Thursday, December 31, 2020
Wednesday, December 30, 2020
Before and after
I'm just three weeks from the first meeting of my new lecture course "After Religion," and much remains up in the air about it. We'll be in zoomland still, and this time - since it's a lecture, with graduate students helming discussion sections - it's possible that I might never see even one of my students. I don't like the idea to a lecturing to a grid of black boxes "live," though students responded well to opportunities to participate in last Spring's course (though that was building on the momentum of having met in person for the first half of the semester). Very reluctantly I'm inclining toward prerecording my lectures and inviting students to meet me in small groups during the officially scheduled time - reluctantly because prerecording seems so impersonal, so resistant to the spontaneous and the playful which live classes allow. It also means that class visitors - I have a few planned - won't he able to take questions.. though perhaps I could have a few live classes when we can all be together? Tradeoffs whatever you do!
Also not finalized, though I'm nearly there, is the course material. A lot of things sorted themselves out when I decided (last week) what the assignments should be, and in particular that the final assignment should, as in the Job course, be one students might tackle in any medium. The prompt, once I'd decided that, was easy: What comes after religion? I'm actually incredibly excited to see what students come up with, whether they're designers or social scientists, creative writers or performers or activists... but that just makes me more desperate to find a way to make a personal connection to them earlier in the class.
Helpful in winnowing possible readings was also the decision to try to include a non-text each week, whether a podcast, a video interview, an archive, a photo essay, even a guided yoga session. (Like this or this or this or this or this.) These will appeal to different learning styles - recommended especially for online instruction - and also make real my endorsement of multiple media for the final project. They also let me disrupt stereotypical views of what various religions look like. But they'll need to be good, since students in a hurry will almost certainly choose these if they don't have time for all the assigned work! Where they're instructively bad (like this) I'll need to integrate them into the lecture to make sure students aren't taken in by them!
The most intellectually exciting (and difficult) challenge is in the course material itself. This was going to be my take on "Religion 101" or "Intro to Word Religions" and the vastness of potential material is matched only by the number of ways any such project will go astray. I'd decided to sequester "world religions" at the center of the class - the middle of the semester - so I could inoculate the class against the dangers of this discourse, and let the constructedness of Buddhism, Judaism and their ilk become a feature not a bug: at a certain point and for a variety of reasons people started bundling things as "religions," all remarkably unified and coherent and many of hoary antiquity. All of them are in fact modern constructs, but so are we, and so is everything else we wrestle with... The course is called "After Religion" in part because we know better than to think that "religion" is a clear and enduring thing - but many other modern constructs have been historicized in this way, too (like "secularism"!), and part of being a modern person may be feeling the need for something like religion (especially if you call it something else, like "spirituality"!) - another reason for the course title.
The other reason for the course title - the one which most students probably think is the main one - is facing the idea that religion is over, a thing of simpler, perhaps more superstitious times (although some scary people seem not to have got the memo). That's wrong, of course, on many levels, and it'll be my pleasure to explore them. One is problematizing what Charles Taylor calls "stadial" thinking - the idea that history moves inevitably through discernible stages, say from magic to religion to science, so I decided the start and finish of my course should jumble that sequence: we would begin in the present, and end with the indigenous traditions usually left out (if not explicitly presented as superseded) in accounts of "world religions," appreciated again or anew by a generation which sees how the old modern constructs have devastated our relationship to our non-human earthly kin. "Indigenous" traditions are every bit as constructed as the others we'll have looked at - indeed often more clearly so, having had to reorient themselves after violent displacements of every kind.
So what might this all look like in practice? Here's the course skeleton I shared with the TAs. The high-minded theoretical aims are invisible but, I hope, operative through well-chosen topics presented in a compelling sequence.
1 1/20 Welcome
2 1/27 SBNR
3 2/3 Yoga – in West and beyond
4 2/10 (White) (Evangelical) (American) (Christian)
5 2/17 What is religion anyway? And “secularism”?
6 2/24 Invention of world religions
7 3/3 The invention of Buddhism
8 3/10 Islam as a world religion
SPRING BREAK
9 3/24 Modern religions: Baha’i and LDS (and Judaism?)
10 13/31 Provincializing Christianity
11 4/7 Syncretic new religions (and cults!)
