Every family should have at least one hypochondriac in the
fold. Ours was a distant uncle who
washed his hands multiple times before and after meals, and sometimes between
meals. He was fastidious about his silverware, examining it minutely for water
stains and polishing it at table with his napkin, much to the annoyance of my mother, even though the silverware was as spotless as a saint.
One Christmas, the dining room table crowded with family and
friends, my mother, attempting to extract a roast from the oven, brushed her
hand on the pan, yelped, and dropped the roast to the floor. It spun around
like a top and came to a rest touching the radiator, which was not spotless.
She shot me daggers and said in a pained whisper full of menace, “DON’T TELL ANYONE
ABOUT THIS!”
The uncle died relatively young, most members of the family
living into old codgerdom. My grandfather on my mother’s side died at ninety-something,
full of years, grappa and Toscano cigars,
which he smoked Ammezzato. A few years before he passed on, he had sucker-punched a younger man in the pub he used
to frequent because the ill-mannered stranger had insulted a Polish friend of
his while the two were playing at cards. The local police brought the unconscious
stranger to the border of the town and advised him, when he woke from his nap,
that should he return to town – ever – he would be arrested.
When the hypochondriac uncle passed away, my mother whispered decorously to me, “Guess the germs finally
got him,” adding, “DON’T TELL ANYONE I SAID THAT!”
The uncle was an expert fisherman, and for years I wondered
how he could bear to hook worms on his line, until my father told me he only used
dry flies, beautiful, fetching, hand-crafted flies. Even so, he had to unhook
the fish and drop it into his often-washed wicker basket, which he wore on his
waist, like a gunslinger.
This fastidious uncle would have survived in good order the grosser
inconveniences of Coronavirus – no hugging, no handshakes, wash hands frequently
after touching polluted surfaces, especially plastic, where the deadly virus
remains in attack mode for nearly a day, converse at a safe distance, avoid
crowds, wear facemasks, telecommune with your doctor every time the hairs on
the back of your neck prick up in fright, usually after listening to some
doomsday-physician on 24/7 Coronavirus coverage networks – because he regarded his immediate environment as a familiar septic system of fatal
germs. To wake each morning was to be alert, focused on the micro-microcosm, to
be always on one’s guard, rubbing the plate off the silverware.
To a certain extent, Coronavirus has made cowards of us all – also, hypochondriacs of us all. Normalcy, and the economy too, have fled the pandemic, screeching and screaming. It will not return, the experts tell us, until the dragon has been slain. And, like a cat, the dragon has nine lives. The choices that lie before us now appear to be poverty or death. And, as Yogi Berra might say, “The future ain’t what it used to be.”
Will we survive? Of course we will. But sociability will
have received a blow to the solar plexus, and all of us will be unduly cautious,
if not afflicted with hypochondria. In
our distress, important distinctions will be lost. Connecticut has just
purchased an entire warehouse of what are called PPEs, gear protecting medical
workers from Coronavirus, from Chinese Communists who were principally
responsible for transporting Coronavirus from Wuhan to Western Europe. No
medical gear has yet been found to protect medical workers from politicians.
If China were Big-Pharma some ranter on the left by now
would have accused Chinese banking magnates of producing a plague so they
might sell medical gowns and facemasks to credulous nutmeggers in Connecticut.
Shrewd Yankees in Connecticut were called nutmeggers because they used to put
wooden nutmegs in with their produce to gain extra coin from their
purchasers. Clever Yankees!
Time is a stream, and no one steps in the same stream twice.
Things change. We used to be able to depend on our politicians to steer us in
the direction of beneficial change. We are just now emerging – one prays --
from the very first intentionally caused national recession in US history. When
the Coronavirus plague has subsided, the question to which we should demand an
honest and unambiguous – i.e. non-political -- answer is this: Have our
politicians, assisted by medical “experts” and data-manipulators, been selling
us a load of wooden nutmegs?
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