Remember “flattening the curve”? By March 15, 2020, the Covid-19 pandemic in Chicago threatened a shortage of hospital beds and medical equipment. The governor cancelled St. Patrick’s Day parades and temporarily closed bars, restaurants, schools, churches and stores. Dr. Anthony Fauci told us not to leave our homes except for groceries or medicine or to walk the dog.
“Look at the curves of other outbreaks,” he said, “they go up big peaks, then come down. We need to flatten this curve.”
Staving off the collapse of the nation’s health care system was dependent on the unselfish actions of the body politic: hand-washing, mask-wearing, not traveling and figuring out how to stay at least six feet from others. We were so afraid we’d end up in the makeshift hospital at the cavernous McCormick Place Convention Center that we followed shelter-in-place orders. The curve flattened. For a few weeks. Then it spiked. And spiked again.
On March 20, 2020, I wrote the first in a series of thirteen weekly blog posts, “Week 1: Life in the Shutdown Lane.” By June, I lost interest. Oh, I wrote about it, moaned about it. But as time shifted into months, I stopped marking the time in weeks.
“Flattening the curve” left the public discourse. Some embrace staying at home. Some double down on mask-wearing and malign
those who don’t. Some defiantly refuse to be masked and mock those who are. And some pay no attention at all as if the rules don’t apply to them. And now, the only hope for this cowboy nation to fight the deadly Covid-19 virus is the vaccine.
The first vaccines arrived in Chicago in mid-December. Priority was given to health care workers and people living and working in long-term care facilities. When the sixty-five and over age group was able to line up, all I heard about on my ever-present Zoom chats were adventures of the shot.
I thought I’d sign up on my doctor’s automated scheduling system, but when I looked, the web page said they don’t do shots. “Click here” it suggested. I clicked there and nothing happened.
“Go on the Walgreen’s site,” a friend insisted. “If there’re no appointments, keep trying.” He’d exhausted himself getting up at all hours of the night checking for available appointments. He thought I should do the same.
“What’s the hurry?” I shrugged. “My life won’t change. Fauci says I still have to wear a mask and stay home.”
Hounded by the challenge, I succumbed to the bird-dog pursuit and registered on every site, not just Walgreen’s. When I received a phone call from Mariano’s pharmacy, I reacted like I’d won the lottery.
It may be a while before I go to the Art Institute, lunch with friends or linger in a grocery store, but after almost a year of restrictions, it sure is nice to have the freedom to do so.
Just the shot in the arm I needed.
I felt a huge weight being lifted off my should – my shoulders still hurt- but its getting better everyday
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I have had a horrible time with the shot too. Cannot get on a list. Thanks for writing this. At lease I know I am not alone!
On Wed, Feb 24, 2021 at 10:07 PM Regan Burke Back Story Essays wrote:
> Regan Burke posted: ” Remember “flattening the curve”? By March 15, 2020, > the Covid-19 pandemic in Chicago threatened a shortage of hospital beds and > medical equipment. The governor cancelled St. Patrick’s Day parades and > temporarily closed bars, restaurants, schools, chur” >
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Ahhh, I remember those days of flattening the curve, and mask obsession, and toilet paper. Thanks Regan for marking and capturing these moments as they rise in significance and then recede. The sun is shining, the sky is bright blue and today is vaccine day #2 for me. The future looks ….well, like a future.
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All sooo true! Hugs
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Great story! Fun to think about flattening the curve.
A
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Just the shot in the arm you needed for sure, Regan. And the shot in the arm we all need â letâs all get our vaccines and get this *)#*%! thing over with already!
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