12 4/14 Hindu TV Mahabharata, Left Behind, sci-fi
13 4/21 Indigenous resurgence
14 4/28 Transhumanism, online religion, fashion
15 5/5 Conclusions
I'll talk you through them once I've determined the readings - next year!
Tuesday, December 29, 2020
Off-brand
This is what we're not seeing.
An article, over six months ago (I thought I'd shared it), asked "Where are the photos of people dying of COVID?" It noted how in other countries, everyone knew what the pandemic looked like, but here, for reasons of journalistic ethics, the pandemic was literally invisible to most people. (Her article had to make do with photos from Italy.) No wonder so many didn't take it seriously, and still don't.
A new article discloses that the ravages of the pandemic in the US have been not only invisible but hidden. A political appointee in HHS made restrictions on journalists in hospitals even more onerous, even as other rules were being relaxed in the face of unprecedented circumstances. He might have thought patient privacy protections especially important at this time - although existing rules already require signed consent from anyone depicted; the patient in the rare photo above, taken in Houston a month ago, gave consent. I fear the Trump appointee was more likely motivated by ideas coming from his boss in the White House that paint media as the "enemies of the people" and reporting on COVID-19 as politically skewed. I wonder if he ever had to witness what has been going as a third of a million of his fellow citizens have lost their lives shut off from everyone they know.
But the fault is not his alone, the article points out. A psychiatry resident who's remarked on the total disjunct between the experiences of those in hospitals and those outside observes: "Hospitals, as businesses, as profit-driven entities, do not want to be
associated with death and suffering — it is very off-brand for them," I
think. Perhaps with a president who's not afraid to face pain and grief, a party which recognizes the humanity of all citizens, we'll do better. Still, how many lives might have been saved had we been confronted with the reality of what COVID does to people? Look again at that picture. Don't look away.
Monday, December 28, 2020
12-day feast
Some folks have already tossed their Christmas trees, can you imagine? Ours is here for the Twelve Days of Christmas - until the Feast of the Epiphany - at least!
Sunday, December 27, 2020
Saturday, December 26, 2020
Boxing Day Best!
Friday, December 25, 2020
Adeste fidelis
Thursday, December 24, 2020
At sixes and sevens
As we process the event of the Great Conjunction (say, couldn't an observer on Saturn have noticed something too, the tiniest blue blip in the vicinity of Jupiter and its moons?) I'm delighted by a story which crossed my FaceBook path. Folklorists have long noticed that the story of the Seven Sisters, the constellation known to us as the Pleiades, is so widespread among the world's peoples that it might be among the oldest stories out there. Most folks in fact only see six stars but the stories obligingly explain that one of the seven sisters is hidden or otherwise absent. But why did they think there were seven in the first place?
Some settler Australian astronomers recently wondered: if the story is indeed so ancient as to predate human migrations from Africa, maybe the constellation looked like seven stars to our earliest ancestors. (There are in fact more than seven in the cluster, ten of them in principle visible to the human eye.) Dial backward, the way folks have done with Jupiter and Saturn in our sky, and it seems that 100,000 years ago a seventh star, now so close to another as to be indiscernible, probably was far enough removed to be visible! How cool would that be: a story so old it tells of an older one still.
Wednesday, December 23, 2020
Tuesday, December 22, 2020
Twinkle in the eye
It was cloudy tonight, but even had it been clear I doubt we could have made out the "Great Conjunction": too much ambient city light. So this might be sour grapes. But what's the big deal? Jupiter and Saturn were nowhere near each other, just appeared so from our vantage point. We gave up thinking the earth the center of the universe years ago, even before the last time these two appeared so close in the earth sky!
I made do with internet sightings, an image on twitter apparently taken in Tampa (with several moons!!), and the google doodle showing us what we wanted to see. Various live streams disappointed, even more than watching the solar eclipse that way. It's clear that for those who did see it, it was a tiny part of the sky - though it conjured the depth, and the closeness, of space in a powerful way. Every constellation hides the depth of space and time behind the shape we project on to it. Deep!
