The Pandemic Letters, Volume 2

In 2020 and 2021 I wrote a series of reflections on the pandemic and related experiences for my TinyLetter. Unfortunately, since TinyLetter’s demise those words haven’t had a home on the internet, so I’ve decided to republish them here. For me, they’re an important record of that time as it happened, especially as I try to write and edit my way into an uncertain future. It is important to remember these things, in a world that wants us to forget. Below is volume 2 of 2, from January through December 2021.

January 23, 2021
One of many things I’ve learned in the last few years since I first became interested in gardening is that, especially here in North Carolina, there’s always something related to the garden that I can be doing, no matter the season. This January I’m making the earliest start I ever have on Spring planning, which is less a result of the pandemic than of the knowledge I’ve absorbed in the last year. (Though taking the time to learn has certainly been aided by the pandemic’s limits on my usual weekend activities.)

I’m still very much a beginner, especially since this will be the first season I can apply much of what I learned last summer in my online Home Gardening course through the LSU AgCenter. But I was able to apply a few things as I went, growing plants from cuttings for the first time, and identifying squash borers that unfortunately killed all of my summer and winter squash. I know now, for example, that I should plant my squash somewhere else this summer, and plant different vegetables where the infestations happened.

On one hand, I’ve delved into gardening with a sense of freedom I have about little else in my life. Yes I wanted the structure of a class to give me a better understanding of what I was doing, but it wasn’t as if it was graded, and it mostly consisted of watching YouTube videos with my Saturday morning coffee before mucking about in the yard for a while. One the other hand, though, I’ve applied my usual (enneagram five) fervor for understanding, for specialized knowledge. Perhaps what feels different here, and what’s been so life giving for me, is that it’s ultimately not about mental knowledge. So much comes down to daily care, weeding and watering and trying to figure out how the heck I’m going to keep the squirrels from digging up the raised bed again. So much is about dirty hands and a farmer’s tan. It’s knowledge that is less about retreating to my interior castle than it is about connecting to the world, from the weather patterns to the makeup of my soil, things seen and things unseen. It’s knowledge with clear limits, because there are some things you simply can’t control.

A garden is a long term project. Every year I add things, every year it’s different, and when I put in something new, like the second raised bed I’m planning now, that’s just the beginning. It’s never finished. And when it comes down to it, I like to let it be a little bit wild, despite my planning nature.

It’s a future oriented thing, which means something that’s not quite hope but something like it. I don’t just plant seeds and hope they’ll grow; I do the things I can to ensure that they will sprout. And when, for the most part, they do, I take care of them, potting them up as they grow and hardening them off before planting them out. I water and weed and wait. (And chase off those dang squirrels.) Mariame Kaba says “Hope is a discipline,” and the garden shows me what that means.

An avocado pit started growing out of my neighbor’s compost and she asked me if I wanted it. I dug it up and put it in a pot, knowing it takes eight years for an avocado to bear fruit. (This is why they’re usually grafted, if you’re actually growing them for fruit. TIL!) Even though I thought it unlikely (out of the question really) that it would ever fruit, I liked the idea of planting something with such a long timeline. It means I expect to be here in eight years to see it.

Come January I left it on the porch in a hard freeze, and it died, so this doesn’t turn out to be a story about hopes realized. Some things don’t survive, and this too is a lesson I am learning. I have become borderline obsessed with the idea of fruit trees, though, with the long-term and slow growth. I’ll probably try dwarf apples or figs in giant pots, though, in acknowledgement of the realities of grow zones and my small yard.

For now, it’s January. I spent my holidays perusing seed catalogs and placed my first order January 1st, a gesture of hope if ever there was one in these strange times. I find something garden related to do every weekend: turning compost, potting up cuttings I’ve been growing indoors on my windowsill, drawing and redrawing diagrams of what I intend to plant and where, measuring spaces in the yard and deciding how to squeeze in this second bed. I watched the entire 2020 season of Gardeners World on BritBox, too. Winter feels endless, as does the pandemic as we near the one year mark, and I will embrace anything that helps me from one day to the next.

