Chattanooga Times Free Press

Tomorrow still holds potential to be your ‘year of wonders’

- Courtney Montgomery

“In 1665, the University of Cambridge temporaril­y closed due to the bubonic plague. Isaac Newton had to work from home, and he used this time to develop calculus and the theory of gravity.” I’m sure your move to online instructio­n and remote learning has been just as productive.

Martin Kleppmann tweeted this out on March 9. After a little Googling, I found the actual quote from Newton about what historians call “annus mirabilis” or his “year of wonders.” The budding 23-year-old scientist did indeed use this time outside of the classroom to discover many groundbrea­king theories that went on to revolution­ize science.

I tell you the Newton story to remind you that there’s

really “nothing new under the sun.” From the bubonic plague to the influenza epidemic of 1918, time and again society has been forced to deal with inexplicab­le loss of life at alarming rates, widespread personal and financial turmoil, fear of the unknown and attempts to escape the effects of an invisible but deadly scourge.

Our technologi­cally advanced and globally interconne­cted society faces unique challenges due to COVID-19. That same technology allows us to stay connected in ways our ancestors could never have imagined, but the sheer volume of conflictin­g informatio­n we receive can at times be paralyzing.

Against the backdrop of the novel coronaviru­s, you have persevered. You overcame the abrupt end to the senior year you had envisioned and the memories you expected to make.

You transition­ed completely to online learning. The struggle was real for everyone, including your teachers and professors who reinvented the wheel all while balancing their own home lives.

Someday you can tell your grandkids about how you submitted your final group assignment at 11:59 p.m. even with bad Wi-Fi, a sibling on a sleep strike howling in the next room and never hearing from that one guy on your team even though he apparently had plenty of time to learn the latest dance on TikTok.

Some of you have had to face seemingly insurmount­able obstacles — unexpected economic hardship, tough home situations, job loss or you or your loved one catching the virus.

We haven’t all been quarantine and chilling.

By the way, even a genius like Isaac Newton had a troubled home life. His father passed away before he was born, his mother remarried a man he came to dislike and he was raised by his maternal grandmothe­r. Like I said, there’s nothing new.

Regardless of your personal situation, you’ve made it to this day. Take a moment to appreciate all you have accomplish­ed and those who have supported you throughout this journey.

As you learned in your English literature classes, “no man is an island.”

We don’t know what the new normal is yet. We don’t know when we are going to have a vaccine or effective treatment regimens.

Your summer plans may be up in the air. Like many, your job or internship opportunit­ies may have drasticall­y changed over the past few months.

The education you have received has empowered you with tools and honed your critical thinking skills. These skills will serve you well in whatever field you eventually find yourself.

More important than book knowledge and life skills is who you fundamenta­lly are as a person.

The coronaviru­s crisis has exposed us.

We’ve seen the dark side of human nature. After the initial stories of toilet paper hoarders subsided, we’ve witnessed extremism on both sides of the “stay home” vs. “reopen now” crowds.

However, we have seen the front-line workers rise to the challenge. We have seen little kids sewing masks.

The pandemic has taken much from us, but what remains is who we truly are at our core.

As you start your next chapter, remember that humanity has been here before, but you have not: Tomorrow still holds the potential to be your “year of wonders.”

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