Now is not the time to panic.

It has been 18 or so days since I woke up feeling like I was coming down with something that turned into nothing except the feeling of my chest being pressed in the center by a 50lb weight. It has been 18 days since my sore throat has come and gone, along with it occasional sniffles. It has been 14 days since I contacted my doctor and she told me that I couldn’t come in to be seen, but my symptoms were concerning enough that she would preemptively treat me for pneumonia and give me a strong antibiotic and an inhaler. 10 day for so since I developed a cold ice gel sensation in my lungs that burned a cool burn and tingled through my entire body, waking me up in the middle of the night. 3 days since I thought I was getting better, but the sore throat and bruised lung sensation returned. 1 day since I realized I’m not getting better.

It may well be that I have a new poorly timed allergy after years of suffering no such symptoms come spring. I’d like to see my doctor in person and be checked out properly. This cannot happen, of course. Not in the age of coronavirus. My lungs are sore and likely inflamed. I have shortness of breath when I walk and sometimes I need to sit down to catch my breath. It’s terrifying. And it’s probably not Coronavirus. It’s especially terrifying if it isn’t Coronavirus, because I may have some undiagnosed Asthma or something that would make getting actual Covid-19 really, really bad.

Today, for the first time in two weeks, I went to a store. I really wanted eggs so I ventured into Whole Foods and tried my best to remain 6 feet from everyone, but that was impossible. I found one empty aisles and made a beeline for the back of the store, switching into a different aisle half way to avoid someone who turned the corner. I kept my face down while peering up to identify the eggs. Found them. Grabbed two boxes of eggs. Then a few other things. Grabbed two cans of pinto beans then immediately regretted it as I didn’t have a cart and I was well on my way to dropping two dozen eggs and acquiring a virus that may in under a month take my life. I felt I had to buy everything I touched, so I did. The two dozen eggs, the two cans of pinto beans, the sorbet bars that turned out to be ice cream bars with sorbet in the middle, a tea, and a dark chocolate coconut bar at checkout.

I failed miserably at checkout. But they didn’t make it so easy. There are blue x’s on the floor but the people behind me came up too far and I went up too far and then it was all over. I was panicking and accidentally put my chocolate bar on the pile of food that the people behind me were purchasing. I apologized and kept my head down. I felt horrible for the woman checking me out who must have at least been 50, and probably in her 60s. She had gloves on, but surely she was at high risk for being infected. Given the situation, I’m shocked that grocery stores aren’t turning into order ahead and pickup or delivery only. Maybe that’s not financially feasible, but it would be safer.

The grocery store shopping expense was surreal with the barren shelves and the people shopping all either clearly trying to avoid being anywhere near another human and then others prancing about and walking past me at full speed, way too close. I couldn’t hold my breath the entire time as I did when I went to the post office to drop off a letter the other day, so I just gave in to get my eggs. If I’m going to die, I at least need to experience the delicious fluff of a few more good homemade omelettes.

This will all end eventually. We all know it will. I’m not even really anxious anymore. I mean, I am anxious, but that’s not the predominant mood of the week. I’m just sad. I’m so fucking sad and I don’t know how to process it. Because it’s not like the depression I’m used to which is largely just a self defense mechanism to keep disappointment at bay, this is a true, raw sadness that brings me back to the months leading up to when my father passed away and the weeks after. It’s this emptiness. This being stuck in limbo. Especially while others act as if everything is ok (even though in this case everyone is actually experience the same loss of normalcy) and I know everything is not ok. It may be ok for me, personally, but the world is not ok. There is so much broken in the world and especially in this country. We all need a wake up call but the saddest part of all is that even a pandemic will not wake people up. How many fucking people approve of how Trump is handling this mess? How many fucking people think he’s doing a great job despite lying over and over again how this wasn’t a big deal? You know what’s sickening? That no matter what he does, his supporters don’t care. And people think he’s doing a good job when his actions (or lack of action) is literally killing hundreds of people, if not thousands of people. Yea, great job.

I don’t think the problem is capitalism. Or socialism. It’s people. People are pretty horrible, when it comes down to it. I can’t say I’m better than the average anyone. We’re all in it for self preservation and survival. But our drive to self preserve is our downfall. I’ve tried to explain to conservative types that even rich people are better off if people in their society are not left to suffer in poverty. We don’t have to bring the top down to bring the bottom up. No one gets it. Here is a real example. We give everyone healthcare. We make sure that everyone can have paid sick leave and see a doctor and not spread a virus so quickly because people refuse to stay home from work when they are ill in fear of losing their jobs. Our country is ridiculously wealthy and yet look at us. Doctors. Nurses. Those on the frontlines. Having to reuse masks and protective gear. What the hell is wrong with us, America?

