Today
(September 10th) we walked down to Dexter to visit the Pot Shop. I was looking
for a balm to help ameliorate the pain from arthritis in my right shoulder. We
were carded as soon as we entered the store. I thought that this was strange.
The little store was full of items related to the ingestion of hemp and
marijuana in all its forms and manifestations. Hookahs, bongs, herbal
vaporizers, dab rigs, creams, tinctures and hundreds of concentrates with names
like Grease Monkey, Blue Dream and Hindu Skunk. I was helped by a young woman
who, as soon as I explained what I was looking for, immediately presented me
with several options. I chose a product called Wildflower CBD “cool stick”
topical salve, which is applied to the skin like a ball deodorant. The bottom
twists making the ointment rise. It contains coconut oil, hemp oil, shea
butter, beeswax, ecosoya, vitamin E, arnica, full spectrum CBD oil and
wintergreen and has a strong but pleasant smell. Very minty.
I
applied some after a run. It is advised to apply the product after a hot shower
when the pores of the skin are open and more permeable. Within twenty minutes
or so I felt a cooling effect and could move my right arm with less pain. The
pain didn’t go away completely but was noticeably diminished. I noticed the
improvement most when, after a spaghetti dinner, I put the parmesan cheese away
high on an uppermost shelf in a cupboard and had no pain at all in my right
arm. Normally, I would barely be able to lift it, the pain would be so acute.
I
also felt very relaxed. It’s as though the balm had entered my general being
and filled me with a soothing alleviation.
September
11th. 12:22 p.m. I watch a YouTube video in which Hambone
Littletail, the persona of a passionate chronicler of the end times named Sam
Mitchell, a Texan who lives outside Austin, drives a highway into the Blue
Ridge Mountains of Virginia for a blue grass festival and encounters a terrific
rain storm, lightning flashes on the road ahead, his wipers going rhythmically
back and forth, as he recounts once again his miserable time in Scranton,
Pennsylvania trying to find a gas station and how glad he feels to be crossing
the Mason-Dixon line into the land where his southern accent fits in and he
doesn’t have to listen to Yankee accents anymore. He titles this nine-minute
episode “Virginia Tornado Is Welcome
Sight For Survivor of Scranton, Pennsylvania.”
September 14th. 11:22 a.m. Florence has
come ashore and begun wreaking havoc on the southeastern coast. Catastrophic
weather events like this are becoming increasingly common. People like to deny
them by saying “this is the new normal.” Like the photo that accompanied the
text for an article published online by a local TV news show last August of a
thirty-something jubilant dad lifting a toddler into the air with a celebratory
grin with the Seattle skyline in the background shrouded in ugly haze from the
many wildfires blazing in British Columbia and east of the Cascades. The level
of cognitive dissonance so fully evident in this photo was breathtaking. There
is nothing normal about these disasters. It is abrupt anthropogenic climate
change. And it’s disrupting lives and costing billions.
The anxiety and despair I feel with regard to this
situation is chronic. I don’t know what other people are feeling. But if I try
to gauge what they might be feeling according to the normalcy of their
behavior, my guess would be that they’re either utterly ignorant of the crisis
we’re in, particularly the ones with babies and toddlers, or they’re aware of
what’s going on but have chosen to adopt an attitude of stoic acceptance and
hope for the best. Whatever “the best” could possibly be achieved when
everything – already clearly unsustainable – goes tits up.
I’ve never been successful at stoicism. Its ultimate
iconic image would be that of the long-suffering cowboy biting the proverbial
bullet as a bullet or arrow is removed from his body, or the grim look of the
pilots in WWII movies trying to pilot a seriously damaged bomber back to an
airfield in England, maintaining attitudes of poise and determination, or the
women attending to the gravely ill or wounded in incredible conditions in
foreign lands persevering with solicitous care and equanimity and tact. I
usually explode into rants and tempests of molten language.
Strategies for adaptation are mapped, contemplated, dangled.
I keep wondering what action I would take the day there is no electricity or
internet or running water and come up blank. Nada. Nothing enters my brain as a
possible remedial expedient for navigating the end times. How does one envision
such a future? There have been detailed predictions of various dystopias
presented in science fiction. But that was always, you know, science fiction.
The Twilight Zone. Outer Limits. The Walking Dead. What we’re facing is as real
as the hurricane presently sweeping over North and South Carolina, dropping
wind and rain in catastrophic biblical buckets, over half a million people
already without power.
“You
sit here for days saying, this is a strange business. You're the strange
business. You have the energy of the sun in you, but you keep knotting it up at
the base of your spine,” observed the Persian poet Rumi.
Yesterday R and I went to a marijuana dispensary in
Fremont, on Stone Way, to get a couple of packets of Deeper Sleep capsules
containing 45 mgs of cannabidiol and 75 mgs of tetrahydrocannabinol (Indica
cannabis concentrate oil). It also contains myrcene and linalool terpenes,
ashwagandha, theanine, passion flower, white peony, magnolia bark, and
chamomile.
I had difficulty sleeping and so I got up and took
one. Within an hour, I was feeling quite relaxed, my whole body felt
deliciously sedated. I had an overall sense of well-being. I enjoyed a few
vivid images that emerged and disappeared from consciousness as I entered a
pleasant hypnagogic state and eventually fell asleep.
1 comment:
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