Vaccine Anyone?

Caroline and John Wise about to receive COVID vaccine

This past Monday early in the morning Caroline logged into Arizona’s COVID vaccination website on the hunt for an appointment to at least get me vaccinated, as she’d been doing every day for the past couple of weeks. At 57 years old, obese, with diabetes and high blood pressure, I’m not the person who wants this ugly virus. Much to our surprise, she not only found an empty slot, but she was also able to snag a second appointment for herself 10 minutes after mine. We’d heard that the sites weren’t being strict on scheduled time so we showed up 45 minutes early and were waved right in.

Caroline Wise receiving COVID vaccine

Along a serpentine path around a series of buildings, the barcodes of our appointment verification emails were scanned in and the confirmation number written on our windshield. At the next checkpoint, we were asked about allergies, those with allergies had yellow caution tape tied to their driverside mirror. Not having allergies, we were told to continue driving through the gauntlet of volunteers. The next question was if this was our first or second shot, we continued to the left with other first-timers. The person at the final checkpoint asked all of the questions all over again while also inquiring about our current health condition and if we’d had COVID already.

A few feet forward and a cadre of volunteers verified our data, handed us vaccination cards, requested we open our doors, and asked us to raise our sleeves. The time of the injection was noted on our windshield, we were congratulated on taking the initiative to get this done and asked if we’d like to schedule our second shot, we said yes. The morning of April 7 will see us back here at the same site getting another gentle little jab in the arm. We were told to pull up further once more.

Car at COVID Vaccine site

We pulled up behind some other cars and someone wrote on the windshield when we could leave: 11:30. Caroline and I have now been vaccinated with the Pfizer-BioNTech mRNA vaccine and so far we are seriously happy to be halfway there to having the recommended dose that will hopefully offer an ounce of protection against the worst effects of COVID-19, should either of us contract it at some point in the future.

At 11:30 we were asked how we were feeling and with a confirmation of “all good”, the attendant cleaned off the notes from our windshield that followed us through the entire process and we were off to find us some lunch. While this all took a minute to finally get the appointments, today went surprisingly smoothly. Now we just need a few billion others to get the shots and get our planet back to normal which is kind of new and still unfolding. I’m curious what exactly it might look like.

Origins

Professor Stephen Hawking at Gammage Auditorium in Tempe during the Origins Science Festival

The Origins Project talks at Arizona State University were a grand moment in scientific lectures where up to 3,000 members of the general public would come together to listen to various luminaries discuss their fields of expertise. From Stephen Hawking to Richard Dawkins or Don Johanson, who stumbled upon Lucy, to Johnny Depp, who talked about creativity out of madness, Caroline and I attended dozens of talks between 2011 and 2017 when the program ended. During those years, we listened to scientific heroes such as Craig Venter, who first decoded the human genome, and Svante Pääbo, who sequenced the Neanderthal genome, and never once did we go to a boring talk.

Origins at ASU with Neil deGrasse Tyson, Bill Nye, and Richard Dawkins from 2014

One example of the nature of these Origins talks was a two-day storytelling event held in 2014, moderated by Lawrence Krauss, who was the public face of Origins at the time. On this occasion, ASU played host to theoretical physicist Brian Greene, along with Neil deGrasse Tyson, Bill Nye the Science Guy, Richard Dawkins, Ira Flatow from NPR’s Science Friday, and Tracy Day, who is the co-founder of the World Science Festival. I mention them all as in the photo above that’s Brian Greene running towards Neil deGrasse Tyson, who is being subdued by Bill Nye. The place was sold out, and had you been there, you too would have thought that Neil deGrasse Tyson was a bonafide rock star.

Caroline Wise and Werner Herzog in Tempe, Arizona with Cormac McCarthy in the background following a talk by Stephen Hawking

Sadly, these events are no longer happening, which leaves a huge gap in listening to some incredible stories about scientific discovery and where these insights might be leading humanity. Finally, out of this blast from the past, I’m including this photo of Caroline and Werner Herzog with Cormac McCarthy and his son John in the background that I posted back in 2011. Fond memories should live on with us throughout our lives.

Strange Memories

Iggy Pop and Dennis Hopper

In June 1982, I called my employer’s helpline because I was losing my mind. The woman who talked with me asked about my symptoms, so I explained them to her. She asked if I did any drugs; I told her, not really. She came back and asked specifically about marijuana, and I told her, “Sure, probably like everyone else.” How about cocaine? “No way, and no heroin either; I told you I don’t do drugs.” Any pills? “Only occasionally and not any illegal ones, just valium, codeine, some other things to help me sleep.” Why do you need help sleeping? “Every three weeks, I work a graveyard shift, and I get off at 6:30 in the morning. On those days, I can’t buy weed until friends wake up later in the day.” What about when you don’t have pills? “I ask one of the guys I work with to buy me a bottle of Jack or Southern Comfort.” So you drink that in the morning? “Well, yeah, but only to get to sleep, and I never drive drunk. I start drinking it when I’m about halfway home, so I don’t start feeling it until I get home, and then I go to sleep.”

