


I write this on the winter solstice, the day before the longest night of the year. It’s the perfect metaphor for 2020, which, for some of us, probably has seemed like the longest year of our lives. But for more than 318,000 Americans, and 1.69 million people worldwide, it has been, quite literally, the shortest.
I’d planned to write a letter to Santa Claus for this column, rattling off all the things I’d like under the tree. Maybe a matching sweatshirt and sweatpants set, the fourth I’ve gotten this year. Or a self-loading washing machine so I can stop trying to convince myself that plenty of other people have piles of dirty laundry higher than their tallest children.
Really, though, I don’t need anything, don’t want anything other than to make it to the other side of this horrible slog of a pandemic, and to bring as many of my family, friends and fellow countrymen as possible with me. But how?
The lists of people dying in Illinois and our suburbs keep lengthening. At the same time the first vaccine recipients are getting a twinkle of hope, our death rates continue to rise. There’s a continuation of the disorganization at our highest levels with regard to the vaccine. Millions of doses sit
And lest you wonder where the priorities are of the powerful people who claim to want to prevent that suffering, Congress just decided to bestow on Americans a check for $600, roughly the monthly rent I paid years ago for a Ravenswood studio apartment in which I could simultaneously put one hand on my bed and the other on the refrigerator.
In “findings that will surprise no one,”
I see folks dismissing the victims as being only the elderly, or only those in long-term care homes, or only those with conditions like diabetes that make them more high risk. Even if that were true,
But even those who don’t care about deaths, or hospitalizations, or the long-term effect of the virus cannot escape the pandemic’s impact. It’s in the very food we eat. The other day, I opened a package of breakfast sausage that had an expiration date a couple of weeks out. The second I did, a putrid smell leaked out. It’s not the first time that, during coronavirus, meat that isn’t technically expired has told my nose a different tale. How can the
At
You cannot escape coronavirus. You can pretend it doesn’t exist, hold your wedding and your holiday party and your play dates with your kids’ friends. But it’s lurking. It’s not going away. This year, we’re all dangling in the wind.
So, what should we do?
Instead of letting politics overwhelm our good nature, instead of buying or ignoring or hiding our way through the holidays, let’s reach over and help the person dangling next to us. Everyone needs some kind of boost.
Make a list not of what you want, but what you can give.
Donate to charity —
Also consider something closer to home. Write a letter to a nursing home resident. Tip big — like, stupid big — at your favorite restaurant. Dress up like an elf and wave to a high-risk neighbor kid who hasn’t been in school for a long time.
More, though, than all of this, forgive. Forgive your grouchy girlfriend, forgive your unreasonable father, forgive your annoying neighbor, forgive your damned self. Let’s hold each other up, as best we can, this holiday season.
It’s the only medicine, the only cure for coronavirus, that’s available to us all.
Georgia Garvey is the editor-in-chief of Tribune Publishing’s Pioneer Press publications.