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The Nerves and Their Endings: essays on crisis and response
The Nerves and Their Endings: essays on crisis and response
The Nerves and Their Endings: essays on crisis and response
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The Nerves and Their Endings: essays on crisis and response

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The body as a measuring tool for planetary harm. A nervous system under increasing stress.

In this urgent collection that moves from the personal to the political and back again, writer, activist, and migrant Jessica Gaitán Johannesson explores how we respond to crises.

She draws parallels between an eating disorder and environmental neurosis, examines the perils of an activist movement built on non-parenthood, dissects the privilege of how we talk about hope, and more.

The synapses that spark between these essays connect essential narratives of response and responsibility, community and choice, belonging and bodies. They carry vital signals.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateAug 2, 2022
ISBN9781922586582
The Nerves and Their Endings: essays on crisis and response
Author

Jessica Gaitán Johannesson

Jessica Gaitán Johannesson grew up between Sweden, Colombia, and Ecuador. She’s a bookseller and an activist working for climate justice, and lives in Edinburgh. Her first novel, How We Are Translated, was longlisted for the Desmond Elliott Prize.

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    Book preview

    The Nerves and Their Endings - Jessica Gaitán Johannesson

    THE NERVES AND

    THEIR ENDINGS

    Jessica Gaitán Johannesson grew up between Sweden, Colombia, and Ecuador. She’s a bookseller and an activist working for climate justice, and lives in Edinburgh. Her first novel, How We Are Translated, was longlisted for the Desmond Elliott Prize.

    Scribe Publications

    18–20 Edward St, Brunswick, Victoria 3056, Australia

    2 John St, Clerkenwell, London, WC1N 2ES, United Kingdom

    3754 Pleasant Ave, Suite 100, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55409, USA

    Published by Scribe 2022

    Copyright © Jessica Gaitán Johannesson 2022

    Epigraph from ‘La ventolera’ by Eduardo Galeano, from El libro de los abrazos appears with kind permission of the publisher, SIGLO XXI DE ESPAÑA EDITORES, S.A.

    Excerpt from ‘Vitsvit’ by Athena Farrokhzad on p.21 (Albert Bonniers förlag, 2013) appears with kind permission of the author. The English translation by Jennifer Hayashida (published in White Blight, Argos Books, 2013) is reprinted with kind permission of the translator.

    Excerpt from ‘The First Water is the Body’ by Natalie Diaz on p.35 from Postcolonial Love Poem. Copyright © 2020 by Natalie Diaz. Reprinted with kind permission of Faber and Faber Ltd., and of The Permissions Company, LLC on behalf of Graywolf Press, graywolfpress.org.

    Excerpt from ‘Pass, Passport, Passaporto, etc.’ by Pia Tafdrup on p.76 appears with kind permission of Bloodaxe Books.

    All rights reserved. Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise) without the prior written permission of the publishers of this book.

    Scribe acknowledges Australia’s First Nations peoples as the traditional owners and custodians of this country, and we pay our respects to their elders, past and present.

    978 1 922310 60 6 (Australian edition)

    978 1 913348 65 6 (UK edition)

    978 1 950354 59 7 (US edition)

    978 1 922586 58 2 (ebook)

    Catalogue records for this book are available from the National Library of Australia and the British Library.

    scribepublications.com.au

    scribepublications.co.uk

    scribepublications.com

    For Adam,

    vars nervios hum alongside mine

    CONTENTS

    When it happens

    ‘What Have I Done?’ and Other Illusions of Control

    When it happens / there

    The Ways We Used to Travel

    My mother said that when her favourite aunt died

    The Great Moose Migration

    When it happened: when my mother’s nerves ended

    A Naturalisation

    Why / so nervous?

    Mixed Signals: Five Moments of Un-Belonging

    Signal / a transatlantic response

    Out of the Tunnel

    One way of classifying nerve endings

    Freak Aguacero

    It’s only a matter of time

    Birth Strike: A Story in Arguments

    When do we give each other a signal

    On Whether or Not to Throw In Whose Towel: A Personal Encyclopaedia of Hope

    Do certain questions have it in them

    Acknowledgements

    Textual Synapses: Notes and Works Cited

    Silba el viento dentro de mí.

    Estoy desnudo. Dueño de nada, dueño de nadie, ni siquiera dueño de mis certezas, soy mi cara en el viento, a contraviento, y soy el viento que me golpea la cara.

    Eduardo Galeano

    When it happens / (as if it hasn’t already),

    we want to make sure we’re together. Own enlaced with own: in the right place at this right time. As a time, it has been good to us: to those who count as us.

