Grocery stores illustrate absurdity of COVID-19 shutdowns

The least safe place in the world right now has been blessed essential by the powers that be: an American grocery store.

Cities and states across the United States have forced “non-essential” businesses to close. Of course, “non-essential,” as a term, can only be defined through arbitrary, nepotic despotism. In other words, it means whatever those in power want it to mean. The poor and powerless are left without jobs, without a voice. The well-connected political and corporate elites continue business as usual.

Denying people the freedom to gather where they please ends in everyone standing next to each other in the same 10,000 square feet of space, hoarding food and pretending microbes can’t penetrate a cloth mask.

Meanwhile, the least safe place in the world right now has been blessed essential by the powers that be: an American grocery store.

Saturday, I left my house for the second time in two weeks and for the same reason: to pick up a controlled substance from the pharmacy.

For me, that meant bypassing the hordes surrounding the self checkout at my local Target, then dodging the damsels more preoccupied with the perfect makeup for pandemic selfies than social distancing. Apparently, the six-foot standard doesn’t apply in the beauty aisles.

Ten paces further, I made it to the intra-Target CVS. The pharmacist is dressed like a surgeon—gloves, mask, and scrubs. The counter has been walled off with plexiglass like a bulletproofed South Phoenix convenience store.

I waited atop a blue footprint decal that read, “Stay safe, wait here.” I was the second and last person in line, just behind another tall Millennial man.

Three women scooted by me, coming within three feet of my face. Only one wore a mask. That’s what happens when the nation’s top disease-control agency changes its mind mid-quarantine.

Like most businesses, CVS had to adapt to serve and protect their customers and to survive. During the pandemic, for no extra charge, they will deliver prescriptions to their patients’ homes. Given all the bureaucratic absurdity through the last six weeks, this is one policy that makes sense. Those most likely to need medications for chronic conditions are also the most likely to be vulnerable to novel coronavirus.

Unless, of course, you need a Schedule II substance. Absurd as it is, the very government mandating I stay home also requires I risk my lungs and my life to get my hands on a month supply of the same ADHD drug I have been taking for a decade.

The very government mandating I stay home also requires I risk my lungs and my life to get my hands on a month supply of drugs.

The other man left. I stepped up to the pharmacy counter. Touching the payment screen, I felt like a batter following the lead-off hitter in a baseball game. My stomach churned. My heartbeat increased. One stroke of the keys, one touch of the face, and it could all be over. My fate was in my own hands.

After grabbing a handful of groceries, I had to repeat the process—only this time in a much longer line that ended at the machines that once promised efficiency and now promise Chinese roulette.

When I finally arrived at my car, I took a deep breath. I was relieved to be out of the store, but horrified at the prospects of infection, of a totalitarian future.

I won’t know for two weeks if I made it out unscathed. My freedoms got caught in the pandemonium and paid the ultimate price. They may never recover.

Writing pro tips: Eliminating distractions

Eliminating distractions is essential to becoming a good writer.

Stephen King, in his acclaimed memoir, On Writing, advises aspiring authors their writing space “really needs only one thing: a door which you are willing to shut.” He writes:

The closed door is your way of telling the world and yourself that you mean business; you have made a serious commitment to write and intend to walk the walk as well as talk the talk.

He cautions against libraries, park benches, and public spaces because he believes you need a room of your own, a place you feel truly inspiring, your own creative sanctuary. He recommends drawing the curtains so you cannot see the world outside. Such a place should have no television, no video games, no tools one can use to fritter away the time as though each of us will live forever.

Close your internet browser

Fine advice at the turn of the millennium, but King never anticipated the world twenty years later. How could he? Who, in 2000, would have known that the very tools we use to write are also portals to bookstores, clothing stores, stores for purchasing more distractions? What would King say now about television’s transformation from worn reruns filled with dull, low-budget commercials to high-definition, commercial-free content available on demand?

How would he advise we avoid YouTube? After all, its customized recommendations fill our days with endless streams ranging from pop-song videos to eighteenth-century Colonial American cooking. You can even watch videos on writing and interviews of King himself.

