So: in a burst of extraordinarily blinkered and sociopolitically aggressive pettiness, the UK government pulls us out of the EU.
I've been joking for months that I have two passports, but unfortunately they're the ones nobody wants... but just try to trade them for something more respectable, better. Slovenia? Great, flat trade, or shall I give you money? Or how about if I add – marmalade?...
Eventually moving to a warmer part in Europe – Barcelona has been my target for a year or so – is not completely impossible as a result; but it will be considerably more difficult. The tangled requirements of professional licensing, work, a place to live, moving – and, of course, more than anything else: health care....
Which is also the most significant reason why returning to the US would be insane. Aside from not wanting to be under the current loony regime in any way at all, I assume I would have great difficulty ensuring HIV medications – even if there were state programs (but how could I afford to move back to urban California?), their stability would be based on the assertive strength of the state government – which is good now, but.... well, you wouldn't want to, you know, bet your life on it.
So that's another closed door.
•••
On Monday afternoon, walking in town, I had an odd, tense sensation across my eyes, my face: it kept feeling as though I were squinting, or grimacing – was this some kind of generalised tension showing up in the muscles? I don't know; but after a couple of hours in town I went home to rest a bit. It didn't feel like a health problem, just... tension.
Associated with a slightly dizzy sadness, disconnection: it is sunny out, but I don't quite feel it. Tired...
Tuesday, the feeling seemed to continue... or was it fainter; or not? perhaps....
•••
A sense of being cornered in the UK, unable to leave: I know, I shouldn't complain – I rent a pleasant apartment (I don't own it, but that should remain a relatively safe choice); I have nice friends and a job, I have my analysands, I have medical care....
Of course, with the NHS under heavy attack, I wouldn't be surprised if that also started to get shaky. When I started my current medications, I was handed a cheaply photocopied notice that they were being changed because these new ones were cheaper – it did turn out to be a better choice for me, and my doctor reassured me that he would never (never!) actually change my HIV medications on the basis of cost, but – well, let's face it: what does he know about the future? He's thinking of what would happen if structures remain relatively responsible, supportive: which is an opinion and not a fact.
Indeed, everyone has reassured me that medical care couldn't possibly change, or of course end, but... as we know, sudden, shocking changes do indeed happen in the world. Those 1930s stories....
The past few nights, I'm reminded of my old vision, the Story of the Abbot: the tale of how, in an earlier existence, I was horribly careless with the lives of others – resulting in a stricture on this life, and others: that those in charge of my well-being will also act carelessly (getting deported from Australia!) – and this will teach me what it feels like, so that I remember the lesson.
Another round of the wheel: another, not especially palatable, lesson....
•••
The BBC has been weirdly silent: we've known for only about a week what day had been abruptly chosen for the break – and then there was astoundingly little discussion: which doesn't feel as though no one has anything to say – it has a much more disturbing quality, as though Murdoch and his cronies decided that the common populace knows enough, and should just shut up.
Which is how this whole thing has gone... so much for that Magna Carta nonsense, it just got in the way, didn't it?
Tonight, a brief mention that the document is signed. All a bit like getting a single-page Notice of Eviction. Sign the divorce papers. You agree to give up all rights to. Yo are ordered not to come within one hundred yards of....
•••
Tonight, again, as I am sitting on the sofa, my energy sudden evaporates, I become a bit shaky – that weakness that hits me once several times a month: I sit, then lie down... I have gotten better at this; I know that I simply stop doing things, turn things off, and if it's particularly bad I head for bed, whatever time it is.
Not terrible, not disastrous. But not exactly the condition one should be in to plan a new life elsewhere....
•••
In Stoppard's play Jumpers, there is a strange moment – one not in the dialogue, but in the stage directions, and so something liable to vanish in performance. The secretary looks in a mirror:
"For the following speeches, the SECRETARY is the only person moving on stage. She gets up. She is going to go for lunch. Perhaps a clock has struck. She comes down stage to make use of the imaginary mirror… a grim, tense, unsmiling young woman, staring at the audience."
It is a disturbingly sad vignette: the other characters talk and jump, there is dazzling wordplay, and emotions and passions as the world disintegrates – but this minor character, who is silent throughout the play and acts practically as scenery for most of it, suddenly shows us something painful: so closed, so without hope....
In that play, of course, Stoppard is also attacking the redbrick universities and their damned working classes, their Labor supporters, those lefties who ruin everything. In other words: vile, irresponsible lefties like me. For him, at least when he wrote that play – because the early divisions in his life were between a beaten-down Eastern European communism, and a luxurious Oxbridge creativity – symbolic representations of power were noble and important, as they are for too many in conservative southern England.
Of course that devolves into the assumption that people and their needs can be disposed of, as long as the symbols stay firmly in place. Which sounds just like the more old-fashioned Republicans, who are so disoriented at the moment by the Neronian chaos of the current regime in the West...
•••
That sense of being lost, of spinning in space – in a culture, in an economy and a political system, that uses you as nothing but a cipher, a functional unit of income and control.
•••
We will shift, manage, there will be changes in everyday life – a weakened economy, fewer opportunities, paying for health care – and a mess of denatured laws, remnants of EU regulations with the bits that bother rich people taken out of them. We'll putter along, I suppose: and if the rest of my life is here, that is of course not such a bad thing.
But it is so sad: to have dream spaces, imagined futures and hopes, collapse into a heap of rubble....
Comments