    When this thing hits, we say, we want to make sure we stay we, until the end of our tethers —

    the borders encapsulating sense. We must hold our nerve,

    keep our wits about us. What else is there, but this system of the nerves, and what if it’s not about us?

    what does it mean to save us, those of us who count

    as us / every crackling end of us?

    ‘WHAT HAVE I DONE?’

    AND OTHER ILLUSIONS

    OF CONTROL

    One or two photographs from the winter of 2006 are caged in my external hard drive, carried around between homes, countries, and boxes of life-debris. They are safely stored, always out of the way. One of them is a selfie, from before pictures of oneself were ever referred to as selfies, taken inside a hospital-ward loo. I look stressed in it — I was most likely expecting a carer to knock on the door any minute and ask what I was up to in there. My eyes are large and liquid. I look like an elderly deer (anorexia makes you look both older and younger than you really are, I found — but time is only one of its dislocations). The arm holding the camera is a piece of scaffolding without anything to soften it. At a certain point, I was able to encircle that arm between the tip of my middle finger and my thumb. This was a great achievement — a mastering (not even a squeezing) of the flesh. A few years ago, I showed this picture to Adam, my Person, and realised, once we were both looking at it on the couch of the present, why I wanted him to see it. He’s never known me like this, that’s why.

    Was I? Actually proud. Once, I’d been so very much on top of things.

    *

    In January that year, aged twenty and thinking birdlike was sexy, but not the least bit interested in sex, I’d been admitted to a closed eating-disorder ward. I spent most of the spring there, re-routed into a strict schedule of meals, and the pooled hours between meals. This was followed by a couple of months as a day patient in the adjacent ward, until I was discharged in the summer of the same year. Throughout this time, I exchanged regular emails with a close friend. Elix was in Malmö, the southern Swedish city I had left in a hurry, no longer able to study, or handle the size of a regular morning. With them in the real world, and me in a place where time was organised by the recurrence of card games and illicit sit-ups, our emails, along with Elix’s mix CDs, offered me a line out — a snorkel bringing in sips of air. The messages were a reminder of where I belonged, and an assurance that a space was being held for me there.

    My reports to Elix were mostly about the new order of things: the way breakfasts worked (and most often didn’t); the staff rotas we used to keep an eagle eye on, anxious to know (for no reason other than simply knowing) who’d be working the night shift; the crocodile-shaped key rings I’d learned to make out of tiny beads; how making crocodile-shaped key rings out of tiny beads hadn’t been on my list of things to accomplish the year I turned twenty-one. I told Elix about a recent excursion to a farm, where a group of us were taken to visit some heavily pregnant goats, for therapeutic purposes. The patients found it funny — six tiny, anorexic people walking six pregnant goats through at least two feet of snow, with the carers pushing from the back; whose idea was it that this would help with weight gain?

    In response to one of those emails, Elix wrote: ‘I’m so sorry that you, and everyone in there, have to go through this.’ It looked to me as a very odd thing to say.

    I admire my friend so very much, especially the wisdom with which they’ve always, for as long as I’ve known them, recognised the harm that happens all around us, in spite of us — how difficult it is to inhabit yourself fully and to accept your reach in space. I don’t remember addressing their comment then (the emails are long gone now — lost to a defunct email address, something involving a species of aquarium fish); I let it slip and, most likely, continued to regale Elix with tales of the nurse with the torch, with whom I was fighting a nightly battle to keep the door to my hospital room closed. There was something in their message that didn’t sit well, though: ‘I’m so sorry that you, and everyone in there, have to go through this.’ The ‘have to’ didn’t seem at all appropriate; it suggested a coercion, pointed a finger to an outside force which, within the gentle, disastrous little universe of the ward, was nowhere to be seen.

    Throughout this illness — every small decision dictated by that illness and leading further into it — I would have told anyone that nothing and no one was influencing my not-eating, nor the rabid walking past perplexed acquaintances in Malmö parks (that classmate and his family, saying hi and getting nothing back). I would have told them that I was in charge. Isn’t that the most basic definition of self-destructive behaviour? Clearly, it’s something you must necessarily do to yourself.

    *

    Twelve years later, on a Thursday morning, Adam and I begin the day by opening our wee digital windows. What we see leaves us staring out of our actual windows for weeks, eating and communicating badly. The first thing I encounter is a tweet by an artist who says she would ‘do anything to save us’. From which bastard? I think, lining up world-leading idiots, and then, immediately, there’s someone else tweeting: ‘this, this is the asteroid’. They mean the one in all the films. That, in turn, leads me to an article in The New York Times about the latest IPCC report, which has just been published. It’s October 2018. Within fifteen minutes, Adam is watching a lecture about the albedo effect, tipping points, the possibility of a Hothouse Earth scenario (combustible spots on every continent), and the sixth mass extinction. We have moths in our bedroom, carpet moths. When they fly by, Adam shouts ‘moth!’ as if he were our local town crier.