And what of Facebook and Twitter? Online social life has evolved from teenagers late-night chatting with friends they’ve actually met to near constant interfacing with acquaintances spread across time zones. Every year, people around the world devote more and more time to social media, from 90 minutes per day in 2012 to almost two-and-a-half hours in 2019.

Unfortunately, for the twenty-first-century writer, this and more is available at a mouse click. The keyboards we should hear clacking away on our latest novellas instead beat irregularly to the rhythm of our palpitating hearts. We read and worry about things we cannot control: coronavirus, presidential elections, our friends’ opinions of our lifestyle. We spend mere seconds working on things we can control, let alone a few minutes writing.

So how does the writer write? How does one get anything done at all?

Isolate yourself so you can focus

Per King’s advice, I write with my office door closed, in a space I decorated to trap myself with my adventurous, romantic spirit. No, I don’t mean the groomed aristocrats populating Tessa Dare’s historical chick porn. I mean the cynical idealist willing to sail the seven seas in search of his own soul. Picture Hemingway relaxing in a Cuban cigar lounge after returning from a safari only to discover the world as he knew it no longer exists.

For the less dramatic, I suggest isolating yourself from the online universe. Temporarily disconnect your WiFi or uninstall the time-sucking apps from your phone. If you need the internet for research, as I do, then turn off browser notifications and Windows 10 pop-ups. I use Linux because it doesn’t come prepackaged with programs incessantly reminding me about yesterday’s email, today’s news, and tomorrow’s dermatology appointment.

Another trick: Use Focus Writer or the Focus mode in Microsoft Word. These block the entire screen except for the page you’re writing on and foster concentration.

Get out of the house

Unlike King, I also suggest getting out of the house. Even science fiction and horror authors can learn from reality. Some of my best material, in fact, even some of my exact scenes, have been borrowed from interactions with and observations of the world and people around me.

Coffee shops are great, but make sure you visit one where you feel inspired and comfortable. Soccer moms sprinting through Starbucks is not conducive to concentration. Frequenting the same coffee shop quickly turns it into your second office. This is a good thing.

Establish a writing schedule and goals

Psychologist Paul Silva in How to Write a Lot prescribes schedules and recommends goals. He instructs writers to remove what he calls “specious barriers,” or excuses we make for not writing. If you truly have a barrier, remove it. If you see an obvious distraction, eliminate it.

Goals can be set and measured in time, word count, pages, or chapters. I go to my local coffee shop to write for at least one hour three times per week. If I write 500 words in that hour, great. If I struggle to hammer out 75, that’s okay, too, as long as I’m making progress.

Find your muse, embrace bursts of inspiration

Last, but not least, embrace bursts of inspiration when it arises. Channel your angst. Spill your sadness. Pour life’s greatest joys and disappointments onto your page.

A friend once told me, “Heartbreak is your muse.” Find your own muses. And when you do, never let the daughters of Zeus out of your sight.

Better yet, take them home. Close your door. And eliminate distractions.

Breathing difficulties: the demon on my chest

Breathing difficulties have made the last two weeks hell. The one symptom of dermatomyositis that has largely been dormant for over a year has returned—weak pectoral and diaphragm muscles. My breaths are once again shallow. Working out is a chore. I wake up in the middle of night feeling like my body is not getting enough air, like I’m panicking, like a demon is sitting on my chest.

John Henry Fuseli’s The Nightmare illustrates what breathing difficulties while lying flat feel like for me.

Has stress inflamed my condition? Have my medications stopped working? Have I simply taken them too irregularly and messed up my progress?

Two business trips, a late-night birthday bash, and attending to doctor appointments have meant irregular schedules and interrupted circadian rhythms. I compensate for sleepiness with caffeine. Too much caffeine keeps me awake, creating a vicious sleep cycle. I struggle to motivate myself to workout. Both exacerbate my symptoms.

Just doing a mild abdominal workout took all my strength tonight. Typing out this note has zapped what little energy I have left.

Hot and sour soup and the small things in life

In the days after I was diagnosed with dermatomyositis, I had no idea what would happen to me. I knew little about autoimmune diseases, and this one was about as rare as they come.