This lady keeps asking questions of this 19-year-old boy with mental problems, which I reassure her are the real issue, not some minor drug use. Persisting, she asks about psychedelics, and here I light up, “Of course I do those, but only LSD and magic mushrooms.” How often? “Maybe two or three times a week.” Do you ever mix anything while you are taking LSD? “Well, sometimes the acid doesn’t kick so hard, so I might take a puff or two of some angel dust, but I’ve got to be careful because I can easily get too high. Then, if I’m too high and I have to go to work the next day, I might take some Demerol to take off the edge so I can sleep.” Do you ever drink when you are on LSD or mushrooms? “Hell no, that would ruin the high, though I have tried it.” By this time, I felt it must have been obvious to her that I was losing my mind and that we could stop this train of questions. Sure enough, she agreed that I was having issues and that it would be best for her to come get me and deliver me to a hospital where I could get some help.

Maybe two hours later she arrived at the house I was renting with some friends, and we talked about some of the things I’d need and about hospital locations where I might want to go to. She also informed me that while she was sure I was having mental issues, she felt that my drug and alcohol use might be making things worse, so where I was going also treated addicts. One of the hospitals was in Long Beach, which, in my mind, would be filled with junkies. Another hospital was in Pomona, not too far away from where I was in West Covina, but I thought this place would be for junkies too, and I wasn’t a junkie or even a drug addict, so I went with “Door #3” over in Century City as I didn’t even know where that was. Well, it turns out that it’s next to Beverly Hills, Bel Air, and Westwood. That sounded non-junkie to me, so off we went. By the way, my health insurance would cover my stay, but the shocker was I’d be in there for 28 days.

I arrived at night, and strangely enough, I was asked if I wanted something to help me sleep; I said no way, as I was here for mental health help, and I didn’t really do drugs. The next day, I was again shocked when I saw that we were across the street from the Twin Towers, which featured in one of my favorite TV shows, L.A. Law. Hey John, this is a lot of backstory for you sharing one of your stranger memories. Yeah, I know, but this is a pivotal part of the story and sets the backdrop for what I’m about to share. Let me get this right out of the way; junkies were not who I thought they were; I was simply stupid in my naivety. I learned the extent to which people would lie to themselves in order to suppress painful character traits or memories that were unreconciled. I made some friends and gained a ton of insight about myself and how much I hated myself.

On my second or third night in this wing of the hospital, there was some grumbling about the staff allowing a homeless man to have a room. This older guy was said to be filthy, scraggly-haired, and bearded and was brought in by a taxi driver who reported that the man hid on the floor of his car in a severely paranoid state. I’d already been talked to about people’s privacy, that some patients were going through serious trauma, and to be respectful of their needs. Because part of being here in this program was agreeing to remain for 28 days, our only place to go was to walk in circles between therapy and various doctor visits.

On some of my walks, I’d pass the homeless guy’s room who was listening to music and just sitting on his bed writing or reading stuff. The thing was, he wasn’t just listening to any old music; he was listening to Kraftwerk. Seriously, this dude was OLD and was listening to Kraftwerk? On another round, I swore he was listening to Chelsea, but how in the world could this old man, who must be in his 40s or 50s, be listening to a punk band I had seen a couple of years before opening for the Dead Kennedys, X, and the Cramps?

The next day, on one of my walks, I had to come to a full stop and talk to this strange guy. What I thought he was listening to demanded I stop. After excusing myself, I explained how yesterday, walking by, I thought I heard Chelsea. He verified that it was, in fact, Chelsea, but he went on to tell me that they’d just played at his birthday party over in Venice Beach a couple of weeks ago. Stunned but not needing details yet because what he was listening to was my main concern, I asked if what he was listening to was Devo. Now, listening to Devo was no big deal, but I could have sworn what he was playing were unreleased tracks I’d heard existed, but I didn’t know anyone who had them. Well, this guy did, and he told me that Mark Mothersbaugh had given them to him personally. I likely slapped my head not able to believe this. He invited me in to sit down.

By now, I had to ask him how he knew Mark, a.k.a. Booji Boy, and who this guy who had Chelsea playing at his birthday party. My name is Dennis Hopper, he said. He could easily see I had no idea who he was. He asked if I’d seen the film Easy Rider, and my rude reply was, “Look at me (I was still into punk rock but also Industrial Music, so I was ‘peculiar’ for the time) do I look like I’m into that old hippy stuff?” Hmmm, did you see Giant with Elizabeth Taylor and James Dean? “Nope, that’s way before my time.” How about Apocalypse Now? Sure, I’d seen it, but that was years ago, so I had to think hard, and then it came to me, “You were the crazy photographer!” Later, I realized that I’d seen him in Cool Hand Luke and True Grit as a kid, but back then, nobody compared to Paul Newman or John Wayne.

