my own private trumpocalypse
1. requiem for a dream
In college I read a short story in which a boy gets kicked out of school. He’s the child of migrant farm workers, and he has trouble keeping up. He knows his parents will be mad. On the walk home, he keeps thinking, Maybe it didn’t really happen.
In college I read a short story in which a boy gets kicked out of school. He’s the child of migrant farm workers, and he has trouble keeping up. He knows his parents will be mad. On the walk home, he keeps thinking, Maybe it didn’t really happen.
Texas, 1942. |
When I got out of work on Tuesday, I looked an animated
New York Times graphic that depicted a needle wobbling between Hillary and
Trump, showing the likelihood of who would get elected based on the count coming
in. It showed an 82% chance of a Hillary win.
Like so many people, I’d showed up to my local polling
place that morning feeling proud and optimistic. People chatted in English and
Spanish, greeted their neighbors and sympathized with a toddler who wondered where
the “boating” was.
The boating. Photo by Massimo Sestini. |
Like so many people, my first thought was Wait…what? Like so many people, I
rapidly cycled through the stages of grief. Denial (polls hadn’t closed in the
West), anger (duh), bargaining (more on this in a minute), depression (for dinner on Wednesday I ate half a bag of gummi worms and scraps from Dash’s highchair). I don’t know if I’ve gotten to acceptance in any but the most
literal sense.
One of the weirdest and saddest parts of scrolling
through Facebook in the dark, on the floor of Dash’s room, was seeing posts pop
up from earlier in the day. People in pantsuits. Voting with their elderly
mothers or young kids. Proudly sporting their “I voted” stickers. The algorithms
pushed these posts upward and reminded us what the world we’d imagined hours earlier might have looked like. Maybe it didn’t really happen. I wanted
to grab the NYT needle and pull on it with all my weight.
2. a lump in my
throat, a lump in dash’s neck
Wednesday morning I woke up with the hungover feeling
that follows any awful event. But I spent most of the day focused on Dash. He
had a bad cold and, on Sunday, I’d noticed a little knot at the back of his
neck.
When you’re Cheryl Klein, you do not take any lump
lightly. I suspected a swollen lymph node, Googled the prevalence of lymphoma
in children (very low) and took him to the doctor on Monday. She wasn’t too
worried, but she uttered the word “ultrasound” before I told her my own cancer history and subsequent nervousness.
And that was enough to keep my anxiety at a low boil right through the
election.
The ultrasound was scheduled for Wednesday afternoon. That
morning, I realized I’d made the appointment on the four-year anniversary of
the ultrasound that led to my own cancer diagnosis. In the same building.
My magical thinking started zinging and popping like oil
on a hot pan. Why didn’t I make the appointment for a different day? But not
everything was going as it had in 2012. After all, that election went great! So
clearly, if good election = cancer, then bad election = no cancer. So Dash
would be okay, right? But, oh no, was I really about to throw the whole country—the
whole world—under the bus for the sake of my child? I would do it—it was my job
to be biased—but what a terrible person that would make me! It was like that
storyline on The West Wing when
President Bartlett had to step down temporarily when his daughter was kidnapped
so he wouldn’t make biased decisions and put the country in jeopardy to save
her.
Dash fell asleep in the car on the way to the ultrasound
appointment, and was still groggy as the tech gelled up his neck and rolled her
wand over it. He was still and compliant, the model of a good patient or a sick
child. I knew he was just sleepy, and he always takes a long time to wake up,
but a small part of me wanted him to squirm and shout, just to show the tech
(i.e. me) how healthy he was.
My heart raced and I wanted to cry. I kept telling myself
This is an opportunity to be brave. Thinking
of my story as dramatic and noble helped. I can be amazing for very short
periods of time. I held his head and his hand and chatted with him while I watched
the tech take measurements on the screen.
All ultrasounds pretty much look the same. If you’d told
me Dash’s lymph nodes were jelly beans or my own ovaries, I would have believed
it. Still, I tried to commit the images to memory. Later, as Dash ran around a
hot, empty park, I searched the internet for pictures of malignant lymph nodes
and healthy ones. Would I call Dash’s nodes round or oval? I couldn’t remember.
It seemed to matter. Everything looked the same.
As I Googled, my body chanted danger danger danger, transporting me to the days of fertility
treatment, miscarriage and cancer—all those times my future has hung on the
results of medical tests. But as true as that feeling was, I knew with equal
certainty that cancer wasn’t the end of the world. That’s the weird thing about
trauma. It makes you stronger and more vulnerable at the same time.
I texted with Kim, my hypochondria sponsor and an
epidemiologist, and she reminded me of the same: Most kids survive lymphoma and
leukemia these days. (I have two friends who lost nephews—separate nephews—to leukemia.
For them this parenthetical is not a parenthetical. For them “most” means
nothing.) Most adults do too.
See that look on her mom's face? That was me. |
3. safety
dance
The sun came out again in my little corner of the world. (I
mean this figuratively, because in L.A. it was already so hot and dry that Dash’s
hair stood on end after one trip down the slide Wednesday.) It wasn’t lost on
me that I was where I was—breathing a deep sigh of relief that my son was
healthy—because of luck and good health care. So many people forget that when
they vote: Those nice things you have? Most of them aren’t because of you. Some
of them are directly or indirectly on the backs of others. Some are just a roll
of the dice.
To be the healthy parents of a healthy child you were
fortunate enough to adopt. That is everything. To remember that my job isn’t to
hoard what I can and hiss and scratch to keep others away—that’s only possible
when I feel at least a little bit safe.
I believe that people who voted for Trump don’t feel safe. Some of them are right about their vulnerability, but wrong about the reasons. To them I want to say:
Working for safer factory conditions after the Triangle Shirtwaist fire. |
I believe that people who voted for Trump don’t feel safe. Some of them are right about their vulnerability, but wrong about the reasons. To them I want to say:
Dude, I get the fear. And I know how hard it is to walk toward the thing that terrifies you. Maybe for you a brown America feels like the Huntington Hill Imaging Center feels to me—like the edge of the abyss. But it’s made of metal and plastic, polyester and people. Only the abyss is the abyss. The rest you just have to walk into.
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