This may be quick and it may be less than artful. I don’t really want to write. My brain is sludgy. However, I don’t want to let this blog wither, and there are sad things afoot.
Last Wednesday, after several days of worry and unanswered messages, my husband found out that a lifelong friend of his had died. M lived alone in a European city and worked in an academic field. He had a strong research presence but no connection to an American university and was essentially a contract researcher who worked out of his home for a European scientific institute. Because M had not updated his emergency contact information for his employer, when he was found dead in his apartment (unclear on how long he had been there), no one knew how to contact his family. It was only through my husband’s outreach to the consulate that anyone in M’s extended personal network found out about his death.
My husband and I are getting older, I know, and losses increase as time goes on. But I think of the small crew of humans we are connected to in this life, family members, childhood friends, former coworkers, friendships formed in person or across the ineffable electronic pulses of the internet. Over time those connections disappear. It all feels so unfair, not just for M and his family, friends, and colleagues, but for my husband, too, who has lost all his immediate family and now his closest friend.
And the world continues to burn. In the face of all of it, focusing on our connections to one another feels like an antidote to despair.