Masks Were The Lynchpin
I never got to touch my mom’s hand. I have got to hug her. I never got to help feed her or give her little sips of water when she was thirsty. I never got to pray beside her bed. I never got to massage her hands or help the aides. I never got to kiss her forehead and soothe her and care for her as she had cared for me as a child. I never got to neaten the room and straighten the bedcovers and sweep and make things nice. I was not able to be with my family, to be comforted and to give comfort. As the Psalmist said, “Reproach hath broken my heart.”
Imagine an alien flying over the earth in 2020, seeing all the masks, he would think that perhaps some kind of enemy that hated humanity was now ruling the world. He would see people muzzled, defaced, punished for some unknown reason. He would think that some kind of power was determined to humiliate and torture men and women and teenagers and children. In India he would see the poor traveling en masse by foot, sprayed with chemicals and beaten, many times forced even under these conditions to wear a surgical mask. In China our most populous nation, he would not only see masks, but also the faceless, strange forms, garbed all in white, carrying machine guns. He would see concentration camps and isolation cells, children taken away from parents and even cats and dogs, beloved pets, the only friends that some lonely people had, beaten to death in the streets. Maybe he would look into some of the hospital windows as he flew and he wouldn’t know that they were hospitals at all. He would quite rightly assume they were torture chambers, places of death.
I am a Presbyterian minister. My congregations in 2019 and 2020 were both PCUSA. One was located in Hager City, WI and the other in Ellsworth, WI. First, I think it might be good to set the context. Wisconsin was a state that resisted masks and distancing and business and school shut downs. Here’s the timeline of what happened in Wisconsin:
https://www.jsonline.com/in-depth/news/local/milwaukee/2021/03/11/timeline-how-covid-19-has-played-out-wisconsin/4522813001/
Note that it was only at the end of July 2020 that Gov. Evers issued a mask mandate, by fiat. You can read about that here: https://www.fox6now.com/news/gov-tony-evers-declares-public-health-emergency-issues-statewide-mask-mandate. The people in Pierce County resisted and protested all shutdowns and masks. Small businesses were closed but interestingly, not the ones that opened at night. A weird fact was that you could always go out to eat in my town, you just had to go to a bar in the evening. There were other things happening as well. We had mass IRL (in real life) meetings–no distancing, few masks, shaking hands and touching shoulders. These mass and maskless meetings were held on the occasion of the county board meetings. Hundreds of people would show up to protest the schools being shuttered, businesses not being able to open, contact tracing, the whole thing. The board separated itself from the people but we (the people) were all together. The follks on county board wore masks and “met” us via Zoom, while hundreds of us, milled about in close quarters in the basement of the courthouse. Thus, while it may have been that in some places, they were masking and doing God knows what, we were still gathering together, in the courthouse, in a high school auditorium, in a building at the fairgrounds. People got together more than they did before the dark times. The meetings got pretty raucous. There was also relief though, and joy; it was good to see each other. It was good to smell each other.
It was a very hard fight. Not wearing a mask was not about “disobeying the rules.” The thing about it was that those who fought were fighting something that stood before their eyes every day. We all understood, far too well, the point of view of those who wanted masks and vaccinations and all manner of horrors. We understood because we were not exempt from the delusion. It took so much each and every day to resist the siren song, to resist the spell. Personally, there is no way I could have done what I did without my dad and my husband, and the Holy Spirit—who came again and again and again and gave me a peace that is beyond understanding, exactly when I needed him most. The Holy Spirit is real and he is our friend.
In one of the chronicles of Narnia, C.S. Lewis’ series of children’s stories, a witch attempts to hold in the thrall the prince of Narnia and friends who have come to rescue him. She throws incense on a fire and begins to play on an instrument; she wants to convince them that there is no world besides her world down in the darkness. There is no Narnia, no sun and no Aslan. She almost succeeds. In the end they begin to believe that Narnia and the sunlight and the moonlight and all the goodness of the earth was all just a dream and “there never was such a world.” It’s only by the barest of margins that they are able to fight and only the name of Aslan himself saves them and gives them just that last ounce of desperate energy to see even part of the truth and resist the lie.
