But of course I'm not in Abersoch. I am, for the ninety-second night in a row, sat at home staring at a screen. I'm not even complaining. It's the right thing to be doing. It's what's required. I'd love to have gone to Abersoch, I'd still love to go to Abersoch, and I fully intend, eventually, to go to Abersoch but, for now, staying in staring at screens is just fine and dandy. Interestingly though, or perhaps insanely, I would be able to go to, of all places, the zoo tomorrow (zoo tomorrow, zoo tomorrow) or even Chessington World of Adventures.
All things I'm looking forward to doing again far more than I am visiting zoos (which, despite a lovely visit to London Zoo with Valia last year, are morally ambiguous for me at the best of times). I'm not complaining. I've had a great week. I've chatted with Mum, Dad, Adam, Shep, Vicki Michelle, and Evie (who drew pictures of fish, dogs, me, her, and 'teddy cobra' for me). I've walked in Peckham Rye, Peckham Rye Park, and, today, I've had a socially distanced meet up in the Horniman Gardens (where the outdoor market is tentatively reopening) with Dan, Misa, Pam, and Poppy the alpaca.
Other little gestures, like Dan's daily music choice (texted personally to me) and Ian F's daily YouTube posting of a tune on mine (and many other's) Facebook wall just go to underline that when it comes to rolling deep we do it both in terms of quality and quantity. It's also this kindness that has contributed to me making this blog more of a personal one, more upbeat, and more hopeful.
I've written enough about the failing of our government, of Trump, and of Bolsonaro (Brazil have now overtaken the UK with the second highest coronavirus death toll in the world, Mexico is the next nation to join the big league with, now, over 16,000 deaths) and I've written enough about common or garden racists, Twitter and Facebook trolls, and the complicity in their rise by those who claim they seek to oppose them but, due to their own intractability, simply aid them. Useful idiots to borrow a phrase.
If Sesame Street can explain Black Lives Matter to kids in about five minutes flat than we have to assume that those adults that still don't, or choose not to, get it are doing so on purpose. Actively choosing not to. "Not all streets are like Sesame Street" Louie tells his son Elmo in a touching clip from the wonderfully warm, inclusive, and funny children's show before Big Bird comes on to learn why Black Lives Matter.
There's been a lot of nonsense written about people living in their own 'echo chambers' and their own 'bubbles' in recent years but the trouble is when you let these transgressive, racist, violent, and divisive voices in it's never a dialogue. They shout you down, they scream all over you, and, if that doesn't work, they soon, and this train's never late, resort to violence.
The latest initiative in easing lockdown (apart from opening up zoos) is for people to form 'bubbles'. Yes, the once derided bubbles we should be breaking out from are now the things we should be keeping ourselves safe in. I'm keeping my physical bubble small for now but I'm making my social bubble as large and inclusive as possible. Everyone's allowed in except for racists, Trump supporters, Johnson supporters, and those who seek both to divide and to use violence as a tool to frighten progressives into submission. The idea of the bubble to keep us safe in groups can work in more than one way and my friends and family are a curious and exotic enough mixture of creatures that I, for one, won't be feeling any need to go to the zoo tomorrow and anyway, I've got an alpaca just down the road.
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