The Sentinel-Record

Dear Normal: Were you really that great in the first place?

- SOPHIA ROSENBAUM Sophia Rosenbaum is an editor at The Associated Press based in New York.

Dear Normal, Everyone wants you back. It seems every day of this late-stage pandemic era is marked with someone wistfully talking about Normal: going back to you, starting new with you. It’s all about norms and normalcy. All about you.

As for me, I’m not so interested in Normal. I defer to Taylor Swift: We are never, ever, ever getting back together.

It felt normal to want Normal back at first. Last year, in those first months, daydreamin­g of you was a constant daily escape from all of the endless dire possibilit­ies. I wanted my life back. I wanted the control.

Complainin­g about commuting or being too busy was the norm in the B.C. (before covid) era.

But in those early days, the mundane was what we craved.

Packing into a subway car, grabbing an unplanned drink with a friend, hugging parents, striking up a conversati­on with a stranger.

And yet all of those Normal desires felt entirely unfathomab­le.

Would we ever be able to go to a crowded space? If we could, would we want to? The answer then felt like a definite no, especially with mortality and death constantly wailing in our ears.

The fear of the unknown was like a weighted blanket, but one that provided no comfort or warmth.

It was then that I craved my Normal most.

It wasn’t just me. Over the last year, our obsession with normalcy has shown up on Google, with the highest spike in searches around midApril 2020, when it seemed we might have been able to resume life as we once knew it.

Searching for normal went up again around the start of the school year in September and around the holidays in late November. But as the search trends show, these desires for normalcy ebb and flow, constantly fading and morphing.

The collective yearning for normalcy was panic-inducing early on, around the time President Donald Trump was vowing to open America by Easter 2020. So much had already changed. Yet it felt then that we might just go back to Normal with the snap of a finger.

By June, the pandemic’s staying power was more clear, and then-Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell was saying, “We cannot go right back to normal. We need new routines.”

Several months later, Vermont Gov. Phil Scott said, “We’ll begin to again turn the spigot once more and get back to whatever normal will be.”

By then, my brain was screaming: No way. Do others feel it, too, cringing every time new Normal, old Normal, any Normal is uttered? That to go back to you would mean we don’t question the ways things were, that we ignore the cracks that have been exposed, and that we forget the lessons — good and bad — that have been learned?

The experience of living through the yearlong aberration feels like the rapid-fire history verses of Billy Joel’s “We Didn’t Start the Fire” — condensed into one tumultuous year. The world shuts down, a racial reckoning, a divisive election. Loss after loss after loss. A previously unimaginab­le attack on the peaceful American transfer of power. A jittery inaugurati­on. Multiple vaccines — and a glimpse of a world beyond the pandemic.

After living through all that, going back to Normal feels more and more like returning to a lover we just can’t seem to leave.

B.C., adaptabili­ty sometimes felt a lot different.

It let us recover from jetlag and get used to a new time zone in days, sometimes hours. It let us move from the warming layered looks of winter to — unimaginab­ly — a spaghetti-strap dress when the heat of summer comes. It’s turning a new house into a home.

The past year has given adaptabili­ty a new meaning.

Many people have a new perspectiv­e of their capabiliti­es.

Impossible things became possible: Maintainin­g relationsh­ips online and enduring not seeing family and friends, or anyone, for extended periods of time.

A whole crop of young people finding grace after being robbed of moments big and small.

We got used to it. We normalized the unimaginab­le.

Now, in late-stage pandemic life, the echoes of this unimaginab­le life creep into my dreams, leaving me wandering around a packed place like Walt Disney World maskless, or being the only exposed face in a sea of people wearing a mask. “It’s normal,” my therapist told me. “Everyone is having these dreams.”

Well, great — more Normal I didn’t ask for.

The thing about normalcy is that it’s never universal. My Normal is not yours. And because of that, it perpetuate­s life’s inequaliti­es, many of which have been laid bare by the pandemic.

These are problems that don’t have easy solutions and may not even be solved in our lifetimes. Sure, many people may want things to change. But will they commit to being part of that? Or will it be just like a resolution made at the start of a new year, one that is broken within a month or two?

When we have a green light to start living life again, to enter a new Normal, what will we hold onto from this time? Will we really stay unbusy? Will we care more about work flexibilit­y, employee protection­s, access to medical coverage? Will anti-racism efforts, once at the forefront of the zeitgeist, be prioritize­d or forgotten? Will mass shootings become the exception rather than a painful rule?

Will there be any systemic change?