In February, it will be time to plant, and I will be ready.

February 16, 2021
When I was a college student in west Michigan we used to say that February was revenge on the Beautiful People, because no one could look good in February. I would walk around the Hope College campus in layer upon layer, one scarf wrapped around my face and a second one wrapped over the top of my hat, a makeshift balaclava. It was cold. It was endless. It was miserable. Not unlike this pandemic. Even now, living in NC, I find that February is the hardest month. It’s the kind of month that makes you forget what plants are altogether, until a kind friend reminds you.

There’s been a lot of talk about the so-called pandemic wall, and hitting it, but the truth is I think most of us hit various walls a long time ago, and we just keep getting up and going because there isn’t much of an option to do otherwise. This week I’m coping by lying on the floor for ten minutes on an acupressure mat I bought months ago and never tried. I have no idea if this is helping anything, but lying on the floor is nice. (Except when one of the cats climbs on my stomach. That is…not nice.)

Certainly another way through February is by focusing on what’s ahead, and I’ve already covered a small table by one of my south-facing windows with tiny newspaper pots and other random recycled containers repurposed for seed starting. Last year was only my second summer growing from seeds, and I got a late start. This year it’s possible I’m too early, as I have eggplants and peppers sprouting up already. It’s all an experiment, every year. This weekend was in the 30s and raining and I’ve been fighting off what seems to be a cold. Goodness knows how I’ve managed to catch anything at all this winter. I haven’t spoken to another human in person in over three weeks, and that was from six feet away wearing a mask, outdoors, over a cozy fire on a cold day.

It was good to meet my friend for a fire. I confess don’t miss parties or large gatherings all that much (though I miss sitting at the bar at Fullsteam more than I can say), but I do miss specific people. My friends, my loved ones. And I miss feeling connected to my community in my daily movements. I love Durham so much and yet lately I feel like my existence is floating in space. I could be anywhere and nowhere. I don’t like that.

Last year this time I was planning a trip to Texas for my nieces’ fourth birthday, and now they are almost five. I haven’t seen them since November 2019 and I grieve everyday the loss of that time, being part of their young lives. Never am I more aware of the limits of Zoom than with them. When I see them will they even know me as Aunt Meghan anymore? Will I know them? Will I even know myself, after all this time? And just in the days since I began writing this letter Texas has become a snow globe of disaster, further wearing at the threads of worry and longing in my frayed heart.

I miss my friends, too, many of whom I’ve lived far from for a long time, which has been a weird sort of blessing this past year insofar as I’m used to cultivating those relationships at a distance. Phone calls and texting would usually be punctuated by visits, though, even if they’re infrequent. The fact that we cannot even attempt to plan when we’ll next see each other hurts.

And then there’s my sweetheart, Raouf, who had to move home to Kerala, India, in November. He left the day after the election and so this whole season of cautious hope in the US has, for me, been tempered by a cavernous loss.

When people talk about wanting to hug everyone they meet when this is over I think, no, I only want to hug the one person I will not be able to hug, because he is 8000 miles away and he is not coming back. This is because of the pandemic, because of the havoc it wreaked on the job market, but the effects of racism, xenophobia, and bad immigration policy on his post-MBA job search were only exacerbated by the pandemic. It was never going to be easy for him to find a job here. It was never going to be easy to stay in a country that makes it so clear that it doesn’t want him here, no matter how much he or I want things to be different. Strangers at startups were never going to look at his name on a resume and see the man I know.

I have not been able to write or even talk about it because I never know what to say, because this is not a story with a happy ending. Instead I listen to this Bruce Cockburn song over and over. Bruce says it best: Nothing worth having comes without some kind of fight, got to kick at the darkness ‘til it bleeds daylight. Which doesn’t mean I’ll get what I want, only that it was worth having it while I could.

