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dispatch no. 02 | day no. 07

March 22, 2020 Christine Fadel

What a time to be fucking alive, am I right?!



I rarely censor my thoughts or filter my use of profanity seeing as how my name is in the URL of the website you’re reading (and, also, I just don’t care), however, I’ve found that during particularly emotionally taxing times such as these, cursing makes me feel better when done with a fervor and weight that effectively translates the momentousness of using the noun or verb, interjection or adverb. Pretending any of this “isn’t dang normal” doesn’t pack the kind of punch that, say, “this shit isn’t mother fucking okay.” does, you know?! All of that is to say that I’m cranky, tired, and overstimulated by the constant presence of my three children and husband who has taken up real estate at the dining room table so I am, therefore, substantially more foul-mouthed than normal. So, allow this to serve as your warning.



Which brings me to this week. As of Wednesday morning, this all felt novel and doable. (I blame naivety and optimist for the lies. All lies.) Wednesday afternoon, I could hear the faint whistle of a very different tune. On Wednesday morning, my inner goddess was boldly shouting Gloria Gaynor’s I Will Survive as her anthem and declaration that she’s. got. this. By 4pm, my inner goddess admitted defeat and allowed the haunting ballad of Lauryn Hill singing Killing Me Softly to fill our psyche and announce our white flag so that we needn’t not bother exerting the effort it would require to wave our acceptance of impending doom.



And, so, I did what any natural-born realist would do: I leaned into whatever feeling were more convenient in any given moment. Which, I’ll admit, made me a big manic. I fluctuated quickly and hastily as I processed a wave of volatile panic, suffocating uncertainty, apathy and pragmatism, earnest optimism, and a feeling of shame that can I can only compare to survivor’s guilt because while this shit storm may be annoying as royal fuck, my family isn’t truly suffering compared to the millions of families who are worrying about much bigger and heavy things than whether or not monitoring your kids from a security camera while hiding from them in a closet is illegal or merely frowned upon. Some of those feelings were fleeting while others required me to do some self-inventory and nearly always ended with wanting to punch myself in the face with perspective.



With that said, I do believe that no matter how ridiculous and exaggerated the feelings I’ve experienced likely are, they’re valid. As long as I remain aware of the fact that what I categorize as a problem is in all actuality simply a privileged annoyance to the majority of the population, I’m free to indulge my being miffed about standing outside of the bubble of contentment I prefer my life to exist within. Like Brené Brown says, it’s okay to piss and moan as long as we do it with some perspective.



Which brings me to this minute right now. It’s 9:27pm on Sunday night. I’m sitting at our dining room table while Joe watches re-runs of various NCAA championship games from the comfort of our bed. He won’t admit it but out of every area this global pandemic has affected in his life, he’s more resentful about the cancellation of March Madness. Personally, I found that to be a silver lining because this is the first year out of the fourteen we’ve been together where he maintains awareness of my existence since he isn’t busy obsessing over UNC basketball, violently pacing back and forth in our living room, cursing college students who can’t hear him tell them what they should’ve done instead of the thing that they did which will just ruin his life as he knows it.



But I digress.



Joe is coping, I think. We’re all in survival mode trying to make sense of what this new reality looks like while also trying to keep our dependents blissfully blind to the chaos that cloaks every single new day it seems as of late. I am and always have been very dedicated to dutifully coping and, as such, believe that we shouldn’t have to defend or justify the form that coping takes as long as it isn’t hurting anyone. My personal coping strategies differ depending on the day and the place the day has landed on the pendulum of potential shittiness. As of late, coping strategies look a lot like organizing every closet, cupboard, and drawer in my home. Some days it’s zoning out the world by obsessively working on and finishing countless house projects I started months ago but never finished because I got distracted by starting another project that I, too, didn’t finish. There are often little pockets of the day where my soul needs a soother, a pick-me-up, or a reset. This remedy can come in the form of drinking a glass of rosé for lunch or sitting in a scalding hot salty water bath after wrestling the kids to bed successfully and inhaling the mind-numbing scent of a stupidly-priced, questionably-titled bougie candle that I admittedly bought as a joke because I thought it was immature and ironic but now I love the smell which, for the record, does decidedly not smell like a vagina.

I’ve been hearing self-care and its’ “necessary practice” being thrown around a lot right now which, for starters, I must acknowledge the sheer privilege that resides in possessing the ability to devote separate energy to taking care of one’ self when most people are worrying about how to feed their family or pay their rent or keep their jobs or feed their children or protect their elderly relatives from a disease that could very likely kill them or protect themselves from the pandemic while they work on the front lines in hospitals and clinics and are watching people die all around them.



Sure, self care is necessary during times of uncertainty and stress but I’d argue that self-care also manifests as the ability to simply pause and retain perspective by looking around at the very many things so often overlooked because we’re too often head down in our phones, knee deep in the trek of the daily wind and grind. I went on a walk this afternoon with Joe while the kids rode their bikes a few blocks to the local playground and park. Instead of inherently assuming annoyance due to that nagging feeling of guilt because if I’m walking with no purpose or destination in mind, I wasn’t being productive and isn’t value based on productivity? As my feet hit the pavement and I followed my babies and watched their newfound confidence on bikes, I dedicatedly embraced the art of having nowhere to go, nothing to produce or complete, and indulged in looking up, out, and around. And, holy shit, you guys! Did you know that it’s mother fucking spring? Did you know that we’re in literally fucking bloom?! Who would even begin to think that in the midst of our collective worlds coming to an unexpected and screeching halt, that the earth would somehow find a way to…. continue to thrive? Both wildly and as what felt like an act of rebellion, the trees were smothered by waves of shockingly purple and pink blooms… it was so damn beautiful it nearly brought me to tears. I mean, it was just so beautiful and majestic to witness and unbelievable and maddening that I somehow allowed myself to become desensitized to this staggeringly magnificent act of Mother Earth by indulging in the glorification of business. How easily we forget that the world doesn’t stop spinning just because we’ve been forced to pause and how much of an asshole am I for needing this pause caused by a pandemic to remind me that while I’m worrying about things that don’t actually matter in the grand scheme of what makes life worth living, the magic of mere existence is happening outside my flipping’ window at this very precise moment. For an hour, I observed vibrant-as-fuck, shockingly saturated violet leaves growing out of wood and it felt novel, familiar, childlike, indulgent, and life-affirming in equal measures. I am calling it my self-care for the day while also the mind fuck it wore as a disguise.


