“It’s hard to imagine life after COVID.” (Doug Ford, Premier of Ontario)
We are adaptable people, but it doesn’t happen automatically or overnight. In our pre- COVID life, we didn’t fully appreciate the importance of social interaction. Indeed we often would turn down an opportunity to have lunch or grab a coffee with a friend because we were too busy, too busy with mundane tasks or activities that could be done alone (and indeed have been over the past 8 months). What about those things that we said we would do one day when we weren’t too busy, things like seeing a concert in a park with a friend, dropping in to visit people on a whim, volunteering to help serve a meal to the homeless? Our ability to safely (or wisely) do all these r things and a myriad of others was taken away from us without warning last March. Will we appreciate and take advantage of social interaction once it is possible again or will we forget all about the pandemic and go back to our old habits. Can it ever be the same again? Do we want it to?
We are on a new road where people (not things or busy-ness) are important. The way our of this pandemic is to think of the other, to wear our masks to protect them. Our lives are very much dependant on how well we look out for the lives of others. The risk of spreading this virus can only be overcome by each person looking out for those with whom they come into contact. We are being asked daily to live by the Golden rule, doing for others what we would like to be done for us. AND IT IS HARD! There is no doubt about that!
Now that vaccines are arriving there is hope for an end to these restrictions. But do we really want to go back to what was before even if it should become safe to do so? What has this pandemic taught us of the Christian values of love, of caring for and thinking about the other, of gratitude for having enough for the day... Will we see a new society that places more value on social Interaction and human connections and less on how busy we are grappling for power or more money? I hope so.
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