To ease my trepidation, I ordered hot and sour soup from our local Chinese dive. I shoveled and savored spoonful after spoonful—as though the final slurp would be my last. My worries about life’s daily helping of bullshit melted away. My girlfriend’s concerns about her bridesmaid dress seemed trivial.

I recalled the articles, statistics, and prognoses I read online and pondered what the rest of my life would look like. Would the few available treatments work? Would I be on prednisone for a decade before dying of liver failure or Cushing’s disease? Would I make it another five years?

Fast forward eighteen months: My concerns, though understandable, could hardly be justified. Not one of my eight doctors was worried about premature death. Most said the condition could be managed. And it has been—without prednisone.

Before dermatomyositis, I often let my anxiety determine my future: I spent my days waiting for the next paycheck, for the next vacation, for life’s next major milestone. I spent my nights tossing and turning over what was to come. Like a fortune teller, I feigned awareness of my future. Like a prophet, I predicted imminent doomsdays if my plans fail to come to fruition.

Having dermatomyositis has taught me I cannot hang my happiness on some idealized future. Come what may, I have to accept myself as I am and my life as it may be.

As that bowl of hot and sour soup taught me, life is full of small victories and everyday joys. One would think someone like me, who indulges in fine wines, whiskeys, and world cuisine, would celebrate those happy moments. But the small things in life are easy to forget. And sometimes, those small things are the best part.

Red-blood-cell scare: my body’s Halloween prank

The red-blood-cell scare ended up being little more than my body’s Halloween prank. Not only were the ultrasounds of my kidneys and testicles normal and clear, but at my follow-up visit, the urologist did not detect any blood cells in my urine—red or white.

Doctors can be paranoid and order premature tests. But given my medical history, I should hardly be surprised. Better safe than sorry, as they say.

Good news: I avoided having a catheter shoved up my urethra. And this latest medical anomaly had nothing to do with my autoimmune condition.

Bad news: My prostate is once again playing tricks on me. The ultrasound showed no inflammation. Blood and urine tests ruled out an infection. Even with the $171.8 billion the United States spends each year on medical research, doctors have no proven explanation or treatment for the most common urinary tract problem for men under age 50—at least, not without evidence of an infection. Indeed, the prostate gland seems to have a mind of its own.

Halloween week and the red-blood-cell scare

Horror films with homicidal clowns and chainsaw-wielding serial killers define Halloween for most. But for me, with my health issues, little is more frightening than an abnormal medical test: This week, red blood cells showed up in my urine.

What exactly this means is any doctor’s educated guess. The urologist ordered ultrasounds of my kidneys and testicles, but since I have to wait a week for them, I’m obviously not dying. He also wants to shove a catheter up my urethra with a camera to check my bladder. Fuck that.

Best case scenario, red blood cells in my urine are just that. Maybe I worked out too hard Monday night before the test. Maybe my prostatitis from three years ago flared up.

Worst case scenario, I have kidney disease or cancer. I’m trying not to focus on this because I’ve had my blood tested so many times the last year, doctors would have likely seen something earlier.

Waiting, yet again

Nonetheless, waiting for test results, yet again, sucks. My heart pounds. My mind wanders. My own House episode continues.

I wonder what a couple tests mean for the rest of my life. Is my autoimmune condition destroying my kidneys? Are my medications to treat it affecting my kidney or bladder function? Is this just a fleeting result with little consequence after this week ends? Is my anxiety for naught?

Yet again, I wrestle with existence, with the purpose of life amid a universe that so often seems to bring only suffering. Sure, I’m not alone. I have coworkers with their own autoimmune conditions. I have Facebook buddies with diseases rarer than my own. I even have a good friend struggling with a much more daunting medical issue and awaiting his own prognosis this week. Clearly, the universe does not discriminate.

But are we, as humans, really meant only to survive? What of happiness? Can we really ever flourish when each day brings a new anxiety of its own, when life becomes a series of test results and visits to specialist after specialist, each one delivering another worry, another reason to fret?

Ancient wisdom for the diagnostic life

Western religions teach us not to worry. Christ tends to his flock. Yahweh watches his people. Allah blesses those who believe. Good triumphs over evil. God provides. But what comfort is heaven when you’re trapped in diagnostic purgatory, hoping you don’t end up in oncological hell?

