By: Danny Tow, Co Editor-in-Chief
We’re living in an unprecedented time. No one currently alive (outside of the few 115-year-olds here and there) was around the last time a pandemic such as this struck the world, and even so, modern medicine and technology have drastically changed the response from how the Spanish Flu was dealt with in 1919.
It’s difficult to be selfish during a time like this, especially when so many people worldwide are fighting for their lives. And yet, it’s hard to not think about everything that I, a high school senior, am missing: Senior Prom, Graduation, the final months spent with my friends before we head our separate ways for college. I won’t get to attend events I had eagerly waited months for. I won’t see a glorious senior prank pulled. I’m (likely) missing my last day of high school, my last sports season, and possibly even my last summer of adolescence.
Now, even as I list everything I’ve lost this semester, there have been a few bright sides to what’s happening. My entire family is together at home again, something that hasn’t happened since my older brothers went to college. I’ve been able to focus on my health much more, and taken steps to improve that part of myself. I’ve found a new appreciation for everything my parents have given me, and made sure to thank them for it. I’ve even managed to improve my skills in video games in the obviously limited time I’ve had at home to play.
While nothing will ever be able to replace the lost memories of this spring, I have realized that there’s very little I can do about it. And that’s OK. All I can do is follow the guidelines of health officials who know much more about what’s going on than me: stay at home, limit contact with others, keep clean, and wait. Wait until nature runs its course and this virus – as have all others before it – dies out, and we can return to normal, or whatever normal will be when this is done.
To the Class of 2020, and all others who have lost something because of the coronavirus, I ask you to remember this: Though nothing can make up for the loss of whatever you had planned, life goes on. You will still find happiness, sadness, and everything in between in your life, even though you missed out on fun events this year. We’re all going through this together, in our own separate ways. Everyone comes with their own origin story, and this is simply part of ours.