But rather than peevish I feel unmoored in a nice way by all this. Constellations, conjunctions and eclipses are in the eye of the beholder - from no other vantage point would they appear. Other celestial observers, if any there are, see other plays of shape and depth. This doesn't make us significant or insignificant but connects us to every other vantage in the universe, each of which has its Great Conjunctions, whether anyone's there to notice or not. It's like the thought I've had on seeing reflections of sun or moon seem to stretch across water to me. What I'm seeing isn't an illusion, but the wonder is what I'm not able to see - the same phenomenon embracing a myriad other points of view. Same and different. The discovery is being and moving in space - the same space - with all these others, potential and actual. (The poignancy of that insight has something to do with the fleetingness of all conjunctions, and with those other vantage points not being occupied, and with how, even if they were, none of us can perceive the beauty seeking out the other... but those are topics for another day.)
All conjunctions are great! The nicest articulation of this experience came in Tyson Yunkaporta's account of the way the Rainbow Serpent appears to us. I've quoted it before, but here it is again.
When
us-two see that arc in the sky, that Rainbow Serpent, we are seeing
only one part of it, and it is subjective: just for us. If we move, the
rainbow also moves, only appearing in relation to our standpoint. If you
go to the next hill you will see it in a different position from where I
am seeing it. The moon sisters were trapped by a similar phenomenon,
chasing the reflected moon on the surface of the night sky, thinking it
was a fish they could spear. But like the rainbow that image moves in
relation to where you are sitting, so they could never catch it. Now you
can see their shadows in the moon where they remain trapped to this
day, a warning to all about the illusion of chasing fixed viewpoints.
The
Serpent loves the water because that is what allows us to see him, and
he communicates with each of us this way, but he is not just an entity
of water. He is an entity of light. The part we are seeing there in the
wet sky, or in the fine spray coming off the front of a speeding dinghy,
is just a line across the edge of a sphere. The line moves across
multiple spheres that are infinitely overlapping, spiraling inwards and
outwards, extending everywhere that light can go (or has gone or will
go), and the Rainbow Serpent moves through this photo-fabric of
creation. He goes under the ground too, because light has been there in
the past and he is not limited by linear time.
Ah,
but is he a wave or a particle? I guess that depends on how you’re
looking at him, but we could see him as a wave, a snake, because he is
constantly in motion across systems that are constantly in motion and
interwoven throughout everything that is, was and will be.
Sand Talk: How Indigenous Thinking Can Save the World, 54-55
Every conjunction is a twinkle in the Rainbow Serpent's eye.
Monday, December 21, 2020
Nourishing
It's been nine months since I set foot in the Church of the Holy Apostles so it was a strange pleasure to return for a brief visit today. I was meeting the woman who will become my co-warden in the new year. She lives nearby and is deeply knowledgeable about the life of the soup kitchen as well as the congregation, so she was the ideal guide.
Our church congregation remains in zoom diaspora, but the work of the soup kitchen is ongoing, and nothing short of amazing - warm meals for the homeless and supplies for healthy and balanced meals for families by the tens of thousands. Not quite what the space was built for, but serving well!
Sunday, December 20, 2020
After the snow
Cold dark day, with a few flurries. Here's the westward view out our window - across the Hudson to New Jersey, and down to a parking lot.
Saturday, December 19, 2020
Friday, December 18, 2020
Seeing through zoom
In our final meeting for "Religion and the Anthropocene," we realized we'd beaten zoom exhaustion. This sketch, drawn by a student in one of the small-group meetings, wasn't meant to be creepy - "eyes are the hardest thing to draw," she explained, and she didn't have time to draw them. Perhaps it's also that we know by now that in zoom rooms people aren't looking at you when you think they are! What she captured instead - the larger group understood this immediately when I asked her to share the image with them - was our presence, our genuine availability to each other.
My classes' final session is always dedicated to sharing final syntheses, and this was no exception. But what was exceptional was how many students' reflections discussed the community we'd created together. While the self-selecting group of students adventurous enough to sign up for a 9am Friday seminar on religion (eek!) and the Anthropocene (wha?) were clearly part of it, I take a little credit too, as this was the class I'd divided in three groups whom I meet each week for 40 minutes each (then leave the zoom room to them), around our shared 90 minute class. What made the difference wasn't just the intimacy of the small groups but the fact that I wasn't always there. We'd almost replicated a classroom, where students could form bonds outside the class and its projects - something that, it emerged from discussion, otherwise just wasn't happening. But here, we knew and cherished each other!
The fondness which filled our final hour was perhaps strange in a class on such profound and paralyzing problems as we had studied together, but, some students suggested, that made it the more meaningful. Of all my classes this semester, one quipped, this is the one that helped me imagine more futures! In 2020 that's no mean accomplishment.