The Stoics teach us to seize the day as it comes, to immerse ourselves in the moment.

“True happiness,” writes Seneca, “is to enjoy the present without anxious dependence upon the future, not to amuse ourselves with either hopes or fears but to rest satisfied, for he that is wants nothing.”

Such advice is all fine and well for the healthy, even for the unhappy or the unemployed. But those ancient words ring hollow when “he that is” cannot be.

Rough weeknights and coping with chronic fatigue

Chronic fatigue has made weeknights rough lately. Despite ritualistic adherence to my azathioprine and hydroxychloroquine, my autoimmune disease zaps my physical and mental strength before the day ends. The moment my right foot crosses the threshold into our condo, I want to collapse.

Eight-hour workdays leave me feeling like I spent them picking anthracite from the walls of an Appalachian coal mine. My muscles feel like they’re sagging—even though I have gained strength. I gulp ultra-caffeinated preworkout energy boosters to start and finish my days.

Sports injuries have forced me to cut back on gym sessions. Between plantar fasciitis in both feet and extensor tendonitis in my right foot, I’m surprised I can stand. And of course, my inflamed lower spine aches and causes me to slouch.

Admittedly, some of this will get better. Sports injuries can be avoided with proper stretching and icing. I have scheduled monthly massages to repair my muscles and soothe my spine. And I’m only three months into a new job—every day feels like a full load of college classes, everything a lesson.

But for those like me with an overactive immune system, feeling tired and stressed can easily escalate to feeling exhausted and overwhelmed. Since stopping steroids in August, I feel like I’m walking through life perpetually sick, minus the drippy nose and sore throat.

I sometimes feel demotivated and depressed despite being otherwise happy with myself and my life. I can’t concentrate enough to read. I don’t have much energy to write or play guitar. I’m embarrassed to admit it took two hours over two evenings to pen even this.

I finished the latest seasons of Netflix’s best shows (Lucifer, Sex Education, and Derry Girls) months ago. Amazon Originals have never held my interest. The NFL airs the least exciting games of the season on weeknights. I have no energy or focus to start my Disneyland-ride-long cue of Great Courses lectures.

Nonetheless, I’m trying to stay positive. I’m trying to meet my goals. I’m trying to reignite my passion to write. I don’t want to make life one long binge watch.

I recall all the great things that have happened since this disease began—a new condo, a new job, a new guitar, another year with my girlfriend. I even earned the next certification level for proposal management. Come to think of it, while these summer months have been a drag, I’ve actually accomplished a lot in the last 18 months. I just wonder, as I did months ago, how much of it was me, how much was the prednisone. Has chronic fatigue become my new normal?

Sales tax, the Way-not-fair ruling, and the last day of duty-free online shopping in Arizona

Today marks the last day in Arizona one can buy and sell goods online without paying racketeering fees—also known as taxes—to the state government.

What at first was plunder assumed the softer name of revenue.

– Thomas Paine, The Rights of Man

Since the birth of mail order catalogs, people in the United States have been free to exchange value for value across cities and states without having to pay their local taxmen. In 1967, in National Bellas Hess v. Department of Revenue of Illinois, the U.S. Supreme Court affirmed this fact: Out-of-state resellers were not required to collect sales tax unless they had some physical contact with the state.

The Court revisited the issue in Quill Corp. v. North Dakota. In one of their earliest attempts to understand the internet, they upheld the Bellas ruling: Online purchases could only be taxed if bought from a vendor with a physical presence in the state.

This has been the understanding for decades. And this is why we all pay sales taxes on Amazon but not at New Egg or eBay: Amazon’s network of distribution centers and delivery trucks makes them one of the few online retailers with a physical presence in almost every state.

In 2018, using thinking that disregards 500 years of legal theory—look up stare decisis—the Supreme Court overturned 50 years of precedent: States not only can require resellers to collect taxes, they can also tax marketplace facilitators—like eBay, Etsy, and Reverb.

The Court majority opined in South Dakota v. Wayfair that “the Internet’s prevalence and power have changed the dynamics of the national economy.” Justice Anthony Kennedy then accused anyone who doesn’t pay taxes on their online purchases of tax evasion.