This morning I read an article that has been circulating about how what many of us are feeling is grief. It’s not just about the loss of life, or even the momentary loss of our way of life. It’s knowing that our world from before has forever changed. That we may move on but we’ll never forget. We’ll be a little more nervous about things like hugging friends and the germs we might acquire touching anything in public. It’s this deep sense of loss. And I was thinking yesterday how what I really feel is mourning. Mourning the loss of the early childhood I expected for my son, mourning that I may not be able to have another child if I responsibly wait until all of this has passed to try, mourning that even though I’m incredibly socially awkward I was just in the past year starting to make a few friends at work who I hung out with in person once in a blue moon, which made me incredibly happy, and now that’s all over too. Or, at the very least, on hold for who knows how long.

Sure, we may be allowed back into the world sooner than later. But the virus will still be lurking. I won’t want to go out to restaurants or bars or anywhere. I’ll drive to work, take the steps without holding the railing, sit at my desk, try to find a seat on the far end of the table in meetings, and immediately drive home without stopping along the way. Just weeks ago I was thinking of all the classes and activities I would enroll my son in over the coming years. How fun it would be to take him back to the zoo now that he knows animals and would recognize them. How we would go to the aquarium a few more times this year, every few months watching him grow into being amazed by the schools of fish swimming by and glowing jellyfish floating about on display.

There will be memories made at home, too. I get to see my son much more than I would otherwise while working from home. Not much during the day, but at lunch I can see him, and then after work I don’t have to spend 45 minutes in traffic waiting to get home, exhausted. Instead, I have more energy to be a mother. Which is nice. I mean, outside of my lung problems, and finding it hard to breathe and have energy for much at all these days.

I’m definitely trying to focus on the positive here. Trying to connect with friends who I unfortunately lost touch with, because we’re all so busy but now we’re all stuck at home (though some have quite an active virtual social life!) I’m trying. Like we’re all trying. But I’m sad. And I just have to say it. I’m sad for all of the people who are losing their lives in Italy because there are not enough hospital beds. I’m sad for my friends stuck in New York City who are terrified of going out to get food because few are taking the shelter is place seriously there and the hospitals are overwhelmed. I’m sad for my son who cannot go on the playground that he finally has gotten brave enough to climb on. My son who can’t see his grandmother or grandfather in person after seeing them very frequently for his entire life to date. My husband who misses his parents. Myself who misses being around people and the things I’d do to calm myself like window shopping at the mall and going to a coffee shop and listening to the cacophony of conversation around me. Everyone who has an ill family member, or who worries they soon might. I mourn a time of not having to think any of this. It was only a few weeks ago. And if turning 36 didn’t make me feel like I’ve turned the corner into my mid life, this sudden shift into calm chaos certainly does.

Life in the Time of Corona

50 minutes until we go on lockdown. It still seems like we’re all living in the middle of a movie, instead of real life. We slowly–very slowly–start to accept that things aren’t as they should be. Some of us by choice, other’s, force. Our self-promoting everything-is-dandy-and-I’m-perfect President finally admitted that our situation is “bad, very bad.” Yes, it is Mr. President, it is.

Today, the stock market dropped 3000 points. Everyone is panicking. The fed dropped interest rates to 0 and eased some quantitativeness but no one seems to care. The world is ending (it’s not ending)–the stock market is certainly acting like it is–because EVERYTHING is impacted by this little bug. As others have written, it’s like a silent tsunami. It’s a natural disaster of epic proportion but we can’t see it. We’ll only see the carnage in hindsight.

Today, the President asked people in our country to avoid gathering in crowds of more than 10 people. Today, the President admitted that this is a serious issue. Today, in California, in the Bay Area, six counties are, as of midnight tonight, on full lockdown. For the next three weeks we can go out only to get groceries and to visit the doctor in an emergency. We’re supposedly allowed to go for walks, as long as we remain six feet away from others. Police are supposedly enforcing all of these rules and at least in San Francisco it’s a misdemeanor to go out for reasons that aren’t allowed.

Despite my lingering chest tightness, I decided to go for a walk this evening to get some fresh air. I first brought my son in his stroller, then eventually made a few more loops around my apartment complex solo. The way people darted across the street when I walked by, you’d think I had developed a case of toxic B.O.–but one quickly remembers it’s just Corona Etiquette–walk briskly and deviate from your path if needed to avoid any and all social contact. Everyone has the plague. Act accordingly.

I managed 11,000 steps this evening, which is more than I’ve gotten in the last week since my company went work from home and I’ve opted to mostly shelter in place as my lung issue worsened. I had a phone appointment with my doctor today, which was as surreal as anything else going on these days. Dear doc: do I worry, or not worry, about this chest tightness and cool liquid sensation in my lungs? DOC AM I GONNA DIE? TELL ME LIKE IT IS DOC, TELL ME LIKE IT IS.

