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I am writing this at the beginning stages of COVID-19 pandemic. The corona virus has made its debut in our country, but the real effects are yet to play out. It is really not a good time to indulge in crass commercialism, as we are still trying to sort out the new norms of behavior and are fearfully anticipating the impact of this disease on our loved ones. Yet, despite this, as a student of history, I feel compelled to say something. So here it is.
If you listen to the news, you will hear many analogies to the Spanish Flu Epidemic of 1919. It was devastating and killed millions. But times now are different than then. Back then, we still didn’t understand much about how viral infections were transmitted, let alone how to treat them. And too, the disease spread in part because we were still fighting a war when the disease broke out. Priority was given to winning the war and alarm over the growing disease threat was suppressed. People didn’t know how to stop the spread of the disease until it was too late.
So we know more and we have better means of treatment today than they ever could have had 100 years ago. That is good, and if we listen to the science-based advice on this contagion, we will fare much better than before.
That is the most important silver lining.
Another is that perhaps this gives us a time to pause, if only for a little while, and see the humanity of us all. No one is immune to this disease. We all have to do the same things to guard against its spread. And if some of us do not do what we should, we are all put at risk. No clearer message that we are all dependent on one another can be made.
There will be a significant economic consequence to this disease. Most will weather the storm. Some will not. Nothing will be easy. But it is important to remember that it wasn’t easy in the past as well. In my family, there are stories of having to abandon farms held for generations because crops could not be sold. Of making a bag of potatoes stretch out for a week of family meals. Of true celebration when a father was called back to work for a couple days a week. So, while times will be tough for many, keep a perspective. Do what you can do every day to may life better. One day, one step at a time. Have empathy for those around you, in your community and in the world.
And while you are sheltering in, and your children or grandchildren are out of school, perhaps it is a good time to share stories of your family’s past. To pull out the old family albums. They do not have to be stories of hardship, although many of your hardship stories will end with their own silver lining. But they are stories of your family’s history, and to the young ones, they send the message that this too will pass, that life and love is good, and there are better days to come.
Silver linings? there are plenty when you think about it.
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