Predictably, within six months of the ruling, 31 states passed laws requiring online buyers to pay taxes and sellers to collect them. Arizona not-so-politely gave us an extra nine months of duty-free online shopping. That ends tomorrow.

State and local governments are pissed off and have been since the first day Amazon sold a book. According to the Court, in 2017 alone, they failed to confiscate another $13.7 billion in tax revenue—as though they have some natural right to yet another 8.6% of each person’s money, as though they add actual value to our purchases, as though human life itself would cease without them.

Every tax we pay is a slap in the face of our very existence.

Income taxes remind us we owe the government a portion of our labor. Little difference exists between the American toiling away until April 16—the day each year she finally starts working for herself—and the serf paying part of his crop to a feudal lord.

Little difference exists between the American toiling away and the serf paying part of his crop to a feudal lord.

Property taxes remind us we do not truly own our own homes. And worse, we cannot be trusted to decide where and how our—and other people’s—children should be schooled.

Sin taxes—those levied on gambling, tobacco, alcohol, marijuana, super-sized sodas, and fatty foods—remind us our bodies do not truly belong to us. We are too stupid and irresponsible to make own our choices.

Sales taxes remind us we cannot be trusted to do business with each other without the benevolent hand of government watching our every move. Like the mafia demanding payment for services we never asked them to provide, state governments actually believe we owe them something for exchanging values with other human beings on their turf.

Arizona is so bold they do not even try to hide this attitude: They call their sales taxes “transaction privilege taxes,” and describe them as “a tax on the vendor for the privilege of doing business in the state.”

When are we, as a species, going to realize that American states, like all governments, extort money from the very people they purport to protect, then convince those people its for their own good? Are they supposed to be grateful? Are they supposed to believe, to paraphrase former Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, taxes are the price they pay for civilization? Are we?

Anything worth doing or owning in life can and should be done or bought by choice. Shoving a gun in one’s face and demanding their money in exchange for schools, prisons, zoos, buses, roads, and professional sports stadiums is not civilization; it’s theft.

Starting a new job

Starting a new job when I have an rare autoimmune condition has been exciting, but frightening. I wondered if the insurance would be good enough, if my coworkers would understand, if my boss would wonder why I needed three afternoons off my first month there.

As I interviewed via Skype with my future boss, her boss, then my assigned market segment leader, I wondered if they knew, if they could hear the anxiety in my voice, if they could see it in my face. If they knew, would they think me incapable, too much of a risk?

Just before July 4, I made it to the final interview with the vice admiral of the company. Perched across from him in a window-seat of a downtown Phoenix high-rise, I was reminded how different in-person meetings are. We both seemed more human, as though each of us could sense the bioelectricity stored in our cells and moving across our nerves. We shared a strategic vision for sales and a dislike for bullshit and sugarcoating.

After a 45 minutes, he all but offered the job. At that point, I had no choice: I to ask about health insurance. I let him know how important it was for my dermatomyositis.

He took no issues with any of it and summarized the benefits package. He even shared his family’s own struggle with kidney disease.

The autoimmune sales team / support group

Fast forward three weeks. I flew to New England to eat breakfast with my new boss for the first time. She had a jovial, energetic personality and an openness few directors believe they can afford.

On placing her order, I discovered she has celiac disease, an immune reaction to gluten, the protein found in wheat, barely, and rye.

Hours later, I learned my East Coast sales manager counterpart has psoriasis. Two weeks later, I learned my boss’s boss–our chief marketing and sales officer–suffers from rheumatoid arthritis.

Schadenfreude be damned: Hearing my new bosses’ and coworkers’ assorted plights filled me with joy. Joining the team was like joining a support group for people with autoimmune conditions.

At last, I thought, people who understand what life is like for those of us who itch and burn and ache, who visit three specialists five times a year, who track and take as many pills as people twice our age, who wake up asking the gods what fresh hell our body will bring us today as we scour our cabinets for modern medicine’s half-assed attempts to make us look and feel normal.

I shared my condition with them. I explained my appointments. Far from upset, my team members were kind, sympathetic, and curious.

Like my last job, insurance is amazing. And we can take sick time for appointments. I have nothing to fear.