Masks were the lynchpin of the delusion. Without the delusion that masks were a simple (ever so simple-ever so easy!-why would anyone object?), way to keep everyone safe, there would not have been the rushed vaccines, the shutting down of the churches, the closing of businesses and schools and all the rest. The masks worked to emblazon on our hearts the lie that humans are destructive. Humans must be isolated from one another. Humans must be checked because we were inherently unsafe, “disease vectors.” The masks were a force in-and-of themselves and they worked a great deceit. There is a reason why the Bible speaks of the face, time and time again. There is a reason why Moses’ face was shining when he came down the mountain. (Exodus 34) There’s is a reason why Jacob was allowed to see the joyous and pleased and loving face of God. (Genesis 32 &33) There’s a reason why Paul says,”we all with unveiled faces.” (2 Corinthians 3) There’s a reason why Isaiah speaks of the day when all veils will be taken from the face of all the nations. (Isaiah 25) These things were written for 2020 and for this hour. Also, if you notice, in the Bible God doesn’t prevent disease, he heals disease.
At that time my denomination wanted the congregations closed down and my sessions (ruling elders) decided to sort of suspend services. As a Presbyterian minister I don’t get a vote and that’s more than okay by me. I am simply their professional student of the Bible. We still had worship though. Every Sunday I would preach to my father and my husband in the church building, two people sitting in the pews but where two or more are gathered, there is the Lord. The services were recorded and you could listen to them online. There was one thing we didn’t do as a family. We didn’t lock the church doors. We lived in the church manse so the church was literally in our yard. My father made sure that people knew they could come in anytime. He would merrily answer the phone and never fail to include an hearty invitation to worship. One young lady who I didn’t know showed up at 9 pm. We tried to be in the church even at this hour with the doors unlocked but I jumped about a foot when I saw her standing there in the darkness. I sat down with her on the steps and talked with her about PCR tests and RCTs (my husband is a scientist after all) and amazingly, she was comforted. As for worship on Sunday, at first, no one came, but then a few started to trickle in. I would just tell them to tell the elders that they had come. One day we were talking after church to a dear elder who was worshipping regularly with us on Sundays— “make sure to invite the session to worship, we said and she did— and there was quite an explosion. The sessions met, and with some talk made the decision to do what the Lord bids us to do, to congregate on the first day of the week. We met outside. We preached and sang, even in the spring snow. I got healthy from being outdoors in brisk weather for an hour or two.
While all this was going on, all medical electives were cancelled and no one could get into to see the elderly at the care centers and assisted livings or hospitals. I will never forget going up to the Twin Cities hospitals and being turned away. Terrible things happen in the darkness and without visitors, a hospital cannot and will not function. I got into see some people in the care centers and assisted livings and even hospitals in our region. I think a lot of people who were in the care centers, assisted livings died of a combination of broken hearts and being snowed under. It was not a good scene. Some congregations in town stayed open all the way through. I will always be grateful for their example and resistance.
At the same time, I was in trouble in a variety of ways. My mother had leukemia. She got kicked out of Mayo in February of 2020 because the immunotherapy drugs had harmed her liver. Mayo could do no more. She wasn’t too downhearted because we had a Plan B. We went to Riordian Clinic in Kansas and got a treatment plan from their doctors. She was taking high dose vitamin C intravenously and her blasts would come down everytime she did. In May of 2020, my mom could walk faster than me. I remember we got out of the car to go around to the restaurant patio, and she got out of the car and took off like a shot. There she went in her totally cute outfit, sailing ahead. But though she had energy and low blasts, her gums were bleeding. That’s a side of effect of the “mab” drugs that they had given her at Mayo. It was so hard on her. She thought that maybe chemo would solve the problem. Maybe the fact that her blasts weren’t down to zero were causing the bleed? That was the thought anyway. She got a doctor in the Chicagoland area that thought my mom was healthy enough to take a very aggressive treatment plan. My husband tried to suggest to the doctor that it was too much, but to no avail. My husband broke it to me a year after my mother’s death that he thought that the treatment itself had sent my mom on a downward spiral. She had no immune system left to fight the cancer. She got the chemo in July of 2020 and she died by September at her home in Illinois. Now, in July of 2020, I wasn’t in a “pod” as they called it. I also didn’t regularly mask (so I guess I wouldn’t have qualified for “ a pod” under any circumstances). In fact, I tried not to mask at all; I actually couldn’t. When I did, I must have somehow been breathing wrong. It wasn’t just that I got lightheaded, I stopped making sense. I would look down at my feet and wonder what shoes were. Things like that. Any time in a mask meant that it would be dangerous for me to drive for a while. I tried once and couldn’t quite figure out how to make left hand turns. I remember this guy on the sidewalk watching me curiously. Also keep in mind that my family in Illinois knew I was going to these huge county meetings and that I was in congregation on Sunday and singing and shaking hands. And even more, certain cracks and weaknesses that were always there in my family were revealed at that time. Stress can do that. Bear all that in mind when I tell you what came next.
