Welcome to Day 1 of the 2020 RWISA "RISE-UP" Blog Tour! Each day, I will be featuring an amazing RWISA author and a piece he/she has written to focus on one of our two themes: A World Without Mom and/or How Living in This New World Has Change Me. Today's author is Harriet Hodgson.
With
Hands Clasped: Thoughts of the Pandemic
By
Harriet Hodgson
As
COVID-19 spread across the land, Americans were directed to stay home. This
news led to all sorts of questions. What will we do for entertainment? How will
we teach the kids? Will we run out of food? As weeks passed, many Americans
felt confined, even imprisoned. Not me. A freelancer for 38+ years, I was used
to working at home.
My
husband and I have been married for 62 years. “I love you more today than yesterday,”
I often say. Staying home with him was a blessing. Pulitzer Prize winner Mary
Oliver, in one of her poems, uses the phrase “with hands clasped.” I lived her
words with hands clasped in memory, in caregiving, in creativeness, in gratefulness,
and in hope.
In
memory . . .
When
World War II started, I was four years old. COVID-19 made me anxious and
scared. These feelings caused war memories to become vivid again: food
rationing, gas rationing, digging potatoes in our Victory Garden, Mom working
in a wartime factory, and air raid blackouts. Odd that a pandemic would cause
memories to resurface, yet a world war and world virus are similar. Many
experts compared fighting the virus to a war, one we would win.
In
caregiving . . .
I
have cared for three generations of family members. This is my 23rd
year in the caregiving trenches. In 2013 my husband’s aorta dissected and he
had three emergency operations. When he woke up, he was paraplegic, unable to
use his lower body or legs. The night I drove him to the hospital, I became his
caregiver, and believe caregiving is love in action. Retired doctors and nurses
rallied to fight COVID-19. I added virus protection to my caregiving To Do
list.
In
creativeness . . .
I
have always been a creative person. While I sheltered at home, I revised two workbooks
I wrote for grieving kids, edited a children’s picture book, explored doodle
art, baked up a storm, and emailed publishers. So far, I have written thousands
of articles and 38 books. Two publishers accepted the children’s books. Because
of the pandemic, however, production of the grief books is on hold. The
children’s picture book is still in production.
In
gratefulness . . .
Americans are interdependent and need each other. COVID-19
showed that truckers, store clerks, housekeepers, home sewers, lab techs and countless
others are heroes too. Staying home made me realize, yet again, that little things,
such as the first robin of spring, are big things. As usual, I was grateful for
my wacky sense of humor. (Yes, I laugh at my own jokes.)
Since I could not be physically close to others, I
reached out in different ways. I sent surprise gifts to some, was a guest on blog
talk radio, signed up for another show, posted book videos on social media, increased
email to family members, gave books to friends and strangers. Though I am a
kind person, I tried to be kinder, a lesson many learned from the virus. I also
vowed to slow down a bit.
In hope . . .
I have survived cancer surgery and open-heart surgery.
Each morning, when I awaken, I ask myself, “How can I make the most of the
miracle of my life?” At age 84 I am still discovering pieces of my unknown self.
Thanks to experience, I know how to adapt to the changes of life. I also know some
changes are easy, and others test the soul.
Poet John O’Donohue, in his book To Bless the Space
Between Us, refers to changes as thresholds. Thresholds can make emotions like
confusion, fear, excitement, sadness, and hope come alive. It is wise to recognize
and acknowledge thresholds, O’Donohue continues, and I have tried to do this.
The pandemic pushed America to a threshold, one that
will define our nation. Let us cross this threshold together with kindness,
dignity, and mutual respect. Let us cross with hands clasped in love.
Thank you for supporting today's RWISA author along the RWISA "RISE-UP" Blog Tour! To follow along with the rest of the tour, please visit the main RWISA "RISE-UP" Blog Tour page on the RWISA site. For a chance to win a bundle of 15 e-books along with a $5 Amazon gift card, please leave a comment on the main RWISA "RISE-UP"Blog Tour page! Thank you and good luck!
Harriet is such an inspiration! Her optimism and unbreakable spirit shines through in these words! Thank you for hosting, Yvette!
ReplyDeleteThanks for stopping by, Jan! I loved this piece as well. :-)
DeleteI was just over at Denise's blog site and now visit your beautiful site. Harriet brings a smile with her warm insights. Lovely post.
ReplyDeleteYes, she does! Thanks for stopping by, Gwen. :-)
DeleteThis was really uplifting and beautiful. Thanks for hosting, Yvette:)
ReplyDeleteI'm happy you enjoyed it. Thanks for stopping by, Denise! :-)
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