By the way, that's the student sketcher at top right. Ours was also her very last class in college: she's one of our December graduates. It can't be easy to finish college in these disembodied times. Congratulations!
Thursday, December 17, 2020
No man
The New York Times breaks down US states and territories as covid spreads. The categories have changed with the pandemic's waves. Currently there's "Where new cases are higher and staying high," "Where new cases are higher but going down," and these two.
Feels like reaching for straws, huh... Community spread has engulfed everyone else, and the aggregate numbers for the day are eye-popping: 254,044 new cases, bringing the total to 17 million. And another three thousand six hundred eleven souls lost, for a total of 307,642. Horror.
Wednesday, December 16, 2020
Stumbling along between the Immensities
"Theorizing Religion" wrapped up today, a small group of zoom-weary students savoring our final time together. The final assignment, as ever, was a reflection/synthesis on what they'd taken from the class, and, as per usual, we heard about ignorance overcome, biases revealed, permissions granted - and, of course, questions unanswered! As a parting gift I shared these two nuggets from Kimberley Patton's "'Stumbling along between the Immensities': Reflections on Teaching in the Study of Religion," to which an AAR panel I attended last week had taken me back. Patton's point in the essay is that, despite our theoretical scruples and specialist efforts to avoid generalizations (not to mention the professional pressures of our academic guild), in undergraduate classes scholars of religion face students who are asking the big questions and seeking answers to them in what we offer them.
I'd like to think I provided a venue for reflecting on big questions as well as questions about those questions, and students seem to have appreciate it. One put it particularly eloquently:
Upon starting the course, I was struck anew by something which had often bothered me in a weaker form: the way that religion is a subject both academically crucial and personally captivating, but it seemed to demand a generalizing of the ungeneralizable. ... In reading the work of some of the consummate professionals included in this course, there are two immediate effects. One is the appreciation for the beauty and intrigue of any given topic when illuminated by a loving scholar, the other is seeing where this light ends, how far the surrounding unknown goes.
Not sure what the Academy thinks of "loving scholars" but I say Amen.
Kimberley C. Patton, "'Stumbling along between the Immensities': Reflections on Teaching in the Study of Religion," Journal of the American Academy of Religion 65/4 (Winter, 1997): 831-49, 836, 840
Tuesday, December 15, 2020
Monday, December 14, 2020
Untied States of America
Here's the evidence again. Certified again. No, the system doth not protest too much. There was just one election, conducted remarkably smoothly and fairly in trying circumstances, and one clear winner.
Sunday, December 13, 2020
Friday, December 11, 2020
Sedition
The losing president's last desperate effort to game the American constitutional system has failed, though it's a sign of how far his demonic influence has spread that anyone thought it could - or should - work. And by "anyone" I mean the majority of House Republicans, the majority of Republican state attorney generals and the feckless mob of silent Republican Senators. (Or maybe they didn't think it would work, are just feeding their voraciously norm-devouring king, but the damage is the same.) A brief for the State of Pennsylvania, arguing against the vile and frivolous Texas suit, urged: “The court should not abide this seditious abuse of the judicial
process, and should send a clear and unmistakable signal that such abuse
must never be replicated.” The signal has been been sent (though unhinged Alito and craven Thomas tried to leave the door ajar), but it is shocking how widely shared the seditious intent has proved. What was once a Grand Old Party is now clearly an enemy not only of decency but of democracy itself. Scary.
Thursday, December 10, 2020
AAR
Whew! I atttended part or all of fourteen sessions. All over the place!