Not likely, “Pandemic” author Sonia Shah said on a recent episode of John Oliver’s “Last Week Tonight.”

“We usually go right back to business as usual as soon as the thing ends, as soon as we have a drug, as soon as we have a vaccine,” she said. “We don’t really do the fundamenta­l social change.”

We’ve already experience­d that. When life changed, there was a period of adjustment. It took a while to get used to it. Then we did.

That’s happening again right now in the United States as more people are vaccinated and infection rates decrease. Already, the pulls of Normal are tugging.

For all the growth and change and adaptation that has happened in the past year, it is hard to even define what a post-pandemic normalcy might mean. The dictionary defines it simply as conforming to a standard — usual, typical, or expected. Is that really what we want?

“If you are always trying to be normal, you will never know how amazing you can be,” Maya Angelou once said.

Without Normal, the path forward is more open, the opportunit­ies perhaps broader.

What if there’s a whole lot of amazing that stands to be lost if Normal returns?

What if, instead of banking on normalcy, we focused on that one-of-a-kind ability to adapt and evolve?

Maybe that’s the way forward, instead of simply reconcilin­g with what was and trying to recreate something that’s already had its day.

It’s too late, anyway. Remember, Normal: You and me, we already broke up.

When we have a green light to start living life again, to enter a new Normal, what will we hold onto from this time?

 ?? (File Photo/AP/Seth Wenig) ?? Pedestrian­s enjoy the sunny weather March 21 in the Brooklyn borough of New York.
(File Photo/AP/Seth Wenig) Pedestrian­s enjoy the sunny weather March 21 in the Brooklyn borough of New York.
 ?? (File Photo/AP/Shafkat Anowar) ?? A couple poses for a selfie March 9 as joggers pass by along Lake Michigan at Lakefront Trail in Chicago.
(File Photo/AP/Shafkat Anowar) A couple poses for a selfie March 9 as joggers pass by along Lake Michigan at Lakefront Trail in Chicago.
 ?? (File Photo/AP/Robert F. Bukaty) ?? Darmita Wilson (left) takes the temperatur­e of a volunteer arriving March 2 to help at a covid-19 mass vaccinatio­n site at the Portland Expo in Portland, Maine.
(File Photo/AP/Robert F. Bukaty) Darmita Wilson (left) takes the temperatur­e of a volunteer arriving March 2 to help at a covid-19 mass vaccinatio­n site at the Portland Expo in Portland, Maine.
 ?? (File Photo/AP/Eric Gay) ?? Kyree Kayoshi, his dog Kumi, and Miranda De Llano use circles marked for social distancing to help battle the covid-19 virus as they relax March 3 at the Pearl Brewery in San Antonio.
(File Photo/AP/Eric Gay) Kyree Kayoshi, his dog Kumi, and Miranda De Llano use circles marked for social distancing to help battle the covid-19 virus as they relax March 3 at the Pearl Brewery in San Antonio.
 ?? (File Photo/AP/Jae C. Hong) ?? Visitors wear face masks March 16 while watching a presentati­on in a theater at the Aquarium of the Pacific on its first day of opening to the public in Long Beach, Calif.
(File Photo/AP/Jae C. Hong) Visitors wear face masks March 16 while watching a presentati­on in a theater at the Aquarium of the Pacific on its first day of opening to the public in Long Beach, Calif.
 ?? (File Photo/AP/Steven Senne) ?? Mary Claire Lane, 86, (left), a resident at Hellenic Nursing and Rehabilita­tion Center in Canton, Mass., shares a hug March 18 with her daughter, Anne Darling of Attleboro, Mass., during a visit at the nursing home. Nursing homes and other elderly residences battered by covid-19 are easing lockdown-like restrictio­ns more than a year into the pandemic.
(File Photo/AP/Steven Senne) Mary Claire Lane, 86, (left), a resident at Hellenic Nursing and Rehabilita­tion Center in Canton, Mass., shares a hug March 18 with her daughter, Anne Darling of Attleboro, Mass., during a visit at the nursing home. Nursing homes and other elderly residences battered by covid-19 are easing lockdown-like restrictio­ns more than a year into the pandemic.
 ??  ?? A subway passenger uses a tissue March 19, 2020, to protect her hand while holding onto a pole as covid-19 concerns drive down ridership in New York.
(File Photo/AP/John Minchillo)
A subway passenger uses a tissue March 19, 2020, to protect her hand while holding onto a pole as covid-19 concerns drive down ridership in New York. (File Photo/AP/John Minchillo)

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