I am fortunate. My family is healthy. My wife and I are still employed. Cooped up together, we count our blessings. There have been challenges, however. Early on, I often reported and wrote about the pandemic all day and then went to bed bleary-eyed and burned out by the trauma I covered, troubled by confusing, anxiety-filled dreams and waking up around 3 a.m., unable to fall back to sleep. In some ways, this reminds me of my time reporting in Iraq years ago. Just like then, the life-or-death stories I am writing on deadline now pump me full of adrenaline, making it hard for me to focus on anything else and stay asleep at night. My mind keeps racing.
I know this is not healthy, so I am forcing myself to do other things. I am spending more time with my family. I am playing catch more often with my 11-year-old son, Casey, a budding lacrosse athlete. I am reading voraciously. I am tending to a new strawberry patch, tomato plants and an expansive herb garden in my backyard. Along my fence, I have planted a long row of giant sunflowers. In between writing stories, I step outside and marvel at how fast they are growing. Watching “The Office” each night with my family keeps me laughing.
But none of this is like being on the lacrosse field in the moments just before the first faceoff, sensing the electric anticipation in the stands and among the athletes, hearing the field hush before the first whistle. I miss the stunning dodges, the rocket shots, the acrobatic goalie saves. I even miss the coaches yelling at me. I miss how I can become nearly invisible in the flow of the game, forgetting my deadlines, forgetting my stories, forgetting myself.
Sometimes, you know you have done a good job officiating when the fans, players and coaches don’t remember you were ever there. If I were back on the field refereeing at this moment, I am certain I would not be thinking about the pandemic. And then I would return to my reporting with new energy and fresh ideas, while looking forward to my next medicine game.
Jeremy Redmon writes for The Atlanta Journal-Constitution and officiates lacrosse in the South. A longtime member of US Lacrosse, he serves on the board of the Georgia Lacrosse Officials Association. He graduated in 2019 from the University of Georgia’s Master of Fine Arts program in narrative nonfiction writing. Follow him on Twitter at @JeremyLRedmon.