•Buddhist Critical-Constructive Reflection Unit:
Joanna Macy and the Work of Our Time
•Queer Studies in Religion Unit:
Queer Secularities
•Indigenous Religious Traditions Unit:
Rising the Feathered Serpent: A First Flight Over Indigenous Contemplative Traditions
•Practical Theology Unit:
Vulnerability, Dignity and the Ecological Crisis
•Comparative Religious Ethics Unit:
Postcolonialism, Race, and Critical Theory in the Study of CRE
•SBL Bible and Practical Theology and AAR Evangelical Studies Unit:
The Intersection of Bible and the United States 2020 Politics
•Indian and Chinese Religions Compared Unit:
Why Humanities Should Go Global
•Plenary Panel: The Changing Field of Religious Studies:
A Short History of the American Academy of Religion’s Annual Meeting
•Exploratory Session:
Critical Whiteness Studies and Global Religion
•Religion and Popular Culture Unit and Yoga in Theory and Practice Unit:
The Power of Context, Identity, and Capital: Three 2020 Books Interrogating Spirituality and Yoga
•Indigenous Religious Traditions Unit and Religion and Ecology Unit:
Indigenous Ecologies: Trees, Temples, Texts, and Sacred Territory in an Era of Climate Change
•Womanist Approaches to Religion and Society Unit:
Celebrating 30 Years of Womanist Approaches to Religion and Society
•Comparative Studies in Religion Unit:
Implicit and Explicit Comparison in Religious Studies Scholarship: A Collaborative Experiment in the Use of Buddhist Categories
•History of Christianity Unit:
The 1619 Project
Wednesday, December 09, 2020
Cabin fever
We're in a cozy cabin in the woods but I'm at AAR! It's a drag being on the receiving end of webinars, where we can see the speakers, in their boxes, but they can't see us. I suppose it's the way we live now - and I'm learning a lot - but one misses all the unscheduled stimulation of a conference, bumping into old friends, meeting new people, gathering around a speaker after a panel... An old friend took time out of her response to three new books on American yoga (all of whose authors' names curiously began and end with a) to name all that's not happening. She introduced it under the phrase "research continuity," something she argued we need to realize has been seriously disrupted by the pandemic. Not just the scholarly community-building effervescence of in-person conferences (she thinks now she should have pushed AAR to cancel this year's conference rather than go for this bloodless simulacrum) but the analogous blockage of access to libraries, the other places we get to browse old and encounter new scholarship. All of this on top of the untold grief, anxiety and isolation of living in these times. "I'm supposed to act like I'm okay as I speak to you about these amazing books," she said, "but I'm not okay." It was good to hear these words.
Tuesday, December 08, 2020
Monday, December 07, 2020
AAF FOMO
I've not been attending that many AAR Virtual Annual Meeting sessions - I'm teaching, after all - but I have managed to have the familiar experience of discovering a few jewels but otherwise getting the sense I was missing most of what was going on. One session today, on the history of the AAR no less, helped explain why nobody could hope to avoid the sense of missing most of it! (See above.) It was interesting also to learn that our predecessor, NABI (the National Association of Biblical Instructors) peeled away from the Society of Biblical Literature in 1909 for the latter's connection to the Church, as well as their resistance to scientific research - but remained focused on the same material, now called "Bible and Religion." Only in the 1960s, when we were renamed American Academy of Religion, was even a desultory effort to move beyond Christian topics made. Now a thousand flowers bloom.
One such jewel was a panel of the recently formed "Indian and Chinese Religions Compared" Unit, where four scholars considered how a globalized humanities might learn from non-Western traditions not only in content but in form and approach. I attended in part because a Sinologist I met in Shanghai was sharing his work on how the work of Tang dynasty "scholar poets" became forms of meditation, incantation and apophasis, a lovely presentation. I was excited also by a paean to the Mahabharata, a polemic against Buddhist studies' implicit acceptance of an irrelevant western distinction between philosophy (the framework for most work on Indo-Tibetan materials) and literature (template for studies of most Sino-Japanese works), and a dialogue the 17th century Indian Muslim poet Bidel of Delhi describes with a Brahmin when they were both on the road to a spring sacred to many traditions. Especially in the time of "love jihad" legislation, it was nice to be reminded of the depth and beauty of Indian religious pluralism. This presenter also shared a translation of a ghazal of Bidel's "on composure and distraction."
Dust of distraction
everywhere
the opposite
of composure.
Bringing lips
to silence
is the aim
of the collected heart.
Be
spinebound
for a moment
held together
by attentive slow reflection.
Your compendium of inner meaning
has come apart
from all those proofs
and heartfelt demonstrations
of composure
In this ocean
waves grow
in search of pearls.
You skim the surface
fleeting and impatient
seeking
a collected heart.
Among its beautiful merits, she observed, was the poem's acknowledgment that in this life composure usually loses out to distraction, whatever faith journey one is on.
Sunday, December 06, 2020
Avian heights
As I bent in to take a picture of an abandoned bird's nest on the west shore of Cayuga Lake, a din overhead made me look up. Can you see?
