Vicki Bennett lived a quiet, peaceful, and uncomplicated life - house and garden, an immaculate kitchen, sundowners on the back porch, and tea parties in the Spring and Fall - unless the applecart was upset by Donald J Trump, President of the United States, demagogue, destroyer, devilish man of evil intentions.
Despite the sinecure of a happy home in Bethesda, a faithful husband, and dutiful children, once the thought of The Madman of Pennsylvania Avenue niggled its way into her consciousness, she became as rabid as a hyena, a fiendish, feral, violent animal. And once the thought took hold, rooted itself and started to grow, there was not shaking it loose. It festered, rotted, and infected her, body and soul. There was no way that she could go back to her geraniums or the evening's pot roast. She was in its clutches and felt herself being transported to the gates of hell.
Vicki had always been a liberal, and was old enough to have suckled at the breasts of moderates - Republicanism was wrong for the country what with its Wild West individualism, Wall Street capitalist greed, and indifference to the plight of the working man and the poor; but it was a matter for democracy to resolve, a change of the guard, an upswelling of liberal opinion, a wave of progressive electoral victories.
In the early days she had worked towards this democratic resolution - the good people of America on both sides of the aisle would eventually come together for the common weal in a nation of reformed ambitions, consideration, and consistent goodness.
The Sixties turned the tables - its revolutionary fervor was just what young people like Vicki needed to shake off the sedentarism of the Fifties - the homespun treacle, the patronizing religion, the arrogance of middle class satisfaction.
She became an activist, a woman on fire always first at the barricades, first to be hauled off by jack-booted police, and last to be released from jail. She was a political vixen, a loud, shrewish partisan, the Mad Woman of Chaillot.
Like for most of her compatriots such adolescent idolatry could not last. Times change, youth matures, and the old allure of Kinder, Kirche, Kuchen is hard to resist. For them and her, politics was not an obsession, just a unifying youthful jamboree. One went to Woodstock and marched on the Mall. It was the zeitgeist of a demographic - for the first time in American history the under-25s were a majority, and all the hoopla was a playground romp.
Yes, the Movement had incidental agency. LBJ resigned, the Civil Rights Bill was passed, and the old pillars of satiated, fat, happy America came down; but for Vicki it was just a walk in the park. She believed, but not all that much. It had not been an obsession, and in many ways she was just as happy that it faded and was folded into her familiar, predictable suburban life.
Until Donald Trump that is. What was it about the man that so riled women up? That awakened them from their decades-long slumber and brought them back to life? Vicki herself was surprised at her reaction. When she saw him on television, her heart started pounding, her mouth went dry, her fists involuntarily clenched, and she started to shake.
She felt like the Peter Finch character in the Paddy Chayefsky movie Network who addled with anger, resentment, and frustration at the state of television, looks into the camera and shouts, 'I'm as mad as hell, and I'm not going to take it any more'. A man obsessed, a man whose reason has left him, a madman, but a prophet.
This possession happens, Vicki a good but now ex-Catholic knew. The Old Testament prophets were visited by God, possessed by his spirit and obedient to his will. The infidels of Judah might have thought them crazy, but they were the emissaries of the true, one, and only God.
Of course Vicki did not consider herself crazed or even possessed. The evil of Donald Trump was secular, and as vile as he was, he could be brought down by concerned, concentrated defiance. Yet this time around she felt different. His image did indeed provoke a kind of ironic euphoria. She felt a strange but satisfying transformation.
She did not try to calm herself down, to recover that old equanimity and moral poise she once had It felt too good to generate this fulminating hate, this rich and tempestuous anger. Without realizing it, she had become obsessed; but even more surprising was her complete surrender to obsession and the almost orgasmic feelings it produced.
Whereas the youthful gatherings on the Mall in the old days were jamborees of camaraderie and good feelings, those now in opposition to Donald Trump were psychic, emotionally pure, devastatingly exhausting. Being among those who felt exactly the same - a thousand obsessed harridans howling at the top of their voices, releasing the hatred and vile passions that had strangled them until now - was liberating and fulfilling.
But obsession is a psychological disorder that has only indirect relation to the cause espoused. Donald Trump was only the catalyst for Vicki's obsession, the trigger for her pent-up psychological animus, the spark that set it all aflame. Once the conflagration began, it became comprehensive, universally applied.
Because obsession is a hungry animal and impatient in its hunt, Vicki soon found herself foundering. She hated Donald Trump just as much, but the feral howls had stopped, the shaking and trembling were absent, and to be honest, she had become distracted. An insidious 'let it be' perfume seduced her into quiescence.
However, as Professor of Psychiatry, Donaldson Parker of Johns Hopkins noted,
Obsession can be muted but never cured in the true obsessive. It is viral, infecting each and every cell, synapse, organ, and fluid in the body. It is a drug more powerful than Fentanyl, more addictive than heroin, and with a psychological hold on individual like no other
'As importantly' he continued, it needs to be fed fresh meat' by which he meant new obsessively capturing causes; and so it was that Vicki turned her attention to climate change. Her house was now strewn with oceanographic maps, tidal coordinates, the variations in the Humboldt and Gulf Stream currents, solar activity, melting and freezing on the Ross Ice Shelf, trans-Atlantic hurricane trajectories, temperatures in the Sargasso Sea, and the weather in the Great Plains. She was no longer the passive observer of the past, but a woman determined to conclude without a shadow of a doubt that the earth was disastrously warming and to tell the world about it.
She lost weight and much of her hair. She shut herself in for days at a time, poring over ships' logs, NOAA predictions, meteorological models, and arcane articles from Zanzibar. Her obsession, already at a fever pitch with Trump hatred, was even hotter and more commanding. The same endorphins flowed through her veins and she was ecstatic.
The neighbors were worried and then frightened when this haggard witch came to the door.
When climate change had run its course - that is when the obsession had fed itself to satiety - Vicki looked for something to take its place, but now so disoriented after months alone in her house living only with millibars and temperature differentials, she hesitated to go out. Instead, she took to cleaning the house, scrubbing, vacuuming, wiping, disinfecting, sweeping, and scouring until her hands and knees were red, cracked, and bleeding. She stood for a moment in her now gleaming kitchen, sparkling and bright; but it still wanted polish, and so she began waxing and buffing until it was like a sunrise on a Florida beach.
Unfortunately there was no one in her life to keep her frenzy in check - her husband had died recently, and her adult children were in Chad and Borneo - so it was only when Montgomery County after repeated concerned calls from neighbors, broke in to the house.
There was Vicki playing with her glass menagerie, a childhood plaything she had always kept. It was a replica of Laura's in Tennessee Williams' vision - an array of delicate fantasy animals in glass and crystal. There was no way of knowing of course, but the attending psychiatrist in Baltimore suspected that, typical of her particular obsessive disorder, she had been moving, arranging, and rearranging the figures ad infinitum.
So, one must have at least a scintilla of sympathy for the rabid women shouting and howling in front of the White House. If the staff at the Hopkins Psychiatric Center can be believed when true belief becomes an obsession, it is a disease.


