This was written a year ago. A lot has changed, but not as much as we had hoped, I think.
Today is April 1st. April fools day. Where did that come from? Is this a joke?
No, it’s not a joke. What’s funny about hundreds of thousands of people in hospitals, thousands dead? What’s funny about that? More people have died in the last few weeks than all the people who died in the World Trade Center bombing.
I have been holed up in my apartment now for nineteen days, alone, not seeing anyone, except when I go to the lobby to get food that was delivered and sometimes my mail. My mail has decreased in size and content–one or two envelopes, one with an advertisement and one, a bill. I haven’t gone out now for nineteen days, except for an occasional walk, so I don’t spend any money. And the doctors and dentists are all holed up in their own homes too so I don’t buy anything and I don’t see any doctors or dentists and I don’t have as many bills. That’s another joke.

What do I worry about? I am alone and that is not easy. But what is it like for couples or families locked up all together for who knows how long. One daughter’s business has gone crash. How will she and her husband deal with it? How can they help themselves? My grandson, Michael, lives and worked in Philadelphia. Now the business has folded, he is alone in Pennsylvania with no work and no family. Megan and Joe were to be married June 16th. That will be canceled, until next year. And they live in the hotbed of the crisis, Brooklyn, New York. She told me one thousand people live in their building when I asked about New York density.
And the same for Todd and Marissa my oldest grandson and his fiancée. They are all working at home and they never go out for anything.
Just for fun tonight Marian, Beth, John, and I had a four-way conference call. Marian and Beth are my daughters and John is Beth’s husband. We talked about everything, how we are, what we laugh at, what we see on television, what are we worried about. I have three children. They married and among them had six grandchildren, and we became a family of thirteen, including me. Three of them are now a couple, Justin is married to Jason, Megan is engaged to Joe, and Todd is engaged to Marissa. What started out as three plus me is now sixteen.
Isn’t that wonderful! We are a force, a group, a loving group and when the grandchildren have children we will be even more. More to be joyous and to think about during this “pandemic.”
What happened to me that is new? I talk more on the phone with my family, with people I have known for a long time, and with my brother. My home has become more than a home. It is a protective nest, a nest to bury my head in, to watch the news on a daily basis—or almost every hour. Sometimes I feel safe here. I hardly eat, I miss my ice-cream and I am losing weight. Why I am losing weight, I have no idea and I have to try and eat more, even without the ice-cream.
Some mornings I get up with extreme anxiety and I don’t know how to deal with it. Today I went out, I drove to the drugstore and waited outside for Monica to bring out my prescriptions. I never met Monica, but I couldn’t recognize her even if I knew her, she was wearing a mask, a gown, and gloves. How nice she was to leave her job, even for a few minutes, to do this for me. She said, “The pharmacy is very busy, I’ve never seen it so busy and I don’t know if we can do everything.”
This is the pandemic as they call it. It is also April Fool. When I grew up this first day in April was the day to plan and carry out all kinds of crazy jokes on family and friends. What a joke. Today, even April Fool is not funny.