Saturday, December 05, 2020
Nw direction
All other plans to get out of town having been foiled, we're stealing away to the northwest. The mountains we drove through (not green in this season, of course) are so different from the corrugations of the Alleghenies to the south or the block of the Adirondacks to the north!
Friday, December 04, 2020
Symbiotic Bir'yun
The final weeks of a class always have a valedictory feel and today was no exception. "Religion and the Anthropocene" meets twice more (and there's much work students might or might not turn in), but it's clear things are drawing to a close. A satisfying one, though! Things are coming together.
Today's class covered an insane amount of material - that documentary about Lynn Margulis, a gnarly piece of Donna Haraway's Staying with the Trouble, and Deborah Bird Rose's lovely essay "Shimmer" - but we'd also decided to skip our scheduled session on Daoism, and I became possessed of the idea of somehow squeezing that in too. Somehow, though, going from Daoist considerations of reality as liquid, all forms (including you and me) merely temporary congealings, we got to Haraway's "tentacular" thinking and Rose's commendation of practices of bir'yun. The hinge was some footage from the documentary - here's my new iPhone's recording of a subscription website's screening of the documentary's sharing of a video from a class in which Margulis was showing videos, our astonishment joining that of layers of other viewers!
With these images in mind, everything made a different kind of sense - and that's even before you get to the sym- part of the story (symbiosis, symbiogenesis, sympoiesis). If this is what's going on, then selves are not in but expressions of environments and relationships, rising and falling, hardening and softening, wiggling and entwining. Individualism crumbles, but so does anthropocentrism - though selves, including human ones, are among the forms the Dao takes. We were at the threshold of rediscovering, in Rose's words, that the shimmer of life does indeed include us. (G61) (The image at top is a recent example of the kind of Yolngu bark painting whose cross-hatching evokes bir'yun - the "brilliance" or "shimmer" of sunlight on moving water, or firelight on painted bodies in motion.) And that, as Haraway shows, we need new (or perhaps very old) ways of thinking.
What happens when human exceptionalism and bounded individualism, those old saws of Western philosophy and political economics, become unthinkable in the best sciences, whether natural or social? ... What happens when the best biologies of the twenty-first century cannot do their job with bounded individuals plus contexts, when organisms plus environments, or genes plus whatever they need, no longer sustain the overflowing richness of biological knowledges, if they ever did? What happens when organisms plus environments can hardly be remembered for the same reasons that even Western-indebted people can no longer figure themselves as individuals and societies of individuals in human-only histories? Surely such a transformative time on earth must not be named the Anthropocene! (30-31)
Today's readings only tangentially touched "religion." (Haraway blames our estrangement from and despoliation of the symbiotic world on the "sky gods" and their votaries.) But it was all over our discussion! It felt - I hope students would agree - like we've arrived at a point where "religion and the Anthropocene [sic!]" makes sense as a project.
I'm a little giddy that things congealed in this way, and it tempts me to try to articulate just how these things hold together for me. This is something I've felt, intuitively and inchoately, at least since seeing that documentary for the first time, but not had occasion, nor confidence, to try. Emergence and sympoiesis are the reality of life (and perhaps not just life), a reality closer to what Daoism describes than monotheism and the cascade of deadly dualisms which follow from it assert. And yet, despite the truth in the critique of sky gods, I don't feel that this is incompatible with my faith as a Christian. Just beneath the shimmer, the layers of atmosphere-regulating bacteria, in the tangle and trouble, I sense the face of God, happy to be discovered.
John Feldman, “Symbiotic Earth: How Lynn Margulis Rocked the Boat and Started a Scientific Revolution” (Bullfrog Films, 2017)
Donna Haraway, “Tentacular Thinking: Anthropocene, Capitalocene, Plantationocene,” ch. 2 of Staying with the Trouble: Making Kin in the Chthulucene (Duke, 2016), 31-57
Deborah Bird Rose, “Shimmer: when all you have is being trashed,” in Arts of Living on a Damaged Planet, ed. Anna Tsing, Heather Swanson, Elaine Gan and Nils Bubandt (Minnesota, 2017), G51-63
Thursday, December 03, 2020
Pall
Our nation is becoming a cemetery. The loss of life reported today approaches the deaths on 9/11! And the curve will go up and up. Newly reported infections topped 200,000/day. The calamity is happening everywhere, a thousand trickles turning into torrents, hard to take in, impossible to grasp. How are we able to talk about anything else?