Over the next days, we’d listen to music he had with him, and he’d tell me stories of his life in Berlin, Taos, New Mexico, and becoming famous. I learned about one of the most important people in his life who’d recently died, Lee Strasberg. He told me tons of stuff about one of his favorite films he’d made called The Last Movie. Meanwhile, I whined about anonymity, frustration, and self-loathing. During these talks, he told me what it was like to go to sleep one weekend and then, on Monday, learn that he was famous. This was the beginning of his problems that led to his alcoholism, which had brought him to the same hospital I was in. The thing was, he never felt famous and only ever felt like Dennis. He wanted to feel what it must be like to be one of his idols, but that sense of fame never arrived.

But enough of the background story as even that stuff is not why I wrote this blog entry. On the opening weekend of Blade Runner over in Westwood near UCLA, Dennis Hopper and I walked into a theater to watch a matinee performance of this movie with very few others in attendance. While waiting for the movie to start, Dennis was telling me about a friend of his, Alejandro Jodorowsky (whom he met while making The Last Movie), who was supposed to be making another sci-fi film called Dune. Blade Runner turned out to be a flop for the general public, but we loved it. Later the same day, back at the hospital, one of his best friends came over to visit him; Dennis introduced me to Dean Stockwell. That was one of my days during rehab with this incredibly creative person in the summer of 1982 when I learned that I was a drug addict.

Last tidbit: the very night I was checking out following my 28 days of getting my head together, one of the nurses told me of a guy who just checked in I might be interested in meeting; his name was Jim Osterberg. I had no clue who this Jim Osterberg guy was, but I agreed. The nurse knocked on the door, and a gruff voice said to come in. Standing naked in front of a window with his back to us was Iggy Pop – fuck!

One Year Later

John Wise in Phoenix Arizona 2021

One year ago today, Caroline and I started our own quarantine while America was just getting ready to ridicule San Francisco, California, for locking down its 7 million inhabitants a few days later. While we were quietly prepping two months earlier, I was still hoping that I was being hysterical in a Y2K kind of way, and so I wasn’t sharing my actions in order to minimize the public humiliation for giving in to paranoia. With an abundant supply of toilet paper, hand sanitizer, a hoard of dried goods, and a freezer stuffed with meat, we were ready for the apocalypse. Well, except for the guns, we were not armed and ready for shootouts as the masses went rampaging, looking for morsels of food after the shit hit the fan.

Now, a year later, we still haven’t exhausted the 50 or so rolls of TP we hamstered away. I’m not sure what to make of that, meaning, do we not use enough toilet paper, or did we simply buy too much? Our pantry inventory continues to decline, but we certainly have much more to rid ourselves of before we see the last products that were purchased in the first two months of 2020. Strangely enough, we’ve grown accustomed to only eating at home, and while there are times I wish I didn’t have to do the dishes, I’m mostly resigned to that new routine.

Not counting the sharing of my book, Stay In The Magic – A Voyage Into The Beauty Of The Grand Canyon, I’ve posted about 165 blog entries in the past year, a record compared to the previous years. Playing with my synthesizer has sadly languished for months now, and while I look forward to finding it again, I can’t say I regret having fallen off that boat as I’ve been busy with other things.

Concerts, museums, travel, and restaurants were the casualties of this pandemic, and if restaurants remain in that camp, it won’t really bother us, but live music, art, and travel can’t return quickly enough.

Some things have been normalized, such as shopping. Initially, I would only go to the store right when they opened or near the time they were closing. For a minute, Google would show me a near-real-time display of how busy places like Costco were and so I’d find myself over there between 1:30 and 3:00, which was often a lot slower than when they opened. Now I shop whenever I need something. For the majority of the pandemic, I would dip into my favorite coffee shop for a few minutes to pick up coffee beans, but in a second, I was gone and sanitizing my nostrils. Over the past week, I’ve been in that shop every day for a few hours each time to get in some writing, such as this post.

There is some travel coming up quickly as in the first weekend of April, which also happens to be my birthday weekend. We’d go sooner, but Caroline is involved with an online weaving workshop that started yesterday and ends the last weekend of March. As for where we’ll go? I’m leaning toward somewhere between Greer, Arizona, and east to Magdalena, New Mexico, but haven’t decided if we’ll aim for 2 or 3 days out in the middle of nowhere.

