- getting seriously ill, or having someone close to you become seriously ill or die
- not being able to see them while they’re ill or before they die
- choosing between two of your patients’ lives because you only have one ventilator
- being unable to hold or attend a funeral for a loved one
- needing urgent medical attention at a time when it’s less available or when you risk catching COVID-19 while receiving it
- being trapped in a house with your abuser
- losing your job in the middle of an enormous economic crash
- losing your home or your possessions likewise
- shutting down your business you sunk all your savings and time and dreams into
- having all your savings evaporate
- living in another country from your loved ones in a time of closed borders
- planning labour, delivery, and early parenting without the guarenteed access to pain relief, Caesearean sections, midwives, or home support you’d been relying on
- not being able to care for close friends or relatives in need of help
- cancelling or postponing your wedding
- getting uncomfortably ill, particularly if you don’t have good access to sick leave and medical care
- living alone and dealing with the prospect of not seeing anyone face to face for weeks and weeks
- not being able to see close friends or relatives for an indefinite period
- needing to look after your children while holding down a full time job
- needing to lay other people off and knowing that they face long-term poverty
- listening to a bunch of people you trusted opine about how “only” sick people (like you) or elderly people (like you) are at serious risk
- watching news reports about people who were happy and prosperous weeks ago dying alone in hospital corridors
- being cooped up in your teeny, dark, noisy house for months
- not being able to fix up problems with your house because handypeople aren’t essential services
- cancelling your holidays, and telling your kids you cancelled your holidays
- explaining to your kids that the new normal is that most days there will be bad news about schools, jobs, friends, holidays and you don’t know when the news will stop getting worse
- cancelling your birthday party or regular board games night
- liking Milan, or Rome, or New York, and not being sure whether or when you’ll be able to visit them again or what you’ll find if you do
- liking cruising, and not being sure it is a thing that will exist in the world after this year
- not being able to hook up with strangers
- not being able to go to the beach during some of the best weather you’ve seen lately
- being subjected to people on social media wanting to take whips to “juveniles” seen outside their houses, or wondering why you even bothered to have children if you aren’t thrilled to be locked in a house with them for a few months at a time at short notice
Yes, not all these things are created equal, the list is loosely ordered and of course you don’t want to complain about taking time off from surfing to someone who just missed their mother’s funeral.
But, at the same time, they’re all sad. You have the right to acknowledge if only to yourself and hopefully to fellow less affected friends that it sucks that your holiday is canceled and that you liked your regular board game night a whole lot actually.
This is important for two reasons, one is simply for peace of mind, insofar as such a thing exists right now. A whole lot has changed in the world in the last four weeks. You’re struggling to keep up and you’re grieving. It benefits no one, especially you, for you to pretend to yourself you’re suddenly all cool with anything short of imminent death.
The other reason is that eventually we want it all back. We want to be mostly free of the looming threat of infectious disease, and for hospitals to be safe, and to be allowed to leave our houses whenever we damn well please, and to have jobs (even if we have children!), and to be able to retire, and to see our friends, and to have new sex partners, and for people on social media to stop hating children so much.
Being deprived of all this is a really serious imposition on civil liberties and while we’re certainly called upon to go along with it for the sake of our communities, and it’s useless to be angry or sad about it non-stop or to heap stress on politicians and public health officials in difficult times, it’s also not a good idea to convince ourselves that we like it this way.
We don’t like it this way, and we’re not supposed to. It’s really really really sad.