Los Angeles Times

Realities clash in crisis, and it’s beyond surreal

A New Year’s dinner in Beverly Hills is juxtaposed with hospitals staggered by COVID- 19 surge

- FRANK SHYONG

The other day, I saw two headlines right next to each other on the L. A. Times website that made my head hurt.

The first was an up- close look at overwhelme­d hospitals around Southern California bracing for a post- Christmas wave of COVID cases, describing hospitals running out of oxygen they need to keep people alive, patients waiting up to eight hours in ambulances before entering the emergency rooms and doctors making impossible decisions about which terminally ill patients will receive care.

The second was a story about an indoor, “speakeasy”- style New Year’s dinner being organized by the Beverly Hills restaurant La Scala. The restaurant slipped invitation­s into takeout bags that encouraged diners to “keep this discreet, but tell all your friends.”

The articles seemed to describe worlds in direct contradict­ion. One story described a group of incredibly brave people facing down the terrifying, lethal reality of the pandemic.

The other was an unapologet­ic, even playful, attempt to escape from that reality. To the organizers of the dinner, the pandemic is occasion dining, so distant a threat that its terrors were

simply an edgy backdrop, the source of a fun “prohibitio­n” vibe.

“Surreal” doesn’t even begin to describe the feeling. It’s painful, enraging and deeply troubling to see all these realities, all interactin­g with one another in contradict­ory and cruel ways. At the end of the year I find myself with two questions: How did we get here, and where do we go from here?

I could argue that a schizophre­nic public response is the natural result of terribly constructe­d policies that seem designed primarily to protect politician­s from responsibi­lity and blame rather than keep people safe. It’s also true that the miscommuni­cation of the virus’ danger during the pandemic’s early stages was a fatal mistake that can’t be unmade. A chaotic political discourse made scientific reality a matter of ideology, and many of the ruinous policies that emerged catered to industries and corporatio­ns, showing us just how little value a human life is worth.

But in truth, I don’t believe that the behavior of institutio­ns and leaders and corporatio­ns are the only source of this growing feeling of surreality I’m struggling to describe. La Scala’s dinner organizers aren’t the only ones trying to escape the pandemic’s reality. Regional ICU availabili­ties are at zero, yet the malls were full of Christmas shoppers last week. COVID- 19 kills someone every 10 minutes in L. A. County, but at least there are NFL games on TV, and families are getting together.

Social media and their distorting algorithms have always allowed us to construct our own factual and social realities. But in a pandemic, when these realities contradict, people die. This is happening as the isolation and psychic toll of quarantine also force us to turn away and cultivate private happiness, to even ignore the pandemic, for a moment, if we are privileged enough to do so.

What’s unpreceden­ted about this crisis is the fact that our ability and desire to dissociate from our painful reality may have hurt our response to it. Things aren’t normal, yet we have all desperatel­y sought normality. We have tried to live life, even knowing that life creates disease vectors.

And it’s not just a contradict­ory factual reality we try to escape from — it’s also a contradict­ory moral reality.

A few days ago, as ICU capacities hit zero, I ordered from a Jamaican restaurant on Uber Eats, and a woman brought curry goat and red beans and rice to my door. I tipped well, but it didn’t ease the guilt that my laziness might have created disease vectors. There are multiple pandemics, and I live in the one where people are made comfortabl­e by paying others to take risks for them.

In one moral reality, what La Scala did is detestable and I can comfortabl­y condemn them. But I also can’t help but think of the desperatio­n of people running restaurant­s right now, how no help is coming, and how I cannot judge what that desperatio­n would make me do because I’ve never experience­d it.

Take my patronage of takeout places: I might be forcing some employees to continue working in unsafe conditions with this order, but I may also be helping to keep the restaurant­s afloat and generating essential income for a delivery driver.

Where do we go from here? As I’ve said before and will continue to say in this column, I don’t have all the answers. But in a world of multiple factual and moral realities, I think we have to learn to see one another with compound vision, and in every way we can, push the borders of our awareness beyond what’s comfortabl­e. We need to form and maintain our own connection­s to reality outside social media.

Our informatio­n ecosystem today hardly resembles an “informatio­n superhighw­ay” or “World Wide Web” — it’s more like an open world video game, where the player embodies a character that interacts with a vast, continuous environmen­t. The player believes they are experienci­ng a complete world, but in reality, the game renders the images, environmen­ts and textures only in the player’s limited field of view.

What you see is decided by lines of code, and no matter where you turn, the only part of the world that exists is what’s directly in front of your face.

 ?? I rfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? MEDICAL I NSTRUMENTS monitor a COVID- 19 patient in an intensive care unit at Arrowhead Regional Medical Center in Colton. The region’s health system is under immense strain because of the COVID- 19 surge.
I rfan Khan Los Angeles Times MEDICAL I NSTRUMENTS monitor a COVID- 19 patient in an intensive care unit at Arrowhead Regional Medical Center in Colton. The region’s health system is under immense strain because of the COVID- 19 surge.
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 ?? THE CITADEL OUTLETS Dania Maxwell Los Angeles Times ?? in Commerce were busy on Black Friday despite health off icials’ warnings.
THE CITADEL OUTLETS Dania Maxwell Los Angeles Times in Commerce were busy on Black Friday despite health off icials’ warnings.

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