About a year after the worst of the COVID lockdowns were over, I noticed that time didnât work the way it used to. I know the concept of linear time is a construct, but, generally speaking, we experienced the intervals humans created in a way that was, for the most part, consistent. One day might feel longer than another, but you never mistook it for a week or a month.
That no longer felt true. I found myself losing track of daysâeven monthsâin a way I never had before. I named this feeling of having been unmoored from the mechanism by which we measure, and keep track of our lives, âCOVID induced temporal dislocation.â This was not limited to those whoâd had COVID (I havenâtâat least not yet), but to everybody who made it through the lockdowns and isolation
That spring and summer of 2020 was the first time in my life I felt time as a wave that was experientially unlike anything Iâd lived through.I still feel outside of time on occasion and the absolutely unrelenting and ferocious velocity with which the news keeps coming at us isnât helping.
Because of this, and because we are only 99 days out from the election, Iâve decided to keep my Sunday show a Q&Aâthere is so much of consequence unfolding (almost constantly), and I want to hear what is of most concern to all of you.
This morning, as I was thinking about the show and what we might talk about, I could not for the life of me remember what the biggest event of the last seven days was. A lot of major news brokeâthe impeccable rollout of the support that coalesced Vice President Harris; the beautifully choreographed roll-out of her campaign; the off-the-charts enthusiasm of (and fund-raising from) the Democratic base; the increasingly fascistic rhetoric coming from Donald at his rallies; the Democratâs search for a vice presidential pick (which is actually exciting, not boring); the swift change in fortunes for Donaldâs VP pick, the vile, misogynistic, and deeply weird, J.D. Vance.
There was something else that proceeded all of this, wasnât there? I knew there was, but couldnât remember. I called a friend of mine to ask what last weekâs biggest news was, and she reminded me that President Biden announced on Sunday that he was not running for re-election. I didnât believe her, at first. Surely that was two or three weeks ago? But, no, Bidenâs announcement was the penultimate piece of seismic news (followed by his endorsement of Harris) that dropped in what will almost certainly go down in history as the most bizarre, dangerous, and momentous month in modern American politics.
So, Iâd love to know how youâre processing all of this. Please put your questions and observations in the comments and Iâll get to as many of them as possible on this eveningâs live âAsk Mary Anything (within Reason).â I really hope to see all of you there.
In my 85 yrs, I have never heard quite the almost gallows humor of today around voting as it was going before Mr. Biden quit. Things like; âIâd vote for a cardboard cutout of Biden before I vote for Trumpâ, and â Iâd vote for Biden if he was on a ventilator over Trumpâ. I interpreted this to mean they will vote for the administration, not the man. And, Trump, is only about the man, however loosely organized his brain and morals areâŚI have believed from the beginning once Roe fell women of the USA would unite and get rid of Trump. I was part of the fight to get abortion care in the l970s, know what it took and how determined we were. I think it no less today. Women will not tolerate Trump.
How do you think Donald is going to react when he loses to a black woman?