So, good people, I hope that whatever is getting you through the day and whatever gets you through tomorrow and the day after that is enough to propel you through the unprecedented bullshit we’re all attempting to navigate our way through.

I hope you’re being kind. I hope you’re remembering to laugh and to laugh with others. I hope you’re nurturing your body and mind and soul and are allowing others to step in and help when you are too exhausted to keep going. I hope you’re remembering that we’re all in the thick of it together and, for the most part, people don’t suck as badly as often fear and are, in fact, usually pretty awesome. Most importantly, I hope you’re remembering to look up and notice the immense beauty surrounding us in nature, in people, and in dark times that’s dutiful in its’ display as long as you’re open to finding it.

Love + Light, friends.

We got this damn thing.


In Operation: Survive Corona
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dispatch no. 01 | day no. 02

March 17, 2020 Christine Fadel

I’ll take my coffee with a side of let’s not go fucking nuts today, please and thank you.



I’m not actually kidding.



When I bought this mug at a local tchotchkes store in Plaza-Midwood, I couldn’t have possibly foreseen what was very quickly going to become our new normal but here we are. As I drank my coffee this morning, emotionally and physically exhausted from being unable to sleep much the past few nights, I couldn’t help but picture the many, many moms and dads alike who were probably doing the very same thing at that very same moment and likely worrying about the very same things I find myself stressing over. I don’t want anyone to be struggling but since the good fight appears to be unavoidable at this current moment in time, I figure it’ll be easier to stomach if I remember that I’m not alone and that we’re all trying to figure it out as we go.



This all really fucking sucks, doesn’t it? It’s not like we needed any fuel to add to the fire that’s already busy burning painful holes into our mental health, our physical wellbeing, and our doubts about the future of our country and the planet.

I’m making an effort to look at the positives this whole shit storm is providing. At the top of that rather short list is the giant dose of perspective slapping me in the face. No, it’s not easy being stuck at home, inside, with my kids all day for the indefinite future. No, I can’t get any work done and I really love my work. And, no, I don’t enjoy trying to explain to my young kids how serious this is. But, there are parents out there who don’t know how to feed their sons and daughters because they depend on free or reduced-cost breakfast and lunch provided by schools to meet their kids nutritional needs. I’m not worried about how to feed my kids or if I’ll find childcare so that I can work in order to continue paying rent or keep my utilities on. I’m not elderly and fearful of what this pandemic could mean for my health and the livelihood of my non-elderly spouse. I’m not worried about the cost of going to the hospital if we happen to fall ill because we have the means to pay for private health insurance through my husband’s company that guarantees we are seen by a doctor for a relatively low cost.

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Beyond being generally annoyed by being cooped up and no concrete answers from the people who are in charge of navigating this situation, I’m not worried about much of anything other than explaining to my clients that the design projects I’ve created for them may take a little longer to complete. And that makes me feel like one giant asshole. Albeit, a very fortunate and grateful asshole, but an asshole nonetheless.




I suppose I’ll just have to work harder to offset my self-admitted assholeishness by approaching this chapter as an opportunity to take stock of all of the goodness in my life, the immense amount of unconditional love I’ find myself showered with everyday by my family and friends, clients, and acknowledging the privilege my family and I benefit from.

Sometimes, that’ll look as simple as drinking coffee in the morning and taking a moment to remember that we’re all fighting this fight together and doing our best to navigate the new normal we find ourselves in. Other days, it’ll consist of giving blood due to the severe shortage the medical systems are facing right now and donating food and time to food banks to insure kids bellies are full. And then there will be the times where I simply allow myself to feel and sit in the depths of the shittiness of this fucked up situation we’re in. I’ll lean into the pain and the fear and the worry and the uncertainty. I’ll no longer possess the ability to keep it together for the sake of anyone else’ peace of mind and I’ll implode. I’ll probably cry while sitting under a steady stream of water in our shower. I’ll drown in the feelings of heartbreak and worry and pessimism and doubt and shock and the kind of rage that only a woman is capable of projecting. And then I’ll look over at my beautiful babies in all their imperfect perfection as they wrestle their dad before bed and, in spite of how crazy they all make me, I’ll think how incomprehensible it is to even attempt to articulate how much love I possess within every fiber of my being for those four humans.




So, while, yes, the world is falling apart, the future is inextricably laced with uncertainty, and I feel like I’m dying inside, one constant will remain through all of this and it’s the only thing that actually matters: LOVE.

Keep up the fight. Love your neighbors. Do some good. And don’t be an asshole.
















In Operation: Survive Corona Tags Operation: Survive Corona
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"I find it amusing that we're all pretending to be normal

when we could be insanely interesting instead.” -Atlas

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