Maine Writer

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Saturday, December 26, 2020

New Year 2021 post COVID hope: Restore what we missed and appreciate what we learned- Echo!

Echo Opinion : As the light returns, taking stock of a dark year

And now the light comes back. By Mary Schmich published in The Virginian-Pilot newspaper:

On December 21st,  the winter solstice arrived, marking the moment we begin the slow climb out of the darkness, like weary miners exiting the pit. This year, more than ever, the shift feels psychological as well as astronomical.

Therefore, it’s a good time to take account of the things we’ve missed during this dark time, along with what has provided some light in spite of it all.

In that spirit, here are two lists and encourage you to make your own.

Things I’ve Missed
1. The ability to plan
Before the pandemic, most of us made plans. For trips. Get-togethers. The future. Wise people have always known the precarious nature of the best-laid plans, etc., and people without money tend to know it. But until March, many of us enjoyed the fiction that we could control the time ahead. Now we live in the wobblier world of the day-by-day, which is disorienting but closer to reality.

2. Chitchat
Remember the idle but vital conversation you used to have with people at the coffeehouse or at work or church? Until you’re deprived of chitchat, you don’t notice how much those seemingly small connections and conversations educate and sustain you.

3. Coffeehouses-  Nothing like a chilly December day to make you yearn for that cozy place outside the house where you can think, read or chitchat.

4. Airplanes-  In a movie scene the other night, I saw a man on an airplane and felt an unexpected jolt of nostalgia. Was I really nostalgic for the feel of pulling down the tray table? I was. (Maine Writer, ahhh, me? Not so much!)

5. Travel-  I miss the visits to friends and family. The possibility of exploring new and distant places. The change of view. The sense of movement.

6. Casual touch-  Remember the hello hug, the goodbye hug, the it’ll-be-OK hug? The friendly hand on an elbow? The firm handshake? How long before those seem OK again?

7. Live music and theater- (Yes!)
One day this summer I stopped to listen to a band playing in a neighborhood park. I saw a couple of bystanders with tears in their eyes and felt the same way. Virtual performances are better than nothing, but they simply can’t match the energy of live ones.

8. Wearing dresses-  I love a good, simple dress. But what’s the point in a pandemic?

9. People I love-  We talk, we email, we have dinner across the Zoom screen. That’s better than nothing — “better than nothing” is a mantra for our times — but it’s not the same. And yet, the separation has made me realize how much I love and depend on friends and family. Missing them makes me appreciate them more. Which leads to the second list.


Things I’ve Appreciated More

1. Health care workers. Grocery clerks. Delivery people. Postal carriers. Poll workers. Journalists who go out into the world seeking sense in the chaos. Those are just some of the people the pandemic has taught us to call “essential.” They were essential before, but rarely recognized that way.

Also, newspaper carriers. It’s a good season to tip yours, by the way.

2. Small businesses, and the people who work in them- Local shops and restaurants give life and flavor to our neighborhoods. As they struggle to stay alive in the pandemic, we realize their value more acutely.

3. Birds, bugs and trees- Nothing like being stuck at home to make you notice what lives around you.

4. Reliable Wi-Fi- As we’ve become more dependent on Wi-Fi, we’ve also learned how many people are deprived of it. Access to Wi-Fi is just one of the inequities the pandemic has exposed.

5. White vinegar-  (Maine Writer- haha, this is something I share with the author, for some reason, when I see vinegar in the store isles, it makes me smile, because, it disappears fast! Who knew?!). Staying home has turned many people into maniacal cleaners. I grew up washing windows with vinegar and newspapers, so the miraculous properties of white vinegar aren’t a revelation. But the pandemic has expanded my repertoire. Cut the vinegar with dish soap and water to clean kitchen counters. Mix it with water to wash berries and keep them from spoiling. The opportunities are endless.

6. My neighbors-  The pandemic has forced us outside — to eat, to exercise, to socialize — and, like many people, I’ve gotten to know my neighbors better as a result.

7. Good walking shoes-  I recently wrote about the psychological benefits of walking through the pandemic. Many people replied with a question: What shoes do you wear? I hesitate to recommend shoes because feet are idiosyncratic. But for the past couple of years I’ve sworn by the On Cloud (aka On or OC) basic “Cloud” shoe, made for running and walking. (I saw a photo of Jill Biden in a pair the other day.)

8. Good novels about plagues-  It’s weirdly consoling to read about other plagues in distant times. Those stories put this plague into perspective. A few favorites: “Year of Wonders” by Geraldine Brooks. “Station Eleven” by Emily St. John Mandel. “The End of October” by Lawrence Wright. “Hamnet” by Maggie O’Farrell. “The Plague” by Albert Camus. (I own, "Year of Wonders", but must take the time to read it. I highly recommend the Nobel prize winning author Albert Camus, "La Peste"- en francais, or "The Plague", is excellent.

9. Being alive long enough to watch the light return.

Mary Schmich is a columnist for the Chicago Tribune.

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