garden of shadows

LINK: garden of shadows

Currently listening to: Every Rose Has Its Thorn – Poison

And now I hear you found somebody new
And that I never meant that much to you
To hear that tears me up inside
And to see you cuts me like a knife I guess

Every rose has its thorn
Just like every night has its dawn
Just like every cowboy sings his sad, sad song
Every rose has its thorn

ian m dudley is sharing night photos as open prompts. I thought I would partake in this.

I remember last March (london/maldives 2025 day eight), when we arrived at Pavyllon in London, the host and waitstaff were incredibly friendly. One waitress, in particular, picked up on our American accents immediately. She leaned in slightly, looked us straight in the eyes, and asked:

“Are you okay? I know itโ€™s been rather difficult the past few months.”

And thatโ€™s when it hit me. Sheโ€™s talking about the absolute shit show that has been our country since the new year.

I exhaled. โ€œItโ€™s been rough,โ€ I admitted. โ€œAnd no, weโ€™re not okay.โ€

Fast forward to today, a patient told me she felt more mentally stable during the pandemic than she does now. That hit hard for me.

It’s hard to believe that 2020 was six years ago. Time flies and yet it feels just like yesterday. There was so much camaraderie during those years despite social distancing. Health care workers and grocery staff were called essential and treated like it too.

I think about the times when I was buying groceries and delivering them to my friend’s elderly parents because she lived out of state. Buying sourdough breads, pizzas, and desserts from furloughed neighbors who were taking up baking to try and survive financially. Sharing KN95 masks with coworkers when our N95s ran out. Being redeployed to unfamiliar units because colleagues were sick, exhausted, or chose early retirement because they didn’t want to risk dying or getting ill.

There was grief everywhere, but people were also resilient during those times. People adapted, we learned and proved that under pressure, we are capable of loving one another. I had countless Zoom parties, went dining al fresco, and binged the shit outta Tiger King.

I have to believe though, that we can find another version of ourselves again when this shit show debacle is over. Something good has to come from all of this, right? I am cautiously optimistic…

For now, I remind myself that I cannot control what other people do or say. I only have control over myself. I will continue to advocate for what is just and right. I also have to tell myself to have positive thoughts (even when I don’t want to) and find pleasurable activities in order to stay grounded.

Reading people’s blogs has become another beacon of light for me. Seeing others on the struggle bus makes me feel less alone and reading their words feels like I’m peeking through a small window into their lives. It’s oddly comforting to me.

Since cutting out coffee (all caffeine TBH), I think my body is more cooperative now. The cortisol spikes and feeling dehydrated are no longer. Now, I just drink water, barley tea, and more water. I actually lost two pounds of stubborn unwanted belly fat since then.


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44 responses to “garden of shadows”

  1. Hazel Avatar

    The pandemic made me more introverted and I feel like it’s a blessing. I’ve heard stories from my sister that her colleague got pregnant and has two children now because the pandemic hit; she was bedridden to keep the baby well.

    I’m glad for your health improvement, Rojie. Congratulations! Stay safe there.

    1. justrojie Avatar

      thank you, Hazel! <33

      1. Hazel Avatar

        My pleasure, Rojie

    1. justrojie Avatar

      danke! i’ll check it out!

  2. utahan15 Avatar

    two lbs is right
    more than four a week
    and it is bad
    look at me lecturing an md
    oooops!

    1. justrojie Avatar

      lolol i didn’t even change anything else in my daily regimen

      1. utahan15 Avatar

        less sugar. moods affect it too.

        1. justrojie Avatar

          yep i don’t eat much dessert or sugary things ,i’m more into savory

          1. utahan15 Avatar

            i love sugar salt. red meat. not to smart diet wise.. percy croons there is no quarter. the dogs of doom howl and moan. janov rojie.

          2. justrojie Avatar

            haha i’m far from arthur j. curious though, do you have hypertension or hypercholesterolemia?

          3. utahan15 Avatar

            no. heart nonsense hi bp and im high functioning autism. you should be curious who your friend is . lmao

          4. justrojie Avatar

            high bp is still a cardiac condition ๐Ÿ™‚

          5. utahan15 Avatar

            daddy had it too. so for years he lived on peanut butter and reconsituted lemonjuice

          6. justrojie Avatar

            peanut butter has a lot of fat tho but it is yummy

          7. utahan15 Avatar

            yes it is

          8. utahan15 Avatar

            ask away. lmao

          9. justrojie Avatar

            what’s your fav color?

          10. utahan15 Avatar

            red

          11. justrojie Avatar

            what’s your fav show?

          12. utahan15 Avatar

            star trek captain james tiberius kirk

  3. Violet Lentz Avatar

    I had to pause and ogle Brett Michaels as a young man perhaps a bit longer than anyone that wasn’t alive when her was but that is neither here nor there.
    I have taken so much strength from the words of other bloggers, like yourself, who are willing and able to speak out- to shine the light- to reassure me that all is not lost- not yet- and if all of us have anything at all to say about it- not ever!