I know that heartbreak is fueling my seed starting obsession as much as anything. I find myself wandering over to the seed table and just looking at the spouts for long periods of time. I shift things around to get the perfect stream of sunlight, carefully spritzing with a spray bottle. I walk away only to come back ten minutes later. It’s a point of focus. It’s something outside myself. No matter how many chili varieties I grow they won’t mend my broken heart, but that won’t stop me from trying.

Another song I’ve found soothing lately is this one from Elise Massa, A Man and His Plant. The first time I heard the chorus, You may be half dead but you’re half alive, so let’s survive, I truly can’t remember if I laughed first or cried, but I know I did both. If one wanted a chorus for this moment, that seems as good as any. And perhaps it’s true that as the plants grow so will I. It’s all an experiment, as I said. Every year. Every day, too.

April 21, 2021
My existence is a series of coping mechanisms.

That’s been my recurring thought these days. I work. Then, I take a walk, do some stretches, eat something that makes me feel good, do a crossword, practice French, do another crossword, plant more seeds and wait for them to grow. Repeat. Repeat. Repeat. Repeat, varying the order, and repeat again.

In the last couple of years I’ve developed a useful box of anti-depressive tricks, but there’s no trick that gets you out of the cycle of coping in order to get up tomorrow simply to cope again. I have to remind myself that this particular version of that cycle is not permanent. It’s not over, and we don’t know when it will be over, but it will, someday, be over.

I don’t know what “over” will look like, of course. But it will arrive, for better or worse.

As we move into over, into after, into whatever newness hibernates beneath the cold ground of the present, this series of unchanging days, I feel something like clarity. There is something to having everything stripped away that leaves the world stark but clear. Often the last few months I’ve felt that the pandemic took everything that isn’t work away from me. No trips to see nieces, no sweetheart, no happy hours with friends. No wandering even in outdoor places without constant vigilance about distancing and masks.

Of course I am not literally left with nothing, but the loss of so much leaves me looking at the bare ground of my life and wondering what I want to nurture, now. Not everything that was there before will come back. In some cases, I lament that. In others, I think this may be an opportunity. Weak roots once ripped out are, in this metaphor, unlikely to thrive again, their remains perhaps better chopped into the compost pile and transformed into something else entirely, nutrients to feed an unknown future.

Tonight it will be cold. I tucked in my tiny plants before the sun went down, makeshift cloches weighed down with rocks and prayers, trusting that will be enough.

September 16, 2021
I am listening to Tyler Lyle’s The Golden Age and the Silver Girl album this morning, an old favorite I periodically need to revisit. It’s a breakup album, but I turn to it for solace in all kinds of transitions, endings, beginnings, decisions, and forks in the road.

A friend told me last night that they are moving, and I am deep in my feelings about all the ways that so many of our lives are changing right now. Little of it is easily classified as good or bad. It all comes together, a tangle of sadness and hope. I am sad my friend is leaving; I am hopeful for their future.

I last wrote on the eve of a late frost in April, and now it is September. Ironically or appropriately, my garden-themed newsletter has been quiet for these months of growth. Lush months, they have been, months of unfurling and reaching out after so many months shut it. In May, I did too much, exhausted myself in the joy of vaccination and familiar (if changed) faces. In June, I moved slowly, circling my garden multiple times a day, tending carefully, watching closely—myself as well as the tender new plants. For I was, and still am, tender. It has been a summer of doctor appointments and long Saturday naps and early bedtimes and herbal teas and soft pajamas and prescription medication and occupational therapy. It has not been growth for me, but it has been healing, in small, almost imperceptible shifts. Each walk in the woods, each swim in the Eno, each day spent trying a little less hard.

I feel more like myself than I have in a long time, if also a worn, weather-beaten version of myself. I think almost daily about the fact that we cannot go back, none of us, to who we were before. That means as many different things as there are people in this world, but the lack of a time-turner we all share. I will never be that version of myself again. And I do not yet know who I will be, only that who I am in this moment is kinder, and gentler, than I have been in the past, even as I am more stubborn and headstrong.

Life is so short. So unbelievably short. All I want to do with my wild and precious life, as Mary Oliver calls it, is putter about in my garden and try to love the world a little more. In so doing I hope I am learning to love myself a little better too.

