Front line fear
My wife the counselor. Bags not her job.
I think if we split I’d be straight on
Tinder with a no counselors need apply.
No she does fantastic work, and it’s
needed.
She’s tending to that growing pack, The Unstuck.
Families and individuals going through rough times.
I’m not so Stuck myself, depending on the
day.
We grownups spinout, the kids soak it all
up and she’s in there with first aid.
A lot of the relationship wreckage she sees
stems from people going under physically – food, shelter, employment.
Lose the ability to provide for ourselves, our
family, and the cortisol tears through the nervous system like a reverse enema.
It attacks any certainty like a cancer, and it’s fallout is costly – for self,
circle of affected’s, the taxpayer, society.
It’s my ultimate close to home fear.
And no matter where we sit in the wealth
stakes, no one is exempt.
All of us are just a ticket away from a derailing. We lose a family
member, we go down with the big C. Lose
our job, our home.
From Christchurch to Mexico and everywhere
in between the earth can shake and suddenly we are the dispossessed.
I’d love to see the weatherman on the
telly, instead of giving us the day’s wind and rain, give us a fear and hope
report …
“ A 25% increase in apparent fear in the Hutt
today due to staff layoffs at one of the Valleys largest employers, while over
the hill in Wainuiomata, we’re seeing a 30 degree shift in hope with the
community’s Village Veggie project - Meanwhile in Wellington central there’s a
gathering belt of anxiety, expected to subside once this trough of concentrated
hot air and deceit moves away.
Hopecasters are expecting some change by early
next week.”
Fear is the nightporter peeking out of the
half light.
Standing in the shadows baby.
When work’s coming in I can be cock of the
walk.
When it falls off, I’m playing Twister on a
waterbed – suddenly I’m down, flailing till more fish bite.
Stop, drop n’ roll, circle the wagons
around the bruises, dust off and re-invent.
Unless we’re in fields like teaching,
nursing or the police, job security has become all a bit maybe really.
And with so many global, let alone local variables
in the pot - ecologically, economically, tectonically, politically, militarily
yada, I figure there’s little chance of physically controlling much anymore.
So for what it’s worth, a few starters here
from my ‘things I can control’ in the giving and receiving response kit.
(1) Eye contact, mentioned in an earlier
blog, it’s a good starter. I challenge you - make it, smile at strangers - get
down on it and put out.
(2) Connection.
When despair creeps in, there’s healing in
empathy and touch -
physical and emotional. As well as a cuddle
and a cup of tea, the Down need to feel that what they have to give is
received.
Down visits many of us from time to time.
(3) Gratitude. Especially low paid workers,
the cleaners and care workers in my elderly mum’s home. And hospo staff when they make my coffee,
deliver my food, take the dirty dishes away.
I’m in there with the eye’s on the thank you’s.
(4) Story rebuild. I try and park the ego
and baseline indicators sometimes and realize that my pre-conceived right and
wrongs, may in fact be arse about face. Damn. This one is messy, the deconstruction of my story,
and it takes on-going recalibration and reboot.
Mandela and the good Bishop Des Tutu
brought the term ‘Ubuntu’ to the western world. Simply put, ‘it’s our sharing
that connects humanity.’
We can share money, capital, and we can also
share goodwill and gesture, the intangibles.
Etched in my memory is 10 minutes of a
Sunday afternoon years back when I was working at the St Heliers BP
station. In comes a local guy, gold
Amex, to top up his Bentley. His eyes and body language saying “I’m lonely, I’m
sad, a little defeated”. I’d clocked his Down on a previous visit.
2 mins later a rusty Toyota hi-ace pulls in
and a dozen pacific islanders en route to East Tamaki spill out to a pop-up
party on the forecourt.
Eyes sparkling, tongues chattering, it was
going on.
They both had what the other needed.
Sharing can have some great win-wins.
Melbourne cartoonist Michael Leunig, one of
my favourite fear and hope commentators, suggests people can handle austerity
if there is a fairness and collective involved.
My mum and dad had similar sentiments to
Leunig when referencing the second world war effort.
We can be a bit ‘fuck off that’s mine’ when
it comes to sharing our wealth, no surprises given several lifetimes worth of
narrative to materially accrue for oneself. The emotional development needed to
bring that one round will be work in progress for years to come.
In fact anyone comes round my place and
tries to Castro all my stuff and leave me asset-less; ok I get the ideology,
but the actuality .... ?
We are frogs in the broth of certain
uncertainty.
The disruption is exciting, but havoc on
the nerves.
So calling all front line responders …
Intangibles (1) - (3) are an easy kickoff, right
now.
And keep up the work on (4).
You're bloody brilliant... some of the phrasing is "exquisite" ... CIRCLE THE WAGONS AROUND THE BRUISES...Legend... yours or did you collect it?!! You've got a book in the making I reckon... Really enjoying them...!!
ReplyDeleteCheers buddy, just pick up phrases here n there as we do n' cross polinate, metaphor being th paintbrush. I reckon nothing is original, we nick everything but there's always new perspective. All th best :)
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