I remember those days:
at first, I was afraid to exit my apartment,
germs lurking everywhere - on the railings,
the doors, the laundry equipment.
We looked at each other in the CoOp,
eyes smiling above our masks,
staying carefully apart from each other,
protecting each other. Only
ten of us allowed in at a time,
in those early days.
I remember washing vegetables,
wiping down library books.
In our small hospital, exhausted doctors
and nurses tended the very ill.
All staff wore layers of protective gear.
They could not afford to get sick
with so many needing care.
Some staff rented motel rooms
so as not to carry germs home
to their loved ones.
We had two ambulances and
only one oxygen machine;
if it accompanied a patient out of town,
it was a long wait till it returned.
Dr. Bonnie Henry was our lifeline then,
with her calm instruction, her voice
on the news, enjoining us all
to be kind.
What I loved most: nation wide,
on the evening news, at 6 p.m.,
we watched people coming out
onto their balconies, all over the province,
banging pots to thank the medical staff
and service workers,
who had to walk into danger every day,
risking their own health,
worrying about their own families.
What I remember most, from those fearful times,
is kindness, and how dedicated everyone was
to caring for each other.
Ah, Sherry, you brought so many memories back. The washing of everything - food cans brought into the house, and yes - wiping down library books. But there were those moments / times of kindness in the midst of it all that managed to help get us through!
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ReplyDeleteThis is unique. While the rest of the world felt bullied by the hype and excess of precautions against a disease that most people couldn't tell whether they had or not...you felt...taken care of? I'm trying to understand. It's not easy.
PK
You bring all of these things back to mind: only 10 in the co-op, washing everything that came into the house, masks and protective gear, the banging of the pots! How well you capture them in this poem!
ReplyDeleteThe same scene everywhere! your poem evokes those memories. And kudos to the front line workers who risked their life to save us. I was extremely worried about my mother who could not take her vaccines because of her health condition. Even doctors were confused. What a time we have lived through! And we survived!
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