The Forging of Beautiful Things

Is lockdown harder or easier the second time around? I can’t quite make up my mind.

We settle into a familiar pace of life and quickly forget that we were ever allowed out of our houses to actually see people or participate in (what seems now to be) frivolous activities. Connection with ‘the outside world’ is conducted almost solely through screens, and our picture of reality is mediated by Facebook and Twitter feeds and raging comment wars. ‘Wear a mask!’ ‘How selfish!’ ‘COVIDIDIOTS’ ‘#Dansfault’ ‘#IstandwithDan’.

The days take on a predictable hue. We move through practised motions, pausing to yell out ‘wash your hands!’ every now and then. Screen time boundaries blur: ‘I’m doing a project, Mum!’ Can I please play that maths game?’ ‘It’s just a car tuning app!’ ‘Show me your screen.’

Food becomes colour and distraction. I bake incessantly. Salted pretzel caramel slice. Oat & raisin cookies. Carrot cake. Pumpkin cake with lashings cream-cheese icing. Star-shaped sugar cookies. Winter lends itself to hearty dishes – chicken cacciatore, paella, Spanish meatballs.

Voices rise and fall. We move chaotically through the same spaces. Frustrations explode more frequently. Apologies made and remade. Pages turn and stories return. We visit worlds through these makeshift portals – the only places left for escape in the midst of this tumult.

The stretch of footpath before our house becomes a runway to freedom – scooters and bikes spin lines into the grass. ‘Can we go across the road with our ramps?’ ‘Can you help me learn to ride my bike, Mum?’ ‘Watch me! Are you looking?’ Skills are mastered. Knees grazed, faces amazed at newfound abilities.

The fear seems more distant this time. The ‘refresh’ button has lost its allure. I relish the chance to escape for (the previously dreaded) food shopping. Even the little interactions reassure me that the world is still a familiar and friendly place. Laughter at the checkout. Stories exchanged. Smiles and commiserations. ‘That’s a lovely hat.’

When a sore throat rears up, the test seems less alien this time. A matter of procedure. We bunker down, repeatedly respond with ‘no news yet’ texts to concerned parents. What would have hardly been cause for attention now becomes a ‘what if?’ Relief cascades at the negative result. We’ve weathered another assault and emerged the stronger for it.

Outside, the world swirls and buckets. We shelter in this haven, thankful for the little things – food, shelter, screens, virtual connection. The birds squawk and cackle above us, seeming to know something we don’t. Trees bow and bend in the wind and then return to point towards the heavens.

We are growing armour. It is painful and messy at times. It doesn’t always look like progress. But the suffering is beckoning to us, ‘Won’t you let me refine you? Slough off some of those softer edges?’ We scream and protest, and then pause. For we are made stronger in the becoming. We are not consumed in the fire.

We are built for this.

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Echoes of Eli

Every so often, we indulge in a bit of nostalgia. Revisiting old videos of the kids when they were toddling about. ‘Put on a video of me!’ comes the chorus after we’ve watched one and they marvel that they could have ever been like that, looked that little. They love […]

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Seconds & Waves

It was all looking so promising. Cases declining, restaurants opening, that sweet feeling of catching up with friends again. I looked towards the upcoming holidays with a sense of purpose. We were going to make the most of it: have a party for Hudson (the poor boy had been waiting […]

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Where We Stand

‘The opposite of a fact is falsehood, but the opposite of one profound truth may very well be another profound truth.’ – Niels Bohr I’ve been doing a lot of listening lately. Watching the protests play out in America following the horrific death of George Floyd and the reaction to the Amy Cooper […]

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What I’ve Learned: Autumn 2020

Almost a whole season in isolation. Seriously. That’s kind of insane. I vaguely remember the start of March and how Hudson’s lingering illness hit us just before COVID-19 was truly a household name, the threads of anxiety tentatively reaching into homes. It feel like another universe. It was an autumn […]

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Farewell to Deda

I was baking cupcakes when I heard the news. It’s always the mundane things that seem so absurd when connected with death. Deda, my grandfather of 88 years, died today. Mile Tomasic was a force of life. Brimming with energy, even in old age. His mind was sharp and keen, […]

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Battling the Beast

I felt it again last week. That vice-like grip of wanting to lose myself in a bottle. To just ‘not think’ for a while. Like a hunger that drives me restless, I squirmed under the squeeze and realised… This used to be how I felt all the time. There have […]

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