Der Einsame in Herbst*

cut out each strip & collect

After a year of silence, I finally heard from my friend Gustav Bauenstadt. I know he travels a lot and finds solace in isolation to write his music essays. But his recent vanishing struck me as odd. During the confinement, I invited him to an impromptu zoom meeting.

He looked radiant and dapper, as I know him, but he proceeded to tell me that he had had a very bad year. It all started with an aborted suicide attempt that led him to a two-week hospitalization in a psychic ward near Salzburg. (I suspected he is prone to depression, like most creative people.) After long therapy sessions and medication, Gustav recovered­—slowly. Little by little he started writing again, taking walks along the nearby lake —a bit like his homophonic Gustav Mahler— and enjoying all his habitual pleasures.

I couldn’t be more happy, not only for having reconnected with him but knowing he is well and safe now. Living alone is not easy, specially when you are blue. Add a pandemic to it and the result could be catastrophic. I briefly thought —perhaps in a burst of selfishness while I was trying to adjust the volume during the zoom call— that if this happened to me, I have a wonderful husband to come home to, who would be supportive, protective, and forever loving. And a cuddly Calico cat that would welcome me after a hiatus in therapeutic limbo. Thankfully that thought left my head when Gustav shared with me some of the occupational therapy he had to undergo while in seclusion at the hospital: “Gestalt macramé,” he said in his sarcastic, accented English. I knew then, that he was back to normal.

—New York City, 4/14/2020

Illustration: Luis Pereyra, Le instante fatale…, 2007, crayon on paper. Rodriguez-Gibson Collection

* The title of the second song in Gustav Mahler’s Das Lied von der Erde (1908-09)

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