“If
there’s a fire, I want you all to lose your shit and just totally freak out!”
said the fantastic emcee at The Slutcracker a few weeks ago. “And then, I want
you to pull your shit together, and get out of here and make sure everyone else
gets out of here too. Because sluts[1]
take care of each other!”
It
was, without a doubt, the best safety message I have ever heard. Usually they
just say:"remain calm and make for the nearest exit.” If a building is burning
around me, I am highly unlikely to remain beatifically calm. I am actually
quite good in crises—I can triage and prioritize and cope and problem solve
with the best of them—but there will be at least a few seconds of freaking out.
Even if it’s just deep on the inside where I’m panicking.
No
one has ever given me permission to freak my shit in a potential crisis before.
Or at least, that primary reaction has never before been acknowledged and
accepted as part of the show. And I’ve been trained in emergency medical
response. But the words go deeper than just funny permissiveness—part two of
the instruction acknowledges that even slutty chickens who lose their heads can
get it back together and become capable heroes, keeping calm and carrying on.
Recently,
I was utterly awed by the ways in which people respond to the real and
potential minor crises of living. I thought back to The Slutcracker safety
debriefing[2],
and how it’s a much more realistic and viable approach to any emergency.
Some
friends and I hiked up one of my favorite trails a few days before New Years.
It was snowy and beautiful, and as soon as we came above treeline, everyone was
ecstatic, and freezing cold. The wind seemed to come from almost everywhere and
the blowing snow found its way into the gaps between mittens and scarves and
hands and faces. There was a good slick of ice under the snow, and even with
foot traction, there were some slips and slides along the trail. Coming up the
last bit towards Mount Jackson was particularly exciting—the wind had picked up
and was blowing sharp icy wind into our faces, making it hard to keep an eye on
where the trail actually went along the fairly bald summit. Being buffeted by
wind, not fully trusting if it would be rock or ice underfoot, and only having
a vague summer memory of where the summit and the trail went, I was starting to
edge into “lose your shit” territory.[3]
Fortunately,
my friends are among the greatest and most capable and trustworthy people on
earth. I do not mind to be afraid with them. And it turned out that we were all
freaking out a little, or at the very least, recognizing that we were in
conditions that could get bad pretty quickly. So we huddled together, talked it
over, and made a plan to turn around if we didn’t find the new trail in two
minutes.
When
we stood up, the trail sign and a little cairn were ten feet away.
We
hiked down, giddy for a bit with how raw and awesome and utterly gorgeous it
had been in the wind, and how relieved we were to have not gone on blindly
without talking to each other.
The
next day, my sister, a friend and I all got stymied by the deep and falling
snow on an unplowed dirt road, trying to get to my sister’s home. When this
became truly and obviously impossible, we ran inside, gathered a few things for
the night, and drove to another friend’s house. Only one car got lodged in a
snowbank, but we managed to push it out without breaking either backs or
engines. I came away from the whole experience with a buoyed faith in the
practical power of capability in trumping perceived emergencies.
I
cannot say enough how beautiful I find capability. The grit and grace of
knowing, or of determining what needs to be done with a minimum of dithering
and a maximum of daring to believe in a solution, and then executing the task
at hand with both joyful confidence and grinning, grim practicality—this is how
we respond to the changes of the world. And it is unparalleled joy to find
yourself able in such times. Your car is in the snowbank? We’ll push like
Sisyphus for you. Your way is unplowed? Come to my house. The trail is unseen?
Duck down, come together, and make a plan. Lost your hope in the melee? Borrow mine and we'll look for yours together.
We’ll
do well to let go of any expectation of the world remaining the same. We’ll do
better, we’ll do best, to instead trust in the ever increasing constancy of our
various capabilities. And to surround ourselves with a diversity of talents.
This will mean admitting fear and turning back, rather than steaming forward as
expected. This will mean work and discomfort and best laid plans going far
awry. This will also mean unexpected delight and comfort and adventure as we go
along.
I
try not to think too much about the particulars of the impending crises of the
world, or the ones that are already lapping at our doorsteps. I get mired in
the darkness so deep I cannot contemplate a solution that is possible. But the
news is daily, hourly, minutely blaring emergency warnings at us all. It is
very scary, so we don’t like to talk about it. It is overwhelming and no one
has the answer[4].
What no one is saying is: “In case of fire, flood, hurricane, earthquake, civil
war, famine, plague, blizzard, locusts, all engulfing economic disparity,
corporate ownership of government, mass and minor extinctions, and/or any of
the unspecified multitudes of scourges upon the world you so love, PLEASE
FREAK OUT! And then, when you’re done, pull yourself
together and let’s help each other through this thing.”
Personally,
I’m nearing the end of how much I either can or need to freak out. I admit that
I’m scared, that I’m not sure where the emergency exits or survival gear or
carbon emission extinguishers are as we’re stumbling around in the darkness.
But, I know that everyone is more capable and resilient than we’re usually
given credit for, that we’re all a little bit the lost kitten in a tree and a
little bit the fireman. I think we all need to both be rescued and to rescue.
Being freaked out, this doesn’t mean that you cannot be, that you are not
already a brave and capable member of the Save the World Club.
If
anything, admitting you’re freaked out is your membership card.
Welcome!
[1] “Slut” was here
being used as a term of ultimate endearment, recognizing and applauding the
audience for joyfully venturing out of normalized boundaries. The Slutcracker
is, after all, a burlesque show that tweaks a Christmas tradition into a
celebration of human bodies enjoying the heck out of themselves and each other.
[2] Pun entirely
intended.
[3] And yet, under
the minor key freak-out mode there is often the sweetest sense of ecstasy for
being alive in such a situation. I love to feel small and humble and mortal at
times and a little mountain snow storm can be a beautiful answer to that
hunger.
[4] To the best of
my knowledge, there is no single answer. No one, not even Bill McKibben or the
Pope, can tell us one true solution to make it all right again. The best we’ve
got—and I do believe it is the best—is for everyone to share the potluck of
what they’re doing and what they’d like to see. We can all pick and chose and
learn what works—bring what you can and eat what you’d like!
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