This is the first day of the week for most of us after the day of rest on Sunday, the seventh day, in the Christian tradition. This week will have two “first” days.
Nancy and I will get our first Pfizer COVID-19 immunization shots Thursday morning.
I don’t think I’ve written much personally about this pandemic in all these months but as I went back and looked at the first few entries in what I call “The Journal of My Pandemic Year,” starting in March that it’s obvious this has been a tense time because of the uncertainty that has pervaded our lives—what do we dare do about relations with friends and relatives; when can we go without masks (never, when we‘re going to be indoors with others), a daily unspoken question about whether we might have picked up the virus somewhere and were soon to be sick, the whole business of—in effect—living only with ourselves day in and day out, week in and week out, month by month as we watched the calendar change and saw only chaos in our national leadership on this and other subjects. And now we’re only days away from becoming immune.
We’re not down to counting hours yet; that won’t come until we near the date for our second shot. But making it to that first shot after all this time, all this uncertainty, all these days with all spontaneity removed from life, all the game nights we missed playing Five Crowns, or Rummikub or Labyrinth, or Quiddler, or something else with friends; all of the fellowship from church and other events gone—-just getting here while 400,000 other Americans didn’t—
I suppose some folks might feel almost guilty that they made it and so many more did not. I don’t think we do. Asking, “Why me?” is, I think, a waste of time. Why NOT me? I don’t think the uncertainty of life has ever been more present, other than for a few minutes at a time, than it has been in these ten months when it has been part of every hour of our day.
And now I have “Pfizer shot 945 Cole Cty Health Dept 3400 Truman Blvd” written in my Day-Timer for next Thursday, February 4th.
All we have to do is just hang on for a few more days.
Today.
Tomorrow.
Wednesday.
Thursday morning, 9:45.
And then the other shot on the 25th.
That shot Thursday morning will be part of what truly will be the first day of the rest of our lives.