In “When I say that I love you,” Lyle sings these lines and I sing along in my own off key voice:

When I say that I’m grateful
I guess what I mean is how the sapling is grateful for the seed
And I’m thinking how all things change
How the branches grow tall but our initials remain
I’ll remember you well when the summer is gone
Another year another ring round my bones

Just as each of us has changed, who we are with others has changed too. That is bittersweet, once again the mix of hopeful and sad. I am learning to acknowledge that some parts of my life have faded while others have deepened roots. It is hard to navigate that with grace, I find, but there is no escaping from it either.

The sunflowers are well past peak, the last tomatoes are ripening, the radishes and carrots are in the ground, with onions and loads of leafy greens to follow. I am starting a new job in October, and I am breathing many sighs of relief. The world keeps turning, and we go along.

December 19, 2021
It’s nearly the Winter Solstice, we’re a week out from Christmas, and for me this means it’s the season for perusing seed catalogs and planning for spring. Yesterday was unseasonably warm, and yet, even as I type those words I think, what does “unseasonably warm” mean now, in a changed and changing climate?

After Thanksgiving I planted bulbs: species tulips, mini daffodils, and a variety of crocus. The soil was dry from weeks of little to no rain, which made the digging difficult for my cranky wrists, but I got them in the ground and proceeded to put the rest of the garden to bed for the winter, cutting perennials back as needed and mulching with leaves, stacking pots and unscrewing hoses. The weather turned colder; winter had arrived, it seemed.

Then, yesterday, December 18, I noticed a few green shoots popping out already. Here in the season when I’m growing festive amaryllis and paperwhites indoors, the crocus I planted for February encouragement have decided that a few weeks in the ground were, apparently, enough.
The soil was now damp from much needed rain, and in theory it’s going to get cold again shortly, so I biked down to Stone Bros & Bird in Durham and filled my basket with more bulbs (and a couple cat safe houseplants). What could I do, I thought, but plant a second round? Whenever they bloom, I’ll enjoy them.

It’s a strange time to be a beginning gardener. No sooner have I read about recommended planting dates for a plant variety than I have to consider how the weather this year has been both cooler and warmer on any given day than one might expect for the season. I look up which perennials are cold hardy in Zone 7b where I live, only to consider that more likely than not, if I keep an eye on the weather and provide even a little extra protection, plants that are only hardy to Zone 8 will likely be perfectly fine. It’s complicated though, because even as temperatures on the whole are milder, intense cold snaps and late frosts are even more likely, climate change being as much about extreme swings as the overall warming trend.

Much like bicycle commuting has made me acutely aware of the weather patterns insofar as they affect my clothing choices from day to day, gardening has drawn my attention ever more constantly to the environment I share with other living things. I used to read Annie Dillard and think about living somewhere more rural, but these days I am focused on all the life finding its way in the small cracks and corners of my tiny urban plot of land. One bird feeder and a cat mint plant are enough to draw a surprising amount of wildlife into my yard, and as I cultivate my garden over the seasons with an eye toward creating a more hospitable year round habitat for my neighboring creatures, I feel less lonely and more hopeful.

The world is burning, and my small acts are not going to stop that, but they orient my mind and my politics toward the bigger needs even as they enable me to fend off despair. I still remember reading Steven Bouma-Prediger’s book For the Beauty of the Earth: A Christian Vision for Creation Care as a first year college student in 2003, and a class discussion about the idea of the catch phrase “Think globally, act locally.” Like any catch phrase, it can become trite from overuse, but it remains true in an era when people argue about whether it really matters whether an individual cuts out single use plastic or rides their bicycle instead of driving, when climate change is driven by massive corporations and we need sweeping policy changes.

My small acts matter if for no other reason than that they keep me from giving up. But they also matter in the meantime because the birds and bugs and leafy things live here with me, right now. Small acts matter because, even in a crumbling democracy, I have to believe that our individual and collective will might be able to turn things around. How we live matters.

