The plague year(s)
In some ways, being retired and having no children is a lot like sheltering in place. The difference between before corvid 19 and now is that all our out-of-the-house activities: concerts, plays, meetings, church, any place where people congregate, are cancelled. At this point we make lists of items we need: food, medications, fuel, hardware, and plan on a single outing. The idea being to minimize the opportunities for exposure.
Over the last several years, we had established an annual schedule of using our motor home to visit friends and relatives as well as places that we have found interesting. From New Orleans to North Hero in Lake Champlain. I named these trips our “Go See’em While There’re Still Alive Tours” because as we become more chronologically gifted (AKA old geezers) talking with our friends, while we still can, is more and more important. It turns out that the title is ironic because I am the oldest of the of the siblings and cousins.
Planning these trips created a mixture of concern and fear. I don’t want my wife or me to contract this life-threatening illness and I don’t want to unknowingly pass it on to anyone we meet. Then there is the fear of the unknown. Is the tickle in my throat from the abundance of pollen blanketing everything right now or is it covid19? We don’t really know how many people in our community have (or unknowingly have) this virus and have no obvious symptoms. The strategy we use now is fewer is better. In our county yesterday, 4/3/20, there were 43 reported and confirmed cases and 1 death, which is probably not the actual number of those infected, so limiting our outings to local stores is a better survival strategy than shopping in the stores in Decatur GA (500 cases). Running out of crunchy snacks from Patel Bro’s Indian grocery in Decatur in Dekalb county, won’t make me ill, whereas a visit to that grocery would increase the likelihood of coming into contact with the virus.
From the perspective of early April 2020, the rest of the year looks iffy at best. The goal is to survive until we can get a vaccination against covd19. That vaccine is probably a year or more away. Earlier in the year, the Democratic presidential race was the lead story across the news media. The primary race has been supplanted by a different horse race: the graph of the numbers of confirmed cases of covid19 and deaths associated with the disease. A significant complication is that across the U.S. the loci of infection form a patchwork, we are not all experiencing the epidemic at the same time and the same degree and the same exposure rate. An work-around to the absent vaccine, is to have a blood test that would reveal if anti-bodies are found un the plasms and to what degree our body has produced them. Knowing this information would tell of individual immunity, but this would be helpful only if everyone knows their likelihood to contract covid19. The actual solution is a vaccine.
We are not living in the dark ages, hunkering behind locked gates and stone walls while rats and fleas spread the infection. We are isolating ourselves as much as possible because we do understand how the virus spreads. This knowledge is cold comfort, however only time will tell.