Sunday, February 16, 2025

UNINSPIRED MALAISE

 I’ve been feeling a little overwhelmed lately. Actually, a lot overwhelmed. I think a lot of people have. Indeed, I know so.

This—this space, this cyber-venue—is where I concentrate on a more philosophical look at things. Where I avoid politics and stick mostly to the common ground of nostalgic memories. Places in the mind where we are all more alike than different. Places where “what we are” is human, with no “isms” or “ists” attached.  

Malaise - a feeling of discomfort or unease 

Maintaining that careful duality is the reason I have two different blogs, one “literary”, and the other, “political”. However, I have been prodding my muse to help me put together a lighthearted, mildly humorous tale of the “good ol’ days” to spin for you, but even she can’t seem to pierce this wall of resigned ennui that has taken hold. Or maybe ennui isn’t quite the right word. Perhaps it’s more like malaise—a restless discomfort and general feeling of unease.

Don’t worry. It’ll pass… I think. I hope. But for now, it seems like a stationary front, come to rest and holding until some chance refreshing breeze comes along to blow it away.

I feel tired a lot. Exhausted some days. I would like nothing better than to sleep soundly for eight, ten, or even twelve hours. But I go to bed bone tired, and awake every hour or hour-and-a-half after that, all night long, which, anyway, usually isn’t more than six hours long, with a couple of those spent reading whatever it is I’m reading at the time to distract myself, and a lot of time also spent eyes closed, but wide awake behind the curtain, with random, often apocalyptic thoughts ablaze in my bloodshot mind’s eye.

More than malaise—malaise-plus—it is a state of weariness and defeat. Twenty years ago, I might still have known how to deal with it, how to gather strength from adversity. How to stand my ground and fight. But at this stage, I’ve forgotten how. And it gets me down.

Given my lifetime of intimate connection with current events, my constant analysis of the news, my serious dedication to researching historical trends and the pendulum swings between democracy and authoritarianism, progressive and regressive, freedom and tyranny, good and evil, all bent on unveiling truths, I should be accustomed to taking tendencies like the present one as just another chapter in history to be studied, analyzed and pondered, without letting it reach down inside of me and rip out my guts. But, alas, I can’t.

I can’t because history has taught me that the living generations of today might think this is all new, but it isn’t. Those with a memory, those who know historical sequences intimately and value the  importance of learning history, of delving deep and not just scratching the surface, have seen this movie before, or have gained insight after the fact. They know that some of the most cataclysmic chapters in modern history have developed around ordinary people’s unrest. People’s often warranted feeling that things should be better for them. A feeling as contagious as a pandemic plague that spreads from one individual to another and ends up infecting whole nations, when not—gods forbid—the whole world.

When that feeling runs rampant through societies, people want change. They want it now, now, now! And they aren’t particular about how it happens. It’s a first cousin to a lynch mob mentality. They will take it, and they will cheer it and root it onward, no matter what the cost might be. And they’ll worry about the consequences later. When, of course, it will be far too late to halt and consider further. Too late for their perceived rivals (who are no such thing, since we nobodies are all in this together), and too late for them.

Because, wherever there is general unrest, there are always cunning, ruthless, violent, unscrupulous men, who know exactly how to tap into the raw power of that discontent and make it their own. They feed on it and grow huge from the malevolent nourishment with which it provides them. All the while their goal is simply more power for them, until it becomes absolute. But the art of their cunning is knowing how to make others believe that theirs is an altruistic mission for which they have been anointed by the almighty to be the people’s savior.

It is known as populism—i.e., movements of the people—and it comes in all flavors, from far-left to far-right, with the one uniting criterion being fanatical fundamentalism. But populism is something of a misnomer, because the power of the people is only such until they hand it over to charismatic leaders for “safe keeping”. Then, it quickly becomes tyranny.

Russia 1917, Italy 1925, Germany 1933, Spain 1936, they all began with popular discontent, followed with the embracing of a charismatic leader, and ended tragically and in tyranny.

It’s all just hitting too close to home for me right now.  Everything I’ve ever believed in (and that my father before me believed in and took up arms to defend), everything I’ve ever struggled for and sacrificed to protect, everything I’ve sworn an oath to uphold and care for, everything I have had occasion to literally risk my life for, is being intentionally set ablaze. And, like in the run-up to the worst war in the history of the world, it is taking place with huge crowds cheering deafeningly as they gleefully watch the bonfire of our best institutions, traditions, and ethical mores, kindled with some of the most valuable of our books.  

These are echoes of the perilous times, before I was born, that my father told me about. Times when we were the good guys who stepped in, across the sea, to show the bad guys that evil had consequences, that tyranny wouldn’t be tolerated, that authoritarianism would be crushed, that there was a strong, clear-minded, clean-cut and democratic new kid in the global village, who wasn’t taking any crap from bullies, and who would defend others against them as well.

You can never be silent again
Anyway, the only time I get some preciously sound sleep now is during an afternoon nap (a.k.a. “la siesta”), which will sometimes extend for a couple of hours or so, and during which, an Army regiment could march through my room and I would not hear them. Other than that, it is a permanent state of wakefulness. And it is exhausting. The feeling is so abysmal that it makes me try and imagine the sort of pain that I would have experienced if I’d been a fiercely patriotic, democratic and freedom-loving Parisian, on June 14, 1940, when hundreds of thousands of Nazi troops marched in rigid formation, confident and unafraid, wall-to-wall down the Champs-Élysées, in representation of pure evil, and with the ironic, if iconic, image of the Arc of Triumph in the background to the west.

But this is worse. It’s internal, intestinal, pernicious, and it is infecting the entire body at once. And those of us who see it, those of us who have lived it in a different time and place, are powerless to stop it, because this is a first-time experience for most, who think they´ve just got the flu when they have cancer.

The malaise I’m feeling isn’t for me. It’s for others, for the social body that is gravely ill and doesn’t know it. Politically and humanly speaking, I’m a survivor of this deadly virus. I’m immune to the deceit of its symptoms. But there is a major after-effect of having had it and survived: Once cured, you can never be silent again.

You’re like the proverbial tree in the forest. You still make a loud and resonating  sound. Even if no one else is listening.

 

1 comment:

Rev Steve Harsh said...

Thank you, Dan, I think. I am feeling much the same way, but you have Described the malaise Much better and I have been able to find the words for. What I still cannot understand is why there are not a handful of Republicans in Congress who have the guts to oppose what they have to know is so terribly wrong. And I think what makes this chapter of history even worse than those that have gone before us is that the whole future of our planet is at risk and Trump, musk, and their minions simply don’t care.