My mom and I were the kind of mother and daughter that talked everyday. I knew what she was feeling just by a look, a glance, a raised eyebrow– she didn’t need to say a word. When I vacationed I would take my week with her. We went to theological conferences together. We were always together. Now my mom was so sick. She was dying but she got to be at home because she had long term care insurance. She had nurses night and day, but I was not allowed to be with her. Long story short I was shunned. The shunning I understood (all to well) and accepted, but the thing that really hurt is that no one would tell me about how she was doing day to day. No one could really talk to me and my mom couldn’t talk anymore. Finally, after about a week of being on hospice my husband figured out a simple solution. I was pretty beside myself and I couldn’t figure out anything. The solution was that we visit outside. We would drive down to Illinois on Sunday afternoons and sit outside my mom’s window, stay overnight and then sit outside my mom’s window on Monday and then go home to Wisconsin on Monday afternoons. I would go in though for a few minutes now and again. Going in meant to wear a mask and a shield and gloves. When I felt myself slipping I would just go outdoors and sit outside in the garden right by my mom’s window and talk with her and sing hymns to her through the screen. That’s what we did. Here’s what I am thankful for, the family didn’t mask. Can you imagine how horrible that would have been if everyone near my mom were masked all the time? That happened to many people in hospitals and nursing homes. It was death. As it was it was just the aides and nurses who came and went who masked with my mom and even with them it was only some of the time. We were so lucky. August passed and then came September. I was heartsick throughout the week because there was no one to call to ask how my mom was really doing that particular day: How her eating was, if she was drinking enough, if she had sat up in bed. I wanted to hold my mom’s hand so much. I wanted to sit on the bed or beside the bed and read to her. I wanted to neaten up the room and fix things the way she like them. She didn’t have to tell me when she was thirsty I could just tell if she moved her lips in a certain way, even from outside I could tell. I think the nurses were kind of confused. They knew my mom was in hospice and that there was no coming back humanly speaking. They couldn’t figure out why we were sitting out there. It was sort of odd to me to too because in Wisconsin I visited with those dying at home and their families didn’t even consider masking, for obvious reasons. My family in Illinois figured that maybe mom would live and that I could have killed her by covid. I thought that was a possibility too. I took a lot of high dose vitamin C intravenously to kill the bugs! It didn’t really make sense though. Air comes out of a mask. I was singing hymns to my mom through a window screen. As I wrote above, this is how delusion works and no one was exempt. My mom hated when she saw me in all the gear, the mask and shield and gloves. She was very woozy by this time and couldn’t understand why I and my husband had our faces covered. She would frown and knit her brows. It was a relief when I went outside because at least then she could see my face and hear my voice.
Meanwhile back in Wisconsin my congregations were very divided. Some wanted masks and some did not. My sessions decided that it would be best to take this time and disband the congregations all together. I asked them just to let me go as their minister but for them to stay together and keep on. I hoped that they wouldn’t close because the community needed them, but this idea did not fly. I remember going down on my knees in the church and begging the joint sessions not to let me stand in the way of their being the congregation. I was begging them to fire me. The sessions and congregations wanted me to stay with them though right to the end. There were a lot threats and hard feelings. The one good thing was that the pressures distracted me from the pain of what was happening in Illinois. Also, the people in my presbytery (that’s the level above the congregation) were wonderful. And there were beautiful kindnesses from the congregations too, so there was sunlight coming through the clouds. Every Sunday before church I would pray for the Holy Spirit to come and he would. No one else could have calmed and quieted me. I was so afraid of the meanspirited attacks that I knew were forthcoming. But every time, the Holy Spirit came and all my fears melted away. I was so incredibly blessed to have my dad and husband with me. They said not to quit but to do what the sessions wanted and stay. The very last service of the congregations were closed off to me. For me, there is no church without singing and the presbytery’s regulation at that time was no singing. Kind folks from the presbytery were coming that Sunday and the service had to be their way. Also, I couldn’t go along with contact tracing that was proposed for that last Sunday so I said, “Well, my last Sunday will be the Sunday before that.” I had served 14 years there. We left in November of 2020. We got everything packed and moved. It was an incredible day. We were so relieved. When you are expiring under a millstone, you are real happy when the pressure is off.
