Change

Changing as I stay the same.

Friday, March 19, 2021

And the Second Shot Was Hope

2/19/2021

Today I had the privilege of receiving my second dose of the COVID-19 vaccine. As such, I arrived at Lincoln’s Pinnacle Bank Arena masked up, cheerful, and a little overwhelmed. I’m not used to being in big groups of people anymore. Being an immune-suppressed person living through a pandemic has changed both how I live and who I am.  

Short lines, long lines. Organization and disorganization. “Moderna or Pfizer?” again and again. Checklists on sanitized clipboards. A flash of cold on my deltoid, and a poke, and then a band-aid. My vaccination card--who knew a tiny piece of paper could be so precious?--handed back to me.

During my post-vaccine wait time, I sat on a metal chair in the back, the seat nearest the windows. My fifteen minutes passed. I stood and walked through the rows of chairs, eyes straight ahead. In the before times, I used to make eye contact with others. I used to smile and make small talk. I don’t do that these days. I was aware of how very alone I felt, even amongst so many people.

Someone caught the sleeve of my coat. I admittedly flinched and jerked back, on instinct. Because we don’t touch each other anymore, you see.

“Oh, I’m sorry,” said an old man in a dark green jacket. His scant hair was as white as the N-95 mask strapped across his face. “Didn’t mean to startle you.”

“It’s okay.” My hyperactivated body said it wasn’t, but my heart said it was. His brown eyes, all I could see on his face, were kind.

“I just wanted to tell you—you look so much like my wife.”

“Oh.” I paused. In the before times, I would’ve instinctively known how to be, how to act. How to make this person feel comfortable, even though he was the one to reach out to me. That’s just what I do.

Did. That’s what I did, before.

“Thank you,” I finally went with.

“She had big brown eyes and dark hair, like yours. I know I can’t see the rest of you—the damn masks—but you are like her. A beauty.”

“That’s very kind of you to say.”

Here, his eyes crinkled. Not a happy crinkle. “She died last year.”

And my own eyes must have given something away—did they dart back to the shot clinic?

“Oh, no, it wasn’t the virus. It was just her time. We’re old,” he said.

“I’m sorry about your wife,” I said. “You must miss her.”

“I do.” He shifted in his seat, pulling his baggy pant legs down further on his thin legs. “Anyway, I just couldn’t let you go without saying hello.”

“Well, hello,” I said, smiling under my mask. I might have reached out to shake his hand, if we did those things now.

“You have a good day, miss.”

And I opened my mouth to say, “you too,” but he wasn’t finished. And I’m glad he wasn’t finished.

“I hope you get to grow old, like my wife did. Maybe this shot will help you.”

It’s funny—when I think about times I’ve been very moved, I think about hour-long client sessions, entire books, meaningful conversations with friends. And now, I will always think about how these two sentences managed to melt my heart, one so long frozen with fear and isolation. 

For nearly a year, I’ve felt like I’ve been fighting for my right to live. As I’ve watched many people around me making no adjustments to their daily lives, I realized they didn’t care whether I lived or got sick or died—or, they may say they did, but were unwilling to make the sacrifices that backed up that statement. I’ve stopped feeling like other humans are inherently good. I’m not the self I was in the before, the self who believed in the power of others and who thought love would always, always win. I’ll probably never be her again.

And yet, when the stranger said to me, “I hope you live,” I cracked a little, and felt some of my old self seeping in through those jagged breaks. There was something special, something transformative, about this other human saying in real time, right to my face: I want life for you.

Maybe I’ll never be as hopeful or as willing to count on others as I was in the before. But maybe, also, there is still goodness in the world.

With tears in my eyes I said, “Thank you. You have no idea how much that means to me,” and me and the man said our goodbyes.

I showed up today for a COVID-19 vaccination, a serum that will reprogram my immune system to act differently in the face of the virus.

And I left with a different kind of instillation. Love and restored belief in serendipity and the most powerful, the most dangerous of the things, hope – those flow in my veins now, too.

I wonder which shot will help me more.