In recent years I’ve struggled with the constant desire to make things meaningful, experiencing a new kind of exhaustion with the idea of calling or purpose. Of “making a difference.” I thought at times that I’d lost all sense of ambition. I’m slowly realizing that, rather, my ambitions have changed. They have shrunk. They’re about less rather than more. Slow rather than fast. Repair rather than innovate.

Last week I saw a video on Instagram in which someone showed how they refreshed a rusty cast iron skillet they had picked up for free. Many of the comments on this video mocked it, noting that the skillet was Lodge, meaning relatively inexpensive, such that one should have saved both the time and money spent on cleaning supplies by simply throwing it away and buying a new one for twenty bucks.

This depressed me more than any number of other depressing things I’ve seen on Instagram over the years. It was a clear microcosm of a throw-away culture, almost too obvious to use as an example. Use it until it breaks, or you get tired of it, then throw it away (“Where is away?” my friend Bryant asks in her book, The Last Straw) and buy another. It’s no wonder billionaires are obsessed with space travel. Why try to stop climate change when we can just colonize Mars? Innovation as permission to dispose of that which asks too much of you in the form of care.

As we stare down another wave of the pandemic, the exhaustion of the last two years has made it difficult to think much less act on these bigger issues, especially as we watch both political parties continue to muck up what chances we have to make big changes. Once again in hibernation mode, in these shortest days of the year, I am learning to orient my days toward life and renewal in whatever ways I can. I am recommitting to fixing things that break, to eating what grows here and now, to fighting for better bus, bicycle, and pedestrian infrastructure for my community. I am doubling down on beauty, and planting every flower that catches my fancy, knowing that their delight is more than ornamental. For creatures great and small, my garden makes this house a home.

The Pandemic Letters, Volume 1

In 2020 and 2021 I wrote a series of reflections on the pandemic and related experiences for my TinyLetter. Unfortunately, since TinyLetter’s demise those words haven’t had a home on the internet, so I’ve decided to republish them here. For me, they’re an important record of that time as it happened, especially as I try to write and edit my way into an uncertain future. It is important to remember these things, in a world that wants us to forget. Below is volume 1 of 2, from March through July 2020.

March 15, 2020
Greetings from the last day of my mini vacation, which did not go as planned!

I never intended to travel when I decided to take Thursday and Friday off. I merely hoped to stave off pending burnout, and planned to go see a few movies, take myself out to lunch, maybe go to a yoga class in an actual studio for the first time in ages. Alas. Instead I stocked up on groceries, filled my inhaler prescription, and encouraged my parents to take the threat of Covid-19 seriously. I did squeeze in a nice hike at Occoneechee State Natural Area with my significant other, and what will no doubt be my last visit to a bar in a while, a short jaunt to Fullsteam, where they had removed some seating to allow for adequate social distancing and were limiting the number of patrons to 100 at a time. I appreciated the effort, and from here on out I think it’s best to support local businesses by buying merch and gift cards online. I’ve been wanting a new t-shirt anyway. (I also hear curbside beer pickup may be coming, which I won’t make use of because I live alone and alcohol is a depressant that won’t mix well with social distancing for me personally, but some of you might like it! I’ll be hiding out with five cases of Bubly water and several pints of Pincho Loco ice cream).

I’ve lived alone for a long time, and since August I’ve been working from home full time. My job will, I think, continue somewhat normally for the foreseeable future. As others transition to working from home for the first time, and try to figure out how to function without leaving the house, I’ve noticed how many habits I take for granted that might be useful to others in the coming weeks. To that end, I’ll try to send some Tiny Letter dispatches with tips on How to Be Alone.

Tip #1: Fill your home with books.
Whether you shop your local indie (The Regulator in Durham has online ordering and will ship to your home) or frequent the local library, filling your home with entertaining stories is one of the best ways to be alone. While social distancing, the Libby App will be invaluable. Download the app to your smartphone or tablet, sign up with your library card to connect to your local library, and start checking out ebooks and audiobooks. Speaking of libraries, many now allow you to check out streaming video services as well. I’ve been slowly making my way through 20 seasons of Midsomer Murders via Acorn, a streaming service I can check out for seven days at a time via the Durham County Library. Your library likely has something similar.