I’d like to share that I’ve been witness to dramatic societal changes that the pandemic was key to bringing on, but in some ways, nothing changed even though, in reality, everything changed. So what is it John, everything changed or nothing changed? Many people work from home; most children attend school online; air travel has tanked; telemedicine has advanced; digital currency conversations are moving forward, universal basic income discussions are moving mainstream, and humanity moved at lightning speed in the development of multiple vaccines to fight COVID-19, the move to electric vehicles is being catapulted by most every manufacturer announcing their plans to compete with Tesla. Those are some of the changes.

Education, racism, environmental concerns, gun violence, war, greed, and health care are all areas of our culture that are floundering the same as they were before the pandemic. Maybe those things that have changed will be catalysts that act as the propellents that will move these nearly intractable issues but only time will tell. Meanwhile, I’ll just assume that the lethargy that allows us to eke out tiny amounts of nearly invisible incremental advances will continue on their glacial march forward, but I’m not gonna hold my breath for the striking changes I’d like to witness. I’d venture to guess that something truly catastrophic must happen to humanity, something that is thousands of times worse than a pandemic and would hammer at the global economy for us to reevaluate our relationship with our planet and one another. COVID-19 was not that event.

But COVID is not done playing its hand. Sadly, today, I was reading about cases on the rise again in Germany, Italy, France, and Brazil, which, in my mind, portends our own return to increasing cases here in the epicenter of death. Ironically, I’m finishing this in a coffee shop at the counter with my mask on as I wonder if I’ll once again have to abandon this little slice of what had previously been known as normal.

Wet Things

Rain in Phoenix, Arizona

Yesterday, it rained across Phoenix, and in a desert where that’s a relatively rare occurrence, we celebrate the little we get. While others find the rain to be an inconvenience, the population of our city often steps outside to experience the rain firsthand. Sadly, we have become a bit cynical, though, as when the weather forecast predicts rain, even with a 90% chance, we will be skeptical that it will actually do so. Last year was not only one of the hottest, with the most consecutive 110-degree days and the most 115-degree days overall, but also one of the driest years on record. Over the past six months, this lack of water has been most obvious in the number of dead trees throughout our neighborhood.

Rain in Phoenix, Arizona

Cinderblocks and asphalt, with very few undeveloped lands around the Phoenix area, have created a heat island that is changing our weather. The effect of houses and streets on the environment is the most obvious when we walk around the block and find that the air near some wide-open state preserve land is noticeably cooler than in the developed area next to it. Instead of trying to conserve water and limit growth, Arizona is attracting a lot of people to move here and not curtailing the use of water for pools and golf courses. I just read that the corporation commission will be raising our water rates by 6% this year, which seems to be the typical increase for the past few years as if paying more, the biggest users will curtail their use. How greater profits equate to filling rivers, reservoirs, and aquifers is beyond my puny brain.

Rain in Phoenix, Arizona

So, on these rare days when it rains, we have to pause and appreciate that this stuff can still fall from the sky like magic. Not only does it glisten in the sun that peeks through the clouds, but it also ignites an explosion of wet earth smells from petrichor to creosote and various woods that seduce those of us outside our homes to celebrate the occasion. I should admit that there is one downside to the rain: Those of us who wear glasses will likely never get used to the droplets that turn into rivulets sliding down our field of vision. Yeah, I know, wear contact lenses, and the problem is solved, but that is not congruent with my brand of laziness.

Glorious Things

Clouds in the sun Phoenix, Arizona

The universe is the first thing that comes to mind when I consider the glorious nature of what I can perceive. The sun and earth are next in the hierarchy, followed by the environment around me. To get out and bask under this glow is easily forgotten when we are consumed by entertainment beamed into our homes and various electronic devices. We’ve never met a sunrise that failed to impress us, nor have we been less than dazzled looking up on a clear night to see with our own eyes the vast Milky Way we’ll never fully comprehend. I’ve never assumed that the configuration of the clouds on any given day is a repeat of any other day in my life or the history of the planet, but what do I think about the stellar clouds of the massive band of stars that stretch deep into history?

Sun ahead of the Clouds in Phoenix, Arizona

Just like the palm fronds that rustle in the wind and then settle back into nearly the same place, I should consider the almost invisible shift of all the matter, dark matter, and various gasses out beyond our solar system. We are, after all, moving at 515,000 mph here in our corner of the Milky Way, and from one night to the next, we have traveled 12,360,000 miles, and while our eyes are not sensitive enough to recognize the difference, in some way, maybe we are presented with new configurations that are nearly as significant as how the clouds change from day to day here on our puny but glorious planet.

The moral of this story: Never go outside thinking it’s just another day. You are alive in a vibrant universe of constant change, and for the briefest of moments, you are here to witness the contrast of things you barely comprehend.