally replaced the deck. So, 2018 brought us a new deck … and no lawsuit from the child’s parents.

There were other events in 2018 that I’m still examining to find a positive side, so I understand that some things that happen can be fairly awful. But when you find yourself dwelling on the bad things that happened this year, be grateful that a flatulent dog isn’t sitting next to you making outrageously rude noises. I’ve never heard of a dog who makes noises when he passes gas. He could well be an old man in a fur coat.

My wish for 2019 is that the year brings upsides that outweigh the downsides. That’s all I want … and Beano for our dog.

Screen Shot 2018-12-31 at 8.47.57 PM

 

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