Santa Fe New Mexican

Out with the bad, in with good in U.S.?

As a dreadful 2020 ends and 2021 arrives, Americans desperatel­y want to move on from pandemic; but will life ever be normal again?

- By Ted Anthony

The enormous signs selling for just $9.99 greet shoppers at the suburban supermarke­t’s entryway, carrying a holiday message that means something very different this year:

“GATHER,” they shout, even as the state’s governor urges citizens to do precisely otherwise.

To come together or to stay apart: one of the countless, sometimes excruciati­ng dilemmas that Americans find themselves caught between as a dishearten­ing year is finally and enthusiast­ically shown the door.

They’re caught between presidents, one of whom is clear that he really doesn’t want to go away.

They’re between a ragged year of pandemic and either a successful vaccine or another chapter of upheaval.

They’re between people on one side who say the country’s crashing and burning — and people on the other side who say the same thing.

As most years wind to their ends, people in the United States press pause on life’s movie — if we can. We take stock, review successes and mistakes, make resolution­s, vow it will be better this time.

This year, buffeted by these December whirlwinds, Americans find themselves at a crossroads unlike any other in its history. This time around, though, the republic itself is caught in that in-between-land right alongside us — exhausted by the year, stumbling to its conclusion.

Hopeful, but unsure, about what comes next.

Those who find their wisdom in song lyrics might find one 1970s hit appropriat­ely captures the times: “Clowns to the left of me. Jokers to the right. Here I am, stuck in the middle with you.”

A year ends. Another begins. Just like always. Yet like nothing ever before.

This year, this moment of purgatory when American life perches between an unimaginab­ly scrambled 2020 and a 2021 filled with unabashed hope, is different.

“Don’t let yourself surrender to the fatigue,” President-elect Joe Biden said a few weeks ago. He was referring to the pandemic. He might as well have been talking about the entire year.

As the December holidays inch along, the in-between moments are many and mystifying:

◆ After 10 months of pandemic and lockdown, angst and anger and economic upheaval and death by the hundreds of thousands of souls, Americans are poised to receive — or to refuse to receive — vaccines that could mark the beginning of the end.

◆ As a new president prepares to take office, the current one — a disputatio­us man who has upended uncounted political, social and civic norms during his one term in office — persists in his evidence-free insistence that he won the election.

◆ Control of Congress is in the balance and will be until Jan. 5, when runoff elections in Georgia will decide the majority in the U.S. Senate — and impact uncounted chunks of 2021.

◆ The centuries-long march toward American racial equality lurched forward vigorously in 2020 before the momentum paused or, at least, slowed — and produced some ugly backlash. What comes next?

◆ Cultural polarizati­on, its flames licking high from the bottomless propane tank that is social media, has split society into what feels like a million little pieces. There’s no obvious route back in 2021 — and, some have argued, there should not be.

Yet fragmentat­ion — sometimes the natural byproduct of democracy, which is messy and diverse by design — does not necessaril­y serve Americans well in this case.

What 2020 revealed (and what some Americans have long said) is that values in the U.S. are not as true or inclusive as some would believe — that while this land embodies and nurtures some of those traits such as “all men are created equal,” swallowing the American story whole is a self-blinding endeavor.

Unfortunat­ely, the opposite is disruptive, too. The national fragmentat­ion, exacerbate­d by 2020’s challenges, is confusing, combustibl­e and complex.

“We’re not living in the same country, we’re not reading the same news, we’re not seeing the same story,” says John Baick, a historian at Western New England University. “There is no narrative. There are only counternar­ratives. And people — are they even looking at narratives? Or are they just following some hyperlinks?”

The cacophony has placed the bizarrely tangential alongside the momentous, sometimes at equal volume. The result: a fun-house mirror of American life. “We’re obviously in the matrix,” people say, citing their “2020 bingo” cards.

It’s easy to believe such a conclusion when an unexplaine­d metal monolith appears in the Utah desert. When a network releases a movie featuring a sexy Colonel Sanders. When Ronald Reagan, dead 16 years, summons us to arms from the latest version of Call of Duty.

When 2020 has been so discombobu­lating that Pantone decides its new color of the year is actually two hues — a gray and a deep yellow, designed to be “practical and rock solid but at the same time warming and optimistic.”

“We need to feel that everything is going to get brighter — this is essential to the human spirit,” Pantone says.

What happens next? Is there a “back to normal”? A new normal? Something else? Is this just a moment in American life, or something more extended?

Yes, time feels out of joint these days. Yes, the lack of distinct markers in American life in 2020 — full-on Christmas celebratio­ns, entire sports seasons, a normal year’s spikes and valleys — has suspended us in a cloudy amber of COVID and fear and contentiou­sness.

“Our memories of this moment are going to be muddled and confused,” says Jennifer Talarico, a psychology professor at Lafayette College who studies how people remember their lives, and how public events affect that. “We’re going to be left with this vague notion that’s going to be hard to articulate, hard to describe, hard to capture for those folks that haven’t been through it.”

 ?? BRYNN ANDERSON/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Yasmine Protho, 18, wears a photo of herself and the words Class of 2020 on her protective mask amid the coronaviru­s pandemic as she graduates in spring with only nine other classmates in attendance at Chattahooc­hee County High School in Cusseta, Ga.
BRYNN ANDERSON/ASSOCIATED PRESS Yasmine Protho, 18, wears a photo of herself and the words Class of 2020 on her protective mask amid the coronaviru­s pandemic as she graduates in spring with only nine other classmates in attendance at Chattahooc­hee County High School in Cusseta, Ga.

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