    1. justrojie Avatar

      ngl that song was a major banger. and although i’m not a fan of dudes with long hair, it really suits him. your stories take me to another dimension and it’s nice to be there during tough times. thank you! <3

  4. ianmdudley Avatar

    The pandemic really effed up the Kiddos socially. They just don’t realize it because they have nothing to compare it to. Mostly virtual interactions seem normal to them.

    We live in a … very interesting … timeline. Everything feels no win scenario to me. I see a faint hope for the future, but no guarantees.

    But maybe that’s withdrawal talking. Doggo (and possibly a rat before that) got into our (rather large) box of barley tea, and I had to throw it out…

    1. justrojie Avatar

      i wonder if this is how every generation feels? i desperately miss the time before the pandemic, life seemed so much more secure then

      1. ianmdudley Avatar

        That’s how I find comfort. I keep telling myself every generation looks at the next and thinks, “Boy, compared to us, these guys are screwed.”

        Except for the generation that lived through the Great Depression. They’re just rolling their eyes at our ridiculous angst.

        1. justrojie Avatar

          lol i had a boomer coworker tell a gen z coworker to put on her big girl pants and just do it. lolol

          1. ianmdudley Avatar

            The number of times I’ve wanted to tell someone that (and I’m not even a boomer)! But, well, let’s just say the HR rep and I are on a first-name basis, and that is NOT a good thing…

          2. justrojie Avatar

            lol!

  5. Jake Pickard Avatar

    I was working in biotech when Covid hit. A facility that made synthetic DNA and RNA, when covid hit production went into overtime to produce materials for tests and the rna fluid matrix for the vaccines. I worked in supply chain at the facility, we would get a year’s worth of material in a month, ppe suddenly hard to get, etc…busy 8 or 9 hours a day, weekends working, id be so exhausted when I did get time off id just Zombify, in fact im not to sure what I really did, went to bed early though.

    1. justrojie Avatar

      ya know, i never thought about the actual pple on the otherside of the fence making all the ppes and tests. that’s wild, i hope you were able to recover from all that!

  6. Jake Pickard Avatar

    Those among us whom had to work through Covid, had to work twice as hard, adapt both mentally and physically to increased and prolonged stress, face the daily threat of contracting covid at it’s deadliest (airborne cold virus! Cmon cold viruses are to heavy right?), to cope to the new normal, but never accepting the new normal, and knowing your work was positive and helping other people to move past the reality of an airborne cold virus. Guess what we did, and did it during Trump as well, he made things even worse, but those of us deemed “essential” did it. We can do it again now.
    Only this time with Trump 2, and the democrats rotting and useless at the leadership level, the left buried in a rabbit hole of identity politics and not policy, resistance and change had to be born, and has been born at the grass roots level by those who never paid attention or were apathetic until the abuse, the perversion and attacks against basic humanity hit them personally or couldn’t ignore it anymore.
    There’s a reason why we, the nation just hasn’t shattered yet and gone completely authoritarian, that’s because those of us who worked through covid and survived it, can teach others to survive and adapt to this shutdown, and hopefully come out the better and finally marginalize and defeat the forces of hatred and greed back to the small hole they belong in.

    1. justrojie Avatar

      don’t even get me started with the spineless fools. tbh, dems and repubs are in bed together and we need to get these long term members out and put a cap on their terms and get rid of lobbyists. their only agenda is making money except for a select few. greedy bishes.

  7. Jesse Pallante Avatar

    The pandemic was a difficult time definitely. It was a time to just stay home and binge watch TV, but we made it through and it made us tougher. Yet, back then was good for doordash because everyone stayed home and was ordering. That was cool. Kudos to you for quitting coffee, that would be hard for me.

    1. justrojie Avatar

      doordash folks were essential because they helped so many pple who were homebound.

  8. Jesse Pallante Avatar

    Yes exactly right ๐Ÿ‘

  9. Dinesh Kumar Avatar

    Rojie, your “garden of shadows” blooms with bittersweet thorns โ€“ echoing Poison’s lyrics and the quiet resilience from pandemic nights to now. Love how you weave those raw stories with hope through the chaos. In our own storms, ditching caffeine and peering into shared struggles keeps us rooted. Cautiously optimistic: light always follows the dark. Grateful for this window โ€“ hydrate on, advocate strong!

    1. justrojie Avatar

      hehe thanks, Dinesh

  10. Joe Avatar

    Thank you for this, Rojie. So much is happening that shocks the conscience–in that regard, these times feel worse than the height of Covid did to me, when at least there was a baseline sense of solidarity.

    Sending you good vibes–

    1. justrojie Avatar

      thank you, Joe! i’m just hoping that this will all end soon…

  11. ibarynt Avatar

    One of my favorite songs. Does cutting coffee reduce belly fat?

    That’s strange in a way that the pandemic comparatively felt less unhinged than the present. Just shows the deep fears people are surviving through. Hopefully situations change and improve.

    1. justrojie Avatar

      coffee spikes cortisol levels, which makes it difficult to lose weight.

      1. ibarynt Avatar

        Ohh, I’m alien then ๐Ÿ˜…

        1. justrojie Avatar

          lol you’re the anomaly

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