Doc: well, your symptoms are a bit concerning, not particularly because of Coronavirus, but typically with chest tightness that isn’t getting better I’d have you come in to get checked out. But since, well, things are, different these days–because shortness of breath is a symptom of, Corona, if you came in we’d have to suit up and it would be a whole thing and… I’m just going to prescribe you drugs for pneumonia, which I wouldn’t normally do without seeing you, but these are different times… and, uh, you won’t be able to get a test because, uh, you don’t have any exposure to someone with Coronavirus or severe symptoms so…”

Me: thanks doc. I know it must be, uh, crazy these days. Thank you for taking the time to talk to me. So, uh, if this doesn’t get better, uh, when should I be worried, like, uh, where I, you know, contact you, before it’s really bad, but not before it’s like, not really bad, because I know you’re busy dealing with people who are, uh, really bad…

Doc: if it gets worse and you have pain in your chest, if the medicine isn’t helping…

Me: Ok, doc. Thank you. doc.

Doc: oh, it would be better to send someone else to pick up the medicine since you, um, have some symptoms…

Me: uhhhhh…

Doc: have your husband pick it up for you.

Me: um… (thinking: husband doesn’t want to get sick) …um, ok. Thanks doc.(click.)

A Week Ago

A week ago we just got sent home from work and told that we would be working from home for two weeks. Then everything in the world fell apart. The time between last Monday and this Monday may as well been the length of a thousand Mondays. I’ve aged too many years with worry in such a short time because the rawness of life, the vulnerability of humanity, the weakness of all of us and our mortality is there, in front of all of us, like a raw beating heart that is pulsing to the rhythm of some childhood joke “nah nah nah nah” beats the heart, pouring blood everywhere, squirting up to the moon–there’s your rotten humanity for you. There’s all the control you’ve tried to obtain fucking painted red across the stars, a sky dripping with maroon rain all over our faces, yet most people somehow don’t even notice it yet, don’t taste the blood there, slipping slowly down to their lips, smelling like salt and old copper pennies.

We control nothing. Nada. Not when a little tiny virus can slip into our throats and nostrils and lungs and take over our bodies, our poor little weak bodies that try to wage war against against these intruders and yet eventually fail in 2 out of 100 cases or maybe 3 out of 100 or 5. There is nothing we can do when the army of our white blood cells can’t take on the enemy. And when hospitals no longer can give our army the backup needed to fight the good fight to keep us alive, we’re on our own, and on our own, we are alone in the fight.

This is happening. It’s not an overreaction. It’s not an anxiety-induced prophecy. Look at Italy. Italy is in chaos. And we are 10 days behind. 10 days. A lifetime. A lifetime of 240 hours where in this horror movie some percent of us know the plot and we’re saying nooo, wait, stoppppp, don’t open the dooooorrrrr and you’ve got people still having birthday parties and gatherings and choosing not to pay attention to the inevitable because it’s too hard to admit how little we control in this world for ourselves and yet how much we DO control if we work together to stop this thing. But we’d never do that.

So every country goes and does their own thing to try to stop the impact of the virus. Italy goes on lockdown. Every state in the US has some different rule, some with curfews, some not, some with no events, some with any event, who knows. The UK says fuck it, let the young folks get sick now, so when winter comes the old folks can be less likely to get infected (yes, my friend, winter is indeed coming–though it’s hard to imagine winter and the Return of the Corona (in theaters this December) while spring has barely sprung and the virus has barely, well, viraled.)

Tomorrow morning, I will go to the pharmacy to get my steroid inhaler and antibiotics, and I will pray to the gods I don’t believe in that I don’t catch this virus at the pharmacy with all of the other sick people to get medicine to treat what may be this virus or may be something else that is still causing some serious issues with my respiratory system which probably makes me more at risk for serious complications from this virus if I was to get it if I don’t already have it. And so. Anxiety amplifies. I try to breathe. To remind myself that most people my age do not die form this thing. That I am doing the right thing and staying inside and in a weeks time this should all pass.

But in the back of mind I’m also thinking–we are 10 days behind Italy… we are 10 days behind Italy–and what if, what if in 10 days, or 5 days, or 7 days, my lungs take a turn for the worst? What if, whatever it is I have, I need to go to the hospital in the thick of it. What then? What can I do now to prevent that? Take my medicine, I guess. I can’t get an X-ray, they won’t give anyone X-rays for pneumonia at this time. I just have to take my medicine and hope I get better. Stay home. Stay home and hope. That’s modern medicine for you.

Why are my lungs so cold? There’s ice liquid in there. Liquid ice. Pouring in. I can breathe. And these days, breath is our most valuable asset. So, I remind myself, just breathe. Just. Fucking. Breathe.

T-10(?).