Tip #2: Yoga With Adriene: https://yogawithadriene.com/
I first started following Adriene’s channel on YouTube when I was new to yoga and too uncomfortable with my body to go to an actual studio. I continue to rely on her free videos now because I can’t go to studio classes as often as I’d like, and regular yoga has become vital for me since I found out I have osteoarthritis. Adriene is a gentle guide with an encouraging spirit, and even (especially!) if you’re a total newbie to yoga, now is a great time to take 30 minutes to stretch and move in your own home. If you follow her monthly calendars you get the added bonus of knowing other people around the world (including me) are doing the same practice each day, and that sense of connection is helpful right now.

Tip #3: Don’t go to brunch, make brunch at home.
Here’s one of my favorite brunch dishes to make, which uses staples you’re likely to have on hand even when we’re not trying to slow a global pandemic, Nigella Lawson’s rendition of Eggs in Purgatory: https://www.nigella.com/recipes/eggs-in-purgatory (it’s the dish she made for a hungover Anthony Bourdain on the London episode of Parts Unknown).

Call your parents. Text your bff. Start a group chat with your siblings. Have a solo dance party in your kitchen. Do a crossword puzzle. Be kind to one another and to yourself. More to come.
Meghan

March 18, 2020
I have cried quite a few times this week. In some cases, I knew what triggered it, in other cases, it was a both general and overwhelming sense of helplessness and dread. Overall, I am fine. Physically and mentally, I am doing okay. It’s going to require ongoing work to stay that way, I think.

I was reflecting on Twitter this week that while I’m used to spending time alone, and genuinely enjoy spending time alone, not knowing when I will next be able to be in the same room with another human is an entirely new experience. Existentially, this is so different from “I like my alone time.” There are funny memes circulating about how introverts were made for this moment, but while they were good for a chuckle at first, the message rings hollow. This is a global pandemic, not a spa weekend. I am not enjoying this.

I hesitate to write this because I don’t want people to worry about me. As I said, I actually feel pretty in touch with what is hard for me right now, and how to cope with it as best I can. It’s clear to me that this is a situation to think about more in terms of surviving than thriving. I set very small goals at work today. I don’t plan on reading a ton of classic novels or writing one in the coming weeks. I’ll get up at the same time every day, I’ll work, I’ll eat three meals, I’ll get some physical activity and touch base with some loved ones. I’ll find some sources of joy and entertainment where I can.

I say all of this because I know I am not the only one feeling this existential weight, and it gets heavier if you expect yourself to bear it alone. You are allowed to struggle. I do not care that Shakespeare wrote King Lear while in quarantine. We are not Shakespeare. We do not have to be geniuses or legends right now. We don’t have to create beauty out of trauma that is still unfolding. We just have to take care of ourselves and each other right now.

This brings me to…

Tip #4: Blanket Forts
I started sending these letters again on the premise of sharing tips for “How to be Alone,” but social distancing isn’t just about that. I shared a bedroom until I was 18 (which is probably not unrelated to my appreciation of aloneness now), which is to say, I’m familiar with another thing you might be experiencing these days, if you are cooped up in a full house: the NEED to be alone(ish).

The house my four siblings and I grew up in had a ridiculous number of closets. When I was small, I cleaned out the back of mine, which had a shelf the perfect height for a small child to use as a desk, and I made myself an “office.”

Yes, I hid in the closet. Or, when I was too old for hiding in the closet, I would simply go to the bathroom and lock the door and stay in there until I felt ready to be around people again (or until someone pounded on the door and insisted they needed to come in, whichever came first). When my sister and I had bunk beds, we’d alternate monthly between top and bottom bunks. On top, I had a sense of distance and solitude even if I wasn’t totally alone. On the bottom bunk, I could hang blankets from the top bunk and create a fort for myself, a little cave to read in, all snuggled up with all my soft toys.

