In my time as a flight attendant, there was the experience each flight of the physical effect that being airborne had on the body. I felt heavier, my fingers swelled so that I couldn’t wear my wedding rings and my ears would fill with pressure that often didn’t clear until well after landing. Although now I spend my days on the ground, I still experience the world through feeling and acknowledge the physical toll of the day-to-day turbulence of life. While serving the public in a grocery store, the volatile commotion in politics and the recent global pandemic has complicated all my interactions. I have lacked grace during this season and have felt weighed down by judgement and resentment of others’ views, of their posts on social media and of their silence, for seemingly not taking the pandemic seriously, for sending their kids to school sick, for refusing to seek testing for Covid-19, for choosing not to wear a mask. I judge myself and my actions the ...
My husband is a teacher in our town, placing us both in active roles interacting with our community. The atmosphere in the education system has certainly been a bumpy ride while navigating this pandemic and political landscape as well. Between our two points of exposure, and immediately after a weekend stay in the city for my husband’s 40 th Birthday, we were the first in our subsequent workplaces to contract Covid-19. My husband had a rapid onset and was fever-ridden for five days. I experienced a slower burn with symptoms of sore throat and headache for six days before fever hit, followed by body aches that combined, had me bedridden for eight days. Prior to contracting Covid-19, I hadn’t claimed a sick day from work in years. This virus took me out like no other sickness has before. Our kids stayed home from school for a month as we respected the isolation process, and I was heartbroken to miss my ...