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‘For those of us who are privileged enough to work from home during the pandemic, the events of the past few months have really messed with the notion of time. Days blend into each other. The weekend, while still a much-needed source of rest, doesn’t feel demarcated from the rest of the week anymore. The things we used to look forward to — gatherings with friends, nights out on the town, opening weekends for blockbuster films — have all melted away. We’ve been left with the endless repetition of the daily routine.
The pandemic has had this strange effect of freezing our lives in place. Whatever financial position or professional status you’d achieved by February 2020? That’s basically what you’re going to be stuck with for awhile. The friends you had pre-COVID? If you’re lucky, they’ll still be around when this is all over (but you probably aren’t going to add to their ranks so much during this time).
Most days, I struggle to dream of a future where things get better. Where we’re allowed to dream again. Where people trust in each other, in the idea of truth, in the possibility of a government that is benevolent and that values science and expertise. This whole pandemic has been absolutely shattering.
But there is one thing I do think about. It’s this interview Larry Brilliant to Wired magazine not too long ago. For those of you who don’t know who Larry Brilliant is, he’s one of the scientists that worked to eradicate smallpox (check out his amazing TED talk on the subject here).
When asked whether he was scared or not, Brilliant responded:
I’m in the age group that has a one in seven mortality rate if I get it. If you’re not worried, you’re not paying attention. But I’m not scared. I firmly believe that the steps that we’re taking will extend the time that it takes for the virus to make the rounds. I think that, in turn, will increase the likelihood that we will have a vaccine or we will have a prophylactic antiviral in time to cut off, reduce, or truncate the spread. Everybody needs to remember: This is not a zombie apocalypse. It’s not a mass extinction event.
“It’s not a mass extinction event.”
Yes, I will grant that if our bar for comfort right now is “the thing is not a mass extinction event,” things have truly gone off the rails. But for some reason I’ve often reflected on this sentence in recent days.
It often feels like the world is ending. For many people, the pain caused by the sickness or death of loved ones will be irreparable. The financial consequences of the pandemic will be with us for a generation.
But this is not a mass extinction event. It’s not an asteroid that’s going to wipe out all life on Earth. It’s not 28 Days Later. Humanity will survive this.
[It’ll also be up to us what type of society we want to live in afterwards. How much do we want to support the middle class? How do we want our cities to look? Do we still need restaurants? Concerts?]
In Seattle, the governor has announced a phased plan to re-open the economy. Slowly, we are seeing signs of life returning to our streets and our businesses. The farmer’s market has opened back up. Many restaurants I used to go to are now operational, albeit for pick-up/delivery only. It is a process that will take months, at the absolute bare minimum, but it is a process that has begun.
In The New Yorker, James Ross Gardner writes about what it feels like to live in Seattle right now:
For now, we stay at home and wait. And we watch other regions that are in the position we were in weeks before. The wave of casualties and economic destruction that first hit Seattle has long since rolled across the country, every city a replica of our empty, boarded-up own. But here, in the first U.S. state with a confirmed case, the first to log a death, there is cause, however modest, for optimism. We showed that there’s a way to slow the spread. That it could, in fact, be done. At the beginning of all this, at the start of March, as the death count climbed, and we stopped shaking hands and sitting in the same rooms together, I thought of Seattle as living in the laboratory of the nation’s future. I hoped I was wrong. Now I hope I’m right.
I hope so too.
A few other interesting things from around the web:
- I had a spirited conversation with Patrick Willems about The Rise of Skywalker. You can view our conversation on YouTube or download the podcast version.
- Renee Dale writes about our loss of the trivial.
- For Vulture, a spectacular piece of writing by Jerry Saltz. It starts as a piece about how he’s surviving during the pandemic, given his very specific diet. It then transforms into something else entirely.
- Micki McElya wonders where is the national mourning for the 90,000 who have died from COVID-19?
- Kyle Buchanan has created an excellent oral history of Mad Max: Fury Road, my favorite film of the past decade.
- Atul Gawande has written a great summary of where things stand right now with the pandemic and how we might be able to get out of it.
- For a laugh, read this Dave Eggers piece on “flattening the truth.”
- From The Atlantic, a haunting piece about QAnon. For those who try to battle misinformation in their daily lives: this is what you are up against.
- Tip your essential workers. Please.
- Chuck Wendig writes about how the quarantine has made us all like Calvin and Hobbes.
- If you want more frequent updates from me, subscribe to my podcast Culturally Relevant. I also tweet out every article I read these days from my Davechen.net Twitter account.
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