Why September always starts with fog

I have no idea. But it’s much better than pure gray. The blurring adds mystery, makes Japanese watercolors out of the banal.

Took a drive last night for an ice cream, first time in six days outside the perimeter of our house. Sat in the parking lot by myself spooning a Turtle Cluster before it melted, a bit self-pitying. Took the long way home by the little park. Turned off the bed lamp at 2000 again with that self-pity, Dawn sleeping on the couch now since I came down with Covid, had to change her plans for Colorado.

Caffeinated and coughing in the early mornings, caged in. Trying to sound cogent on work meetings: the brain fog akin to network latency, delayed transmission. Or the brain stutters / freezes. Coming off mute feeling emboldened to speak up, raising my little animated hand, the sense I’m on to something, then later wondering if I really was, and what they made of me. So much of this corporate work is how you show up in meetings.

Re: the fog, not sure if caffeine burns it off or produces more. The brain fog. Occludes shapes and concepts. Shortness of breath is a common symptom and I get it just gathering up the garden hose, probably from the caffeine. There was a time when I worked at Starbucks and had my first bout of work anxiety I had to go off it as it was giving me near panic attacks. I tried going in to work sans caffeine and it felt like being unshowered, or one of those dreams where you look down and realize you’re naked. Starbucks HQ is not the place to kick caffeine; you simply can’t keep up with other people’s dialogue or get a word in edgewise.

Tested positive again last night though I’m feeling better. Felt a bummer way to end the day. Glad my work desk is right next to the bed as I can roll on and off like an animatron, an electromechanical device lurching to life when activated. Kind of sounds that way when I talk too.



Categories: Corporate America, Creative Nonfiction

Tags: , ,

21 replies

  1. Fog is my favorite weather phenomenon. Eerie and comforting at the same time.

    Hope you feel better soon.

    Liked by 2 people

  2. Nothing like trying to work whilst ill. Hope the fog clears and you feel better soon.

    Liked by 3 people

    • Thanks cj, appreciate that! Nice working remote as I can rest lots. And being infectious? Zero issue via webcams at least ha ha. No stopping this capitalist train! Not even pesky pandemics.

      Liked by 1 person

  3. Dang, Bill, I hope you shake the Big C soon. What a way to finish up summer. In a miserable fog.

    Liked by 1 person

  4. Oh, yeah…the perkiness of the folks at the ol’ Starbucks Support Center! There were times I actually loved the positivity. But at other times, I really wanted everyone to take big ol’ bong hit and calm the f*** down.

    Liked by 1 person

  5. Sending recovery vibes … and gratitude for your caffeine commentary – a sort of pat on my back for fairly recent switch from coffee to tea – I’m MUCH better! Loved my coffee but I overdid it … Twice in my distant past I totally decaffeinated myself … unwilling to go THAT far again!

    Jazz

    Liked by 1 person

  6. Trying to figure out why I show up as ANONYMOUS when commenting via iphone … Jazz

    Like

  7. Your writing has cleared even if you haven’t.
    Covid seems to mess with the head in a unique way. For me, it messed with my concept of time so I had little idea of when things had happened for ages after.
    Re coffee, I’ve been doing my own 50/50 decaf/caf blend for … who knows how long now.
    Get well and do more good!
    DD

    Liked by 1 person

  8. That bout was maybe a year ago, I really don’t know when it was. It could even have been two.

    Liked by 1 person

  9. How interesting to have the title be part of the first sentence. Needed fog lamps to work that out, I did. Haha.
    I was caught by that phrase ‘raising my little animated hand’, so child-evoking, so true to the nervousness we always feel in a new environment.
    Enjoyed this clear piece, Bill. Take panadol and do bed.

    Liked by 1 person

  10. Your writing surely doesn’t show any signs of fogginess, this is lucid and very enjoyable. Hope you shake the bug soon and can resume a normal caffeinated fever pitch!

    Liked by 1 person

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