    Within the hour, we no longer inhabit the same world-history as our families or friends. The same week, I snap at a co-worker for using the phrase ‘in more mundane matters’ when I mention the hell that is materialising, because how could anything be more of the world than the end of it? She is referring to restocking Sellotape. We’re in dire need of it in the office.

    For those who haven’t yet experienced climate collapse in our own bodies, a history not yet written into us, the feeling it arrives in the shape of shadows, an atmospheric wrongness, and harrowing predictions; these are stories that change our own. The moment we begin to truly engage with climate science, our narratives of self and future are whirled out of orbit. For me, it was the IPCC report that ultimately tipped knowledge into feeling. The (overly simplistic, it would turn out) headlines declaring that humanity had ‘twelve years to limit climate change catastrophe’ fulfilled one purpose exceedingly well. They alerted certain groups of people, primarily economically privileged, often white people, mainly in the Global North, of climate collapse as a present tragedy, not a menace a hundred years down the line.

    So many of us spot the ghoul of climate change, but only behind half-open doors that we won’t walk through, not yet. Not while there’s still comfort to be had in ‘more mundane matters’. I’d read books, hyperventilated for a while, and then got up to read or watch something else — because what else is there, but the next moment? I spent a weekend handing out flyers back in 2011, when I first moved to Edinburgh, and the next weekend I didn’t. I joined Greenpeace, but never went to meetings. Now, environmental collapse forced itself into the same timeline as the next Sellotape order, my next writing project (it wasn’t supposed to be this), or my next possible visit to see my grandmother in Colombia, now in her eighties and difficult to understand over the phone since her stroke.

    In the weeks after finding out about the IPCC report, different versions of the question ‘what have we done’ invade my notebook, stuck like dead flies on windowsills. There is ‘what have we done?’ but also the slightly more inquisitive ‘when did we do it?’ and lastly ‘how come no one is running down the street screaming, if this is what we did?’ There is, not least, ‘how could we let this happen?’

    All of it, really, amounts to howls into cramped spaces. The climate crisis has moved inside, and with it the blame. Out of all directions we could be moving in, this is not the most useful.

    *

    Considering that blame, it may not be all that surprising that during these first weeks of head-first immersion into climate science, I can’t stop thinking about the card game Uno. There was a carer in the hospital, back in 2006, who used to suggest Uno tournaments whenever someone was having a panic attack in the corridor. He was Finnish, very competitive, and had very thick fingers with which he used to hold the cards tightly, a barricade against cheating, coming from all sides. He’d grab attention from a howl outside the communal area by asking you what you’d dreamed that night. In 2018, as Adam and I keep reading (methane beasts, locked-in warming, the Amazon emitting more than it can eat) and start going to meetings, as we train in non-violent direct action, run for the local council, and get arrested for protesting, I remember the people in that ward more clearly than I have in the previous twelve years — the people who, in Elix’s words, had to go through it all.

    Something in the experience of dissecting climate collapse as an event — something that ‘is happening’ and you find yourself in, and the attempt to unpick individual agencies in it — feels oddly familiar. It reminds me of arriving in a hospital room on the northern outskirts of Stockholm — on the wall, a watercolour painting of a field with a hat in the middle (no visible head) — and sitting down on the bed to ask my dad ‘how did this happen?’ (‘it’s what happens when you don’t eat,’ he said, checking for plug sockets, which was all anyone could feasibly say). All those moments when I ate less, didn’t listen to hunger, went for ill-advised runs piled up over time but under the radar, all that harm being done off-camera and then — in bursts that seemed incredibly rude — coming into view.

    Someone tells me that as they’ve grown increasingly aware of how quickly the climate crisis is escalating, they’ve also begun to regard their own body as a measuring tool for planetary harm. Vast, intricate mechanisms of destruction enter one nervous system and turn it into the place where global heating seems to begin, where it’s perpetuated, and where it worsens. Everything an individual consumes (that banana rather than an innocent turnip), how it gets from one place to another (are you flying home for Christmas?), the space it takes up in the world (are tiny homes and ‘micro houses’ the answer?) gains significance when you realise — as in, make emotionally real — the connection between your way of life and the risk of societal collapse, that you do not end with your physical boundaries. Your nerves, then, seem to stretch beyond what is visibly yours. Climate scientist Peter Kalmus describes how, since his climate awakening, the thought of flying has given him nightmares: ‘It feels like the plane

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