Working at a university has made my vocabulary worse

Working at university has made my vocabulary worse. I now wage my own vendetta against jargon, gobbledygook, and sentence structures that would make my sixth-grade language arts teacher cry.

Sure, I could blame the pedantry of the ivory tower or the posturing of men and women trying to outdo each other with words rooted in Greek and Latin. They tie their identity to these flashy displays of learning: Their words and sentence structures are signals that after a decade in post-secondary schools, indeed, they belong.

To be an intellectual elite is to believe that out of seven billion humans, you alone own the infinitesimal fraction of knowledge that will save humanity from itself.

In academia, identity is attached to superiority. To be known is to be better than the rest, to have your papers more cited, more read. To be an intellectual elite is to believe that out of the seven billion humans on the planet, you and you alone own the infinitesimal fraction of knowledge that will save humanity from itself. And what better way to prove that than to hide your ideas beneath concepts and language so convoluted, so abstruse that you may be the only human being who truly understands what you mean?

Words Without Meaning, Without Truth

As Frederic Nietzsche points out, those who conceal their ideas behind jargon and gobbledygook often do so deliberately. Ever the linguistic magicians, they trade truth for illusion. He writes: “The essential element in the black art of obscurantism is not that it wants to darken individual understanding, but that it wants to blacken our picture of the world, and darken our idea of existence.”

Nietzsche wrote this in 1878. He was a hundred years ahead of his time, anticipating critical postmodernism before it became an academic rage. The postwar generation scribbled pages of unintelligible, useless prose that earned the ire of intellectuals ranging from far-Left linguist Noam Chomsky to conservative political theorists Michael Oakeshott and Leo Strauss.

Postmodernists deny reality and reject the possibility of reliable, objective knowledge. For them, there is no answer just as there is no spoon. Morals are relative. Existence is futile. Aesthetic standards for art and beauty are impossible. Everything is viewed with skepticism and irony. Nothing is what it appears—even language itself. Think Fight Club. Think Matrix. Darkened ideas of existence, indeed.

Postmodernism in three words: There is no spoon.
Postmodernism explained in three words: There is no spoon.

The Danish sociologist Jürgen Habermas observes the irony behind all this there-is-no-spoon nonsense: Anyone asserting language has no meaning must use language with meaning to defend their position. Habermas calls it a paradox. I call it dishonesty.

Bad Writing: A Simpler Explanation

During my graduate education, postmodernism and Marxism were easy targets to blame for bad writing. These approaches allowed professors to justify their hatred for capitalism and Western civilization while simultaneously collecting paychecks for teaching students to question all truth but their own.

Managing proposals for astrophysicists and virologists, I’ve had to re-evaluate my earlier position. As the medieval theologian William of Ockham reminds me, I need not come up with a complicated explanation for a phenomenon when a simple one will suffice. In other words, academics may simply be bad writers.

Researchers learn how to be a great researchers without learning how to explain their research to both academic and lay audiences. Quality writing is neither rewarded in peer-reviewed journals nor considered in the promotions and tenure process. After all, why waste time cogently articulating results and ideas when you can let your data and neologisms talk for you?

Those not taught how or encouraged to write well at the last minute string together convoluted passive sentences that recall the words of English novelist George Orwell: “The writer either has a meaning and cannot express it, or he inadvertently says something else, or he is almost indifferent as to whether his words mean anything or not.”

The Curse of Knowledge

Academics spend almost all of their time with their own ideas in their own disciplinary monocultures. To fit in, they use the same jargon and awkward sentence structures. They forget the rest of the world has no clue what their forced acronyms means or that words like parthenogenesis could easily be rewritten as virgin birth.

Academics simply cannot imagine what it is like to not know what they know.

Much like country clubbers disconnected from the other 95 percent of income earners, academics have an impossible time appreciating and communicating with outsiders. They simply cannot imagine what it is like to not know what they know. They suffer from what Steven Pinker terms “the curse of knowledge.”

Thanks to obscurantism, to postmodernism, to the curse of knowledge, over the past few years, my writing has become less florid, more direct, more plain. I write with clarity. I strive for brevity. To be read is to not to have eyes fixed on your work; to be read is to be understood.

To be read is to be understood.