Every year, as a final post, Ferrebeekeeper publishes obituaries detailing the important losses of the year. But what do we do for this disastrous pandemic year when the world lost so many people from all walks of life (and when Americans nearly lost our democracy to a larcenous conman and his enablers)? How do we characterize the human cost of the plague, strife, ecological degradation, and economic mayhem of this past revolution around the sun?

I thought about including tables of numbers or little biographies, but I decided instead that the best answer is to put up this baroque pen and ink drawing which I made to represent the year and its struggles. You can see the battle for political power which has rocked the nation and the world mirrored in the left and right puppeteers, however, the dueling grandees are less important than the larger tableau of molecular and cellular changes which are affecting the whole ecosphere. I imagine the great skeletal reptile at the bottom as the fossil fuel industry (although it might be the underworld belching up the fires of hell). The cornucopia represents the dark fruits of our endeavors (which we do everything to obtain, yet which always seem to float tantalizingly out of reach). A lovely bat flits around the upper right corner to illustrate the sad vector through which the virus jumped to humankind…but also as a tribute to the dreadful time bats are having.
Studded throughout the image are virus caplets… and grave after grave after grave. It was a dark year and we will be thinking about what went wrong for a long time (provided, of course, that things don’t go more and more wrong in subsequent years, which would certainly recontextualize 2020 in the very worst way possible–as a good year!).
We are not out the woods yet, but the vaccine is on its way (my grandpa just got his first shot). We have to make it through this dark winter first though. Then, in the new year we can start to mourn the dead appropriately. We can best memorialize them by fixing some of the problems which brought us to this unhappy point in time. We can truly have a happy new year by starting to work on the even larger problems which we know to be immediately in the road ahead of us.
We will talk about it all more soon. In the mean time, accept my condolences for any losses or setbacks. Be safe and vigilant and have a Happy New Year!
6 comments
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December 31, 2020 at 4:26 AM
Isobel Necessary
Beautiful drawing, wise words. Best wishes for the year ahead.
January 5, 2021 at 12:32 PM
Wayne
Thanks a million, Isobel! Happy New Year!
December 31, 2020 at 11:49 AM
kingkang911
Lovely drawing. The technical know-how to this piece is admirable coupled with the web of life theme composed with the imagination is absolutely a joy to behold. Thank you and have a happy year!
January 5, 2021 at 12:31 PM
Wayne
Thanks so much for looking closely at my drawing! I think the naga in the center might represent information (genetic and otherwise). She sort of IS a double helix. I wish I had more time to make more pen and ink drawings like this.
January 2, 2021 at 12:32 AM
Meg Miller
WOW.
January 5, 2021 at 12:27 PM
Wayne
Aw! Thanks for the kind exclamation!