"Cathy" lives on Instagram — and she's a character fit for these frazzled times.
A decade after the eponymous comic strip's lengthy run ended, cartoonist Cathy Guisewite brought back her much loved and much mocked character (whose struggles with the four "guilt groups" of work, food, love and mom never abated, even as new generations of women embraced changing sensibilities) in single-frame cartoons, shared through @cathygwite.
Since March, Guisewite has been capturing our collective pandemic anxieties and ack-worthy quarantine moments in a series of daily "Cathy" posts called "Scenes From Isolation."
We talked with Guisewite, who launched the paperback edition of her essay book "Fifty Things That Aren't My Fault" this spring, about her latest cartoons and how she's managing solo self-quarantine in California with her dog. She's missing her 98-year-old mom, yet finding solace in old routines — and even Cathy-haters have reached out to say they suddenly relate to the character.
Q: How did you decide to begin posting a comic every day during the pandemic?
A: After all those years of doing the strip, when my anxiety builds up in me, I have to kind of dump it out on paper. So I found great solace in dumping some of this out. And, truthfully, this is a time when people are reconnecting with old friends, old foods, old people they know.
Q: Are you finding the daily routine helpful?
A: This is kind of my comfort zone, I'm afraid, waking up in the morning and being panicked that I need an idea for the day. There's something very comforting about that, because that was the rhythm of my life for all those years I did the comic strip. It's partly just kind of a natural relief — getting some of the angst on paper.