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Monday, March 30, 2020

Some Quarantine Updates

Earlier last week, Sam and I left Princeton to head down to DC. We knew that there would be stringent measures in the Northeast, and we wanted to be in DC with Sam's family if there were going to be lockdowns (which there subsequently have been--both in New Jersey and in DC). It was good we left earlier rather than later, since starting yesterday, there has been a travel advisory for New York and New Jersey. So we're in DC for the time being (though I really hope I can get back up to Princeton by the end of April). We'll see, I guess. There's so much uncertainty, so it's hard to plan--research, travel, anything, really.

[beautiful princeton in the springtime.]


[i'm convinced that princeton is prettiest in pink.]



Before leaving Princeton, I stopped by the library to gather up any odds and ends in my carrel and to say goodbye (since I really don't know if I'll be coming back there). I was only given a 30 minute slot to get what I needed. Luckily, I didn't have to grab all of my books, some friends had been able to gather together my books five days before--I was out of town and there was an unexpected announcement that they were closing the library for a couple of days, and some friends (shout out to Miri, Bailey, and James) answered my panicked texts and went to go get my books out of my carrel for me. There ended up being about 3 boxes of books and 6-tote-bags of books. In other words, I would not have been able to get all of my books out in 30 minutes. So I am incredibly grateful to them for doing that. Instead, I was able to grab a couple of leftover things out of my carrel and just spend the time feeling melancholy and nostalgic instead of panicked.



[sign of the times]


[empty reading room. very abnormal.]


[everything is GONE. so, SO weird.]


[of course i had to document myself feeling sad. i mean, i guess i didn't have to. but i did.]


[documenting for posterity's sake. and my vanity's sake. but also, look how tired my eyes are. this has been A RIDE.] 



[the vastness of eternity.]

While in quarantine, I've been organizing my research files, writing, reading secondary sources, trying to learn more French, brushing up on my Russian, stress baking, and taking daily walks (although it's much more fun to call them "daily constitutionals"). Writing those things down make it sound like I'm being more productive than I really am. I promise you--I am not being as productive as I usually am. 


[more signs of the time from our passive-aggressive neighbors in princeton.]


[making pancakes.]


[now onto cookies.]


[walks around tacoma park.]


[beautiful cherry blossoms. not the ones around the tidal basin, because those are #offlimits, but these ones in a tacoma park neighborhood were beautiful, too.]


[a rare day when i actually get dressed AND do makeup.]


[maybe it's her, maybe it's quarantine. JK, this one is definitely a maybelline--or a maybelline-adjacent--look.]

Another thing I am doing while I listen to audiobooks is this dot puzzle. It's kind of hard to explain, but it's kind of like a color-by-number picture, but instead you stick on little dots with wax to create a picture: 


[you can't really see the picture, but it's to the right and it will be van gogh's "cafe at night" when we finish it.]

It's mindless, but it also is one of those things where I feel like I'm actually producing something tangible, so it helps me deal with stress. 

Hope you're all healthy, safe, and well during these "unprecedented times" (as every email from Princeton's administration likes to call them). 

Saturday, March 14, 2020

Love and Loss in the Time of Coronavirus

In the words of a timely meme which I've seen on various social media posts, what a year this week has been.

We have all been affected in similar and different ways. Some of us have loved ones who have contracted the illness. Maybe you've contracted it yourself (and if you have or do, I wish you a speedy recovery). Most of us have had events, travel, school, or important rituals cancelled or postponed indefinitely. My heart aches for my undergraduate friends at Princeton who have had to leave friends, studies, athletics so abruptly and who won't be able to participate in graduation ceremonies.

My own work has been disrupted. Yesterday, the National Archives closed indefinitely (as have many other archives in the United States and around the globe), and since university-funded travel is on hold, this pandemic probably puts back my research at least six months--more likely a year. A couple of academic conferences I planned to present at have been cancelled or postponed--including one at Oxford that I was really looking forward to because two close friends and I had put together a panel and were looking forward to seeing each other.

I realize that these cancellations are the responsible thing to do for the public health. And I realize that there are worse things than cancellations. But the loss is still real, as is the uncertainty. All of this loss, ambiguity, and anxiety seems oddly juxtaposed with the arrival of spring.

And I think it is okay to feel that loss.

Social distancing is needed, but isolation, separations, and cancellations are hard. We crave connection, and this next while will change the ways we are able to give and receive love. I think about my own church community, among members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. So much of what we do to help people is centered on literally reaching out--bringing over meals, hugging someone who is sad, visiting the sick in hospitals, placing hands on heads to give blessings of comfort and healing. During times of trouble, we want to give and receive touch. We want to break bread together. We want to gather during good and bad times to show love and to be loved.

It is hard when those bonds are broken. But all I know is that we can't stop reaching out; we have to find ways to create and strengthen those bonds. There are so many ways to love. Maybe ways we've forgotten about and which we only remember when we are faced with a crisis.



I don't really have much else to say at the moment. But if you are looking for the words of someone who is wiser than I am, I will direct you to Maryan Shumway's blog posts about living in China during the time of the Coronavirus. There are too many articles and memes and such floating around social media (and so many that, to me, are full of empty platitudes), but her blog posts have calmed my heart during these times.

I don't know what the next year, week, or even day will bring, but stay healthy and happy, my friends.


Friday, March 6, 2020

an early spring.

Spring is here and i think it's here to stay, complete with an ~almost~ 70-degree day forecasted for next Monday. It's too early, I know. But still, I'm enjoying going outside more. It's nice to be able to take a walk when I am going stir-crazy from reading too much rather than just do two dozen jumping jacks or something. 

[snowdrops in the woods.]

And hopefully we can all keep going outside during these next few weeks. It's impossible to know what will happen with the spread of Covid-19. Today at Costco the shopping carts were full of thought-to-be-essentials. The cashier was laughing at us all, and he didn't even give me a chance to ask why. He just started explaining that it all reminded him of some zombie movie. Like we were all preparing for the apocalypse. 


But if a quarantine were to happen, perhaps that would mean I would get more reading and writing done. I'm getting to a point in this stage of my PhD program/dissertation research when I am asking myself, "But when do I start writing?" It feels like I have too much to know still before I actually put something down, but I know intellectually and intuitively that's the wrong way to think about it. I'll just have to make the leap and start writing. 

[crocus by the street lamp.]

Although, to be honest, if a quarantine were to happen, it would most likely mean that I would just start watching more videos. I re-discovered that I have access to Kanopy via Princeton, which means I have access to thousands of movies and documentaries. I also found out that they have "Middlemarch" on Amazon Prime. This is great for my Friday nights. Not so great for my thesis. 


And since it is one of those Friday nights when my heart and head are tired, I think that calls for the first hour of BBC's "Middlemarch." So if you'll excuse me, I think I'll settle in for the night and begin the saga. 

Stay healthy, stay safe, stay strong. 

Sunday, March 1, 2020

the limits of longing

"Go to the Limits of Your Longing," by Rainer Maria Rilke (Book of Hours I, 59)


God speaks to each of us as he makes us, 
then walks with us silently out of the night.

These are the words we dimly hear: 

You, sent out beyond your recall, 
go to the limits of your longing. 
Embody me. 

Flare up like a flame 
and make big shadows I can move in. 

Let everything happen to you: beauty and terror. 
Just keep going. No feeling is final. 
Don't let yourself lose me. 

Nearby is the country they call life. 
You will know it by its seriousness. 

Give me your hand.