Equanimity and Stoicism

Equanimity.  It’s a word I needed to hear spoken twenty-five times before I knew how to pronounce it.  Forty years ago, the word “melancholy” challenged me in the same way.  I was Patty in the musical “You’re a Good Man, Charlie Brown,” and that word was in my script.  Before the play, I thought it was pronounced “meh-lon’-ko-lee” instead of “melon-collie.”  I still pause before I say it.

Equanimity, according to Merriam-Webster, is pronounced “ē-kwə-ˈni-mə-tē” and is the evenness of mind especially under stress.  This word reminds me of stoicism, which is defined by the same source as the endurance of pain or hardship without the display of feeling and without complaint.  Depending on how well a person carries a poker face, both may very well look the same from the outside.

Both stoicism and equanimity point to a detachment from the mire of life.  I see a river filled with sludge where stoicism is an awkward wooden boat and aboard are paddlers churning enormous oars, solemnly determined to make it through to clear waters.  For equanimity to travel the same river, sailors in silk flowing robes pull the oars into the boat and force a layer of air between the bottom of the sleek keel and the murky waters, and that air angles in the right direction to propel the hovercraft forward smoothly. 

I’ve dabbled in stoicism most of my life.  When facing challenges my tactic has been to move through the situation.  Literally, that mantra runs through my head: “I will move through this.”  I lower my head like an ox in a harness and move ahead with constant pressure.  Big oars.  With stoicism, I see the present moment as not OK, but OK as being just around the bend.  Keep paddling.

Equanimity is more gracious with the present; there’s an elevated trust that the slog doesn’t have to be so intense.  The ten thousand what-ifs do not need to be considered in the present moment—all within one inhale and one exhale.  As for stepping up out of the mire and staying in the realm of equanimity?  A challenge. 

There is no recipe for equanimity.  I see it as a conscious choice of finding balance every day.  We aren’t the Ingalls living on the prairie.  Many of us live in an environment where stuff is being relentlessly flung at us.  While we can’t stop the slingers of messy cow pies, we can step out of the path of the projectiles.  Walk away.  Turn it off.  Once we peel ourselves out of the spin, calm seeps into each breath in the altered, protective continuum of equanimity.

The Blizzard of '22

Recently, with a pending Nor’easter—possibly featuring 80 MPH winds, a bomb cyclone, blizzard conditions, below freezing temperatures, and a major snowfall—I frequently tuned into the weather forecast three days before the storm hit.  I watched the computer models weave back and forth, unable to commit to either 12 or 28 inches of snow and blizzard conditions.  Only the timing was predictable: It would start late Friday night and go through late Saturday night.  I counted my chicks, and no one had to be anywhere; I didn’t have to worry about any of my crew on the road during the storm.  

The day before the snow fell, I was still checking the weather maps: Would we get 12-18 inches or 24+?  When the snow started to fall, I tuned out.  There was no real difference to me between 12 and 24 inches.  By mid-day Saturday a good eight inches was on the ground and our plow guy made his first swath through our L-shaped driveway.  Liam and I put on our snow gear. Liam is my snow-soulmate. He was going to swing and jump off into the snow, and I was going to shovel out the car so that the next plowing wouldn’t leave the little Subaru buried.  It was blustery with light snow spinning in the air.  This wasn’t a delicate snowfall; it was a blizzard.  At around 17 degrees, it was so cold the snow fell in tiny dry flakes rather than heavy wet ones.  Shoveling snow wasn’t as arduous as “shoveling snow” sounds as the snow was fluffy: good for shoveling, lousy for building a snowman.

Liam & Linda in a snowbank, January 2022.

Four-foot banks of plowed snow rimmed our drive near the car.  Liam attempted to dig a fort into the side of the snowbank.  He was able to dig out enough for his head to fit in before the roof collapsed.  Liam sprawled out on his back with his head in the second hole and invited me to join him.  I laid down next to him but outside of the head-fort.  The snow below me felt still and cool through my hooded coat and snow pants.  Despite the swirling storm above us, we were swamped in peace.  

We had 22 inches of snow in 24 hours, and every negative possible characteristic of the storm materialized somewhere in eastern Massachusetts.  A few miles from our home, coastal flooding iced streets and knocked out boardwalks.  Homes along the coast, the windiest area, lost power.  Public works in towns more tightly housed than ours struggled with snow removal. 

My son Liam in a snowbank, circa 2015.

We could’ve been hit harder like neighboring towns, but we weren’t.  What a 22-inch snowfall means is relative: for us, fortunately, we buttoned-up and were fine.  We couldn’t go anywhere, yet I’d be hard pressed to say we were stranded.  Our reality of the storm was small compared to many others.  Yet the pipeline of information coming through the television was heightened and dramatic days before the storm hit.  And we were drawn to the “what-ifs” like a fly to a bug zapper, but on the day of the storm, while lying on the snowbank in the middle of the blizzard, we were miles from the spin.