Little
did we know when we got on that plane to visit Roots and Roosts. Yes, we knew
there was a novel (aka "new") virus going around somewhere in China,
and it may or may not be making its way to the rest of the world. But we had no
idea, not in our wildest imagination, what we had in store. We had no idea that
the entire planet was about to have the rug pulled out from under it, dropping
us to our collective knees.
A
strain of coronavirus - a group of viruses, including the 'common cold' that
cause respiratory and other symptoms - had been found after someone at the Huanan
Seafood Wholesale Market in Wuhan, China, bought pangolin meat that had been
infected by SARS-CoV-2 virus when the animal was bit by a horseshoe bat. (SARS-CoV
is the strain of coronavirus that causes Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome.) The
infection transferred to the person and then developed in to CoVid-19 (so named
because it started in 2019). Apparently, that can happen with some viruses. It’s called zoonotic
transmission.
The last time this happened was in 2003, when a similar virus,
which we just called SARS, was transmitted from a bat to a Masked Palm Civet
which was then eaten by a human. Another outbreak caused by zoonotic
transmission was MERS-CoV, Middle East Respiratory Syndrome, which was
contracted by eating a similarly infected dromedary camel. The vegetarian in me
says, let’s
not eat animals anymore. But the realistic me says, can we at least draw the
line at eating exotic animals?
Anyway
. . .
The
first US case was diagnosed on January 21, three days into our California trip.
The man had traveled to the Wuhan province, where he contracted the virus, and
then back to his hometown of New York City before it developed into CoVid-19.
By the end of January, there were seven cases in the US. Fast forward to the
end of March, and we would see an exponential increase to nearly 187,000 cases
and over 3,800 deaths. Two weeks later and we’d have 525,000 cases and over 20,000 deaths nationwide. We
had officially surpassed any other country in number of cases, making CoVid-19
the number one cause of death in the United States. Worldwide, the toll was astronomical
–
over 1.8 million people have been infected, 113,000+ dying from the disease as of
mid-April.
The
next three months saw a mind-bending flurry of activity in attempts to ‘crush the curve’. States, counties, and
cities implemented ‘shelter
in place’
orders, stopping just short of ticketing people for leaving their homes. Employers
scrambled to put work-from-home protocols, equipment, and bandwidth in place. Hospitals are short on supplies such as masks, gloves, gowns, and staff. Front-line workers
began wearing protective plastic face shields and full-body protection. ICU
beds and ventilators reached critical lows. Military ships are docked in major
ports to serve as temporary hospitals. Ages of those affected grew younger as
death counts rose. Countries experienced hundreds of fatalities every day. Borders
were closed. Flights were grounded. Business were shuttered. Jobless exceeded
16 million. Social distancing became a buzz word. Drive-thru testing sites were
built. International heads of state were hospitalized. The government promised
token stimulus checks to families. Parties were divided. Friends and extended families
were separated by a minimum of six feet. Newscasters and late-night hosts
filmed from their living rooms, or front porches, or tents set up in their back
yards. Zoom (a video conferencing platform) became a household word. Children participated
in online school.
People
either panicked or felt invincible and indifferent. The panicked ones stayed
home, self-isolated, did without. The invincible and indifferent continued with
life as if nothing were happening. Pastors defied recommendations and held
massive church services. Spring breakers flooded places like Mexico and
Florida. Families gathered for Sunday dinners.
And, as a result, cases remain
on the rise. We have yet to hit the apex, medical experts say. The government,
and society, are fighting a delicate balance between health and finance – steps we need to take
to finally eradicate this virus seem to lead us to a long-term economic
recession. Billions of dollars have been lost. The stock market has plummeted.
When will it end? What will it cost? And how do you reconcile the rebound of
finances at the cost of human life?
And
yet, the air is clear. Emissions and greenhouse gasses have dropped. Light
pollution has lessened. Animals that haven’t been seen in geographies for decades have suddenly reappeared.
The planet seems to be healing itself now that we’ve gotten out of its way.
Families
are rediscovering each other. Parents are learning what it takes to be a
teacher, and a stay-at-home mom. Times together (from six feet away) are more
precious than ever. Car picnics are a thing. Porch portraits are a thing. Graduation
parades are a thing. Bear hunts are a thing. Can we do without the money, the
travel, the busy-ness? Can we heal our obsession for collecting things and put our
energy into collecting memories? Can we please keep the good things that have
been forced upon us by this unlikely source?
Governments
say we will “re-open
for business”
on May 1. I can't help but to feel like that is too soon. Experts predict a second wave of cases by
mid-summer if we do. I believe it will be August or later before we start to
regain some of our old normal.
I hope so. I want more time for healing. I’m not ready to come back
to life.