What I am saying is do not hesitate to make yourself a blanket fort. I don’t care how old you are, sometimes it’s necessary. Maybe it’s the literal coziness of blankets you need, maybe it’s the more straightforward locking yourself in the bathroom away from your kids for 15 minutes of peace. For me, yesterday it was 20 minutes in a lawn chair after work, in my tiny, weedy backyard, the sun caressing my face, a small urban oasis.

Find a little corner, make a little space. Offer yourself a big heaping helping of grace today.

March 23, 2020
I started this letter on Thursday, and here is how I began:

“Oh, friends. I am tired. It has been a busy week at work, though my inbox is starting to slow down, a trend which I assume will continue. For the moment the world of book publishing, on the editorial end, continues apace. There will be long term impacts, but our 2020 books are all in various stages of editing and design, so I am trying to keep things moving for the authors’s sake as much as for that of the long term stability of my job.”

Life comes at you fast. This morning I found out my job is being cut, effective today, by 20%, so after less than 8 months as a FT salaried employee I am once again back to the hourly, underemployed life. I wonder whether these past 8 months might end up being the only 8 months of my entire life that I have one full-time job. I don’t know. This is supposed to be temporary, until June 30, but who can say what the economy will look like three months from now?

Still, 32 hours is not zero hours. I am better off than many, many people are right now, I know. And I am used to this, to reworking my budget, to hustling, to living in flux. I was just so overwhelmingly grateful that I didn’t have to quite so much anymore.

The rest of the letter I started on Thursday was a collection of cooking suggestions, which I might still share, but not today. I can’t quite wrap my mind around why anyone would want to read my cooking tips just now. I am not a great cook, though I am great at cooking with affordable basics, if that makes sense. I’ve been especially grateful these past ten days for everything I’ve picked up over the years, not just about cooking but about grocery shopping, about how to effectively stock my pantry. Your mileage may vary when it comes to anyone else’s pantry advice, of course, because one of the most important things you can learn is what ingredients are most essential for you, for the meals you like to cook, the meals you like to eat. Get your hands on Judith Jones’s brilliant The Pleasures of Cooking for One, even if you’re cooking for two or more. It’s such a wonderful handbook of basic skills upon which to improvise.

That’s probably as close as I get to a single philosophy in life: improvisation. I’ll figure this out, though I don’t yet know how.

July 26, 2020
Hello, friends,

Yes, I’m still here. Are you still here? Good, I’m glad. There’s something soothing about checking in on one’s existence, even if there’s little else to say. I’ve given up on a right answer to “How are you?” I’m here. That’s about what I can say, consistently, though there are better and worse days.

In any case, I’m writing because I negelected to send a letter to alert you back in May that I published a new essay on Killing the Buddha. So many editors and writers I respect and admire have been involved in KtB over the years that it’s always been a place I wanted to be published, even if most people outside a certain niche have likely never heard of it. In any case, I finally got up the gumption to submit something (pandemic gave me a bit of “what have you got to lose” energy back in April), and it was accepted. You can read it here: https://killingthebuddha.com/mag/in-the-garden/

I’d worried that by the time we got through edits and the piece when live it might not be timely; I don’t think it occurred to me that it might still feel pretty relevant in July. My garden is looking a lot different than it was in May when I harvested the last of my spring radishes and transplanted the seedings I’d nurtured indoors as I waited for the temperatures to warm. Now it’s oppressively hot, the part of the summer that is only made bearable by heirloom tomatoes and fresh basil. The future feels less certain than ever. I am trying to embrace small moments of hope. I am doing crossword puzzles, reading mystery and romance novels, doing yoga, trying to make a perfect pizza. I am trying to ward off despair, and these things help. I am working harder than I did pre-pandemic, which is a bit of a problem, and I think the topic of work in the time of corona deserves its own tiny letter, though I make no promises to write one. If I only write one essay during the pandemic that’s certainly enough.

Until next time,
M