Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Why our lives will never be the same

- By David Mekeel dmekeel@readingeag­le.com @dmekeel on Twitter

Nobody knew it would be quite like this.

On March, the coronaviru­s pandemic was already something familiar to most people in the region.

The first case of COVID-19 in Delco would be reported on March 6. Be infectious disease was already big news. It had hit other countries hard and was already spreading in other parts of the U.S. and PenGov. Tom Wolf soon ordered schools across the state to shut down for two weeks. The mantra of “wash your hands, clean and sanitize, socially distance” was already part of the collective conscience.

But just how bad things would get, how much all of our lives would change; that was a story yet to be told. We didn’t know then that we were standing on the precipice of a year unlike one any of us had experience­d before.

The past 12 months have been trying ones, ones filled with disappoint­ments and tragedies and countless frustratio­ns. They’ve also been filled with moments of hope, with strokes of innovation and acts of compassion.

The Delaware County Times is marking the one-year anniversar­y of the pandemic with with a series of stories about the impact it has had here.

And what an impact has had.

Thousands here been infected and have died.

That two-week statewide school shutdown? It was eventually extended

The past 12 months have been trying ones, ones filled with disappoint­ments and tragedies and countless frustratio­ns. They’ve also been filled with moments of hope, with strokes of innovation and acts of compassion.

it

have hundreds

to the end of the last school year. Some students still have not returned to classrooms, while others have found themselves with a mix of in-person and virtual learning.

The day after some of the first cases of COVID-19 were reported in the state, the governor ordered all non-life-sustaining businesses to shut down, a move that sent some scrambling to figure out how to work from home and others to the (virtual) unemployme­nt line.

And those who did end up turning to unemployme­nt were in for a nasty surprise. While more money was made available because of the pandemic, the staggering volume of people seeking benefits overwhelme­d the state’s

system and left people waiting for weeks or even months for the money they were owed.

Restaurant­s have taken a devastatin­g hit, at times barred from allowing indoor dining and forced to rely on takeout service to sustain themselves or to shut their doors.

People lost birthday parties and vacations and proms and a chance to watch sports in packed stadiums and arenas or listen to live music. High school graduation­s were held via computer screens or with graduates tucked inside cars in parking lots.

Some missed out on the chance to be with dying loved ones or even to properly celebrate their lives at funerals.

Isolation and fear cultivated

concerns about mental health. Experts worried about exploding drug and alcohol abuse and warned of a potential increase in suicide rates.

Other experts sent out warning flares for a flood of homelessne­ss, and the thousands out of work fell behind on rent payments or mortgages.

And of course, we’ve all gotten used to grabbing a face mask before we head out the door.

There was a lot of darkness, a lot of struggles. But there were also rays of light.

Like the countless people who stepped up to help their neighbors, who provided much-needed meals to kids or seniors.

There was a group of creators who banded together to help fill a gap by 3D printing face shields for medical workers and emergency responders.

And all those struggles figuring out how to work from home? A lot of people figured it out, opening up a whole new array of possibilit­ies for what certain jobs can look like in the future.

While there are ongoing challenges in the world of education, teachers and administra­tors worked tirelessly to provide the best education they could in next-to-impossible circumstan­ces.

They got virtual learning programs up and running, they handed out grab-and-go meals to make sure students didn’t go hungry, they plotted and planned and adapted to find ways to safely return kids to classrooms.

Scientists performed miraculous­ly, crafting a vaccine in record time that will, hopefully, help to finally put COVID-19 in our rearview mirror.

And, of course, most of us learned how to use Zoom. Sort of.

The past 12 months haven’t been what any of us expected, and they certainly haven’t been what anyone wanted. But they happened. COVID-19 happened.

And we’ve all just been trying to wade through it the best we can.

Hopefully, the next 12 months will be different. Hopefully, they’ll be better.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Pennsylvan­ia, Gov. Tom Wolf toured a Rite-Aid pharmacy in Steelton, Pa., that is administer­ing COVID-19vaccinat­ions on March 5.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Pennsylvan­ia, Gov. Tom Wolf toured a Rite-Aid pharmacy in Steelton, Pa., that is administer­ing COVID-19vaccinat­ions on March 5.
 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? People sit in a waiting area after receiving a COVID-19 vaccine at the FEMA Community Vaccinatio­n Center in Center City Philadelph­ia on March 2.
ASSOCIATED PRESS People sit in a waiting area after receiving a COVID-19 vaccine at the FEMA Community Vaccinatio­n Center in Center City Philadelph­ia on March 2.

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