You may be wondering what happened to my mom; she was not snowed under I am happy to report. She did not die of pain medication. Someone who is ill can die of a pain patch but that’s not what happened to my mom. In September 2020, I was there on my weekend visit and the nurse was trying to get her to take an opiate I believe. My mom said, “No. I don’t want that.” My mom didn’t have any pain at all. The nurse tried to persuade her and then I piped up from outside, “My mom SAID, SHE DOESN’T WANT THAT.” The nurse leaned over my mom and asked in a sickly sweet voice (sorry, it’s true), “Is that what you really want Susan?” My mom raised her voice, “MY DAUGHTER AND I DON’T WANT YOU TO GIVE ME THAT.” My mom and I were fighting shoulder to shoulder as we always had, one last time. As I left, my mom yelled, “I LOVE YOU!” and I said, “I LOVE YOU TOO!” That was the last word I heard from my mom. She died the next day, early in the morning, drug-free.
My mom’s funeral was a year later and I was asked by someone in the family not to come. Following the advice of my dad, we decided not to attend. Why make trouble? I was sort of relieved. But the rest the extended family decided that wouldn’t be right. I was speaking and they knew that I was my mom’s right hand and that I was always with her and she was always with me wherever I went even if it was just our daily call on the phone. They all got together and they said we should come, so we did. I remember I was so happy to see my family, my sister especially. It was so good to see her even though her face was half blacked out by the mask. I remember going towards her—my husband tells me that I went towards her with my arms out and she turned away from me angrily. I sort of remember this. I have a problem remembering things that are really painful. I like to delete them. One of the reasons that I am writing this essay is in order to remember. I know myself and if it were up to me, I would forget it all on purpose/not on purpose. As I reflect on these issues in 2024, I now know that sometimes it’s best when people walk out of your life. In the heart of hearts they don’t want to abuse you but they know they will and so they leave. I still tense up whenever the phone rings. I have gotten a lot of therapy and I would recommend it to anyone. There’s no law against speaking to a pastor or priest or a therapist. Sometimes we need the outside perspective.
We are living now in Rochester, MN. I love preaching in churches. Rochester was a much harder place to be mask-free. I got kicked out of stores, ratted on and yelled at. My dad said to me, “You are preaching the gospel without saying a word.” That was nice of him to say and I can’t tell you how grateful I am for the words of encouragement. At the same time, I know that many people suffered far worse things than I did. Terrible things happen to those who had covid or were thought to have covid. At the same time, I have this to say, all those who died alone were not alone. There is no pit so deep that God’s love is not deeper still. They were not alone. They were with one who loves them more than we can even imagine.
One of the things that was especially galling was how words were changed. A “case” suddenly meant something different than it had for a hundred years. A positive PCR test does not mean one is truly ill or is a “case.” In fact, as the New York Times reported up to 90% of positives are not really positives, they are just indication that by happenstance or because you were sick a couple of weeks earlier, you have some genetic fragments hanging around. This means of course that our number of “cases” are completely off. I hear that seven hundred staff from Mayo were fired for refusing the vaccine. I know a hairdresser whose customers demanded she get the vaccine. This made me very angry. It still does. Doctors were going to private dinner parties in 2020 and 2021 (yes, it’s true) and they talked with me about how hard it was in the hospital. Some of them prayed with the dying. There was no one else to do it. Doctors were at the mercy of the administration. I hope Mayo gets sued by all those who were hurt. That probably sounds funny for a minister to say but Mayo is a place that needs the squeaky wheel. They need complaints and they need attention paid. I love Mayo but Mayo has to be corrected and perfected sometimes. Mayo began with a vision from God and visions have to be fought for. After reading the many stories on CollateralGlobal, I want to say, “Blessed are those who mourn,” you will be comforted. Blessed are the poor in spirit (that phrase just means so anxious you can’t breathe properly), for yours is the kingdom of heaven— and that means not just in the hereafter but the here and now. Never be ashamed of your sufferings. In fact, know that they were part of God’s work to save the world. Yes, he lets us help.