Lost and Found in a Pandemic

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Photo Jens Johnsson@pixels.com

What a mother 2020 is turning out to be, huh? Pandemic, mystery seeds from China, Tik Tok controversy, presidential election, political divides, and racial tensions. I don’t know about you, but I feel like I’ve been on a roller coaster ride for the last five months and not a short-lived, fun-filled ride. More one that makes you puke when the coaster rolls into the station.

Shortly after the pandemic began, New Jersey was inundated with COVID-19 cases and I found myself unexpectedly working from home. I was excited by the prospect of having three hours of commute time to use in more productive ways than sitting in NJ highway traffic. I was excited to be the kind of present mom that working full-time had disallowed. I even wrote a couple of articles about how great all of this would be and how there was a silver lining to lockdown. I was so funny. I had grand, grand plans — I would clean the pantries, stock up on essentials in case the worst happened. I would make homemade, nutritious meals, and serve them at the proper dinner hour instead of at 8:30 pm. I would edit and polish my manuscript and shop it out to agents. I was excited about this new work from home gig.

At first, I did do many of these things. I greeted the teens with hugs and fresh eggs and toast for breakfast, or whatever their little hearts desired. A few hours later, I would make a healthy lunch for them, as well, and then start planning dinner around 3:00 pm. I promised myself I would workout every day and use the extra time to run a few more miles, too. I stoked my passion for trail running again, by getting out for lunchtime runs. I baked multi-grain bread, and homemade croissants that I had been promising to make for years, and years. I folded loads and loads of laundry. I painted and redecorated our laundry room. I cleaned feverishly to keep the germs at bay that my husband, a nurse, brought home from the hospital. I plowed full-steam ahead.

One day, I found myself getting irritated with the teen’s needy requests for breakfast, then lunch, then dinner. Really, what am I doing? I felt resentment seeping into my little, perfect, pandemic world. I mean, they’re both teenagers old enough to take care of their own meals. Next, I found it hard to sleep. All the tasks I had required of myself poked at my psyche while I tried to sleep, coupled with worries about catching the virus and what that would mean for our family. During the day, I found myself getting teary for seemingly no reason and feeling anxious. Still, I continued to pressure myself to get all the things done, ignoring the fact that I was also working a full-time job in the middle of trying to play Susie Homemaker.

I was learning how to navigate working from home with new technology, finding workarounds for easy, everyday corporate tasks, keeping in touch with those who work for me, and trying to sustain and prove my value within my new workplace environment. In addition, I don’t have dedicated office space at home, but rather shared our living room with two teenagers who were remote learning and navigating their own set of social and educational changes. At first, we managed to successfully occupy the same space all day, day after day until later in the afternoons when they were done with school and I still had work to do that required attention to detail. I found myself annoyed at every turn from normal teenage happenings. Add to the mix, my husband working on the frontlines, and I was struggling — hard.

One day, an email popped up from my gynecologist, which read something along the lines of ‘these are stressful times, and many of us may be feeling anxiety and depression. We are prepared to handle these issues via telemedicine.” Feeling exceedingly desperate, I called to make an appointment. I am hard-pressed to take an Advil for a headache, so talking this step was difficult for me, but I knew something had to change. I had been down this road seven years ago when my mom passed away, so I knew the anxious-trying-to-keep-it-altogether feeling and I knew medication had helped before. Days prior to the telemedicine appointment I felt dread, defeat, but also hope that I could find a way to manage some of what I was experiencing. My gyn discussed some options and I decided a short-term, short-acting anti-anxiety medication was worth a go. I filled my prescription, initially not even telling my husband. I was too embarrassed. I was keeping it all together, after all.

Despite my reservations about taking it, the medication certainly helped. I could finally sleep and give myself a little breather from all that was weighing me down. In this clarity, I realized I could no longer keep up the frantic, pandemic pace, and unrealistic expectations I had set for myself. I needed to make some serious changes.

First off, I fired myself as breakfast cook, and let the kids handle that unless I truly had the time and would enjoy making it. I let them fend for themselves for lunch. I stopped trying to bake homemade goodies and complicated dinners every day. I stopped vacuuming and scrubbing and disinfecting every day and somedays let the laundry pile grow large. I have a plan to carve out some dedicated office space before school starts up again, as it looks like we’ll all be home toiling away on our computers this fall. I’ve given myself permission to embrace the fact that these are uncertain, often scary times. I have allowed myself to adapt gently without feeling like I have to get everything done and get it done now. There are still days when I find myself chasing that non-existent Susie-Homemaker-Work-from-home rock star, but I try to temper the feeling with a heavy dose of reality.

If you’re struggling, like I was, don’t hesitate to reach out to friends, family, or professionals to help sort through those feeling so you can find balance again. I wish I had done it sooner. It is important to remember these are unprecedented times, and there is no right way to tackle every feeling and every new adjustment/development this pandemic is tossing at us. I lost myself for a little while in the thick of the pandemic chaos, but I also found how to take care of me.

My Husband is a Nurse and I’m Scared

Man Wearing Blue Scrub Suit and Mask Sitting on Bench
Photo by: Jonathan Borba

My husband has been a dedicated nurse for 17 years.  Never in his career has he faced the life and death safety issues he now confronts every single day when he walks into the hospital to report for work.   Every day he is, as a friend who also works in healthcare describes it, playing ‘Virus Roulette’ because healthcare workers everywhere are working without the proper personal protective equipment (PPE) and protective measures in place.

My husband is a nurse and I’m scared – petrified, in fact.  I’m scared he will go to work, contract the virus and be the unlucky one who does not make it through.  At the age of 54, he is healthy, but he is not a superhero immune to the illness, nor are any of his coworkers.  I am scared he will bring it home to me and I will get sick and die. I am scared he will bring it home to our children, both teenagers, who will get sick and die. I am scared he will give it to his aging parents who are in the at-risk category. This is ONE nurse, in ONE family. Across the country there are hundreds of thousands of nurses, doctors, respiratory therapists, physical therapists, and other healthcare workers who are being unnecessarily put at risk during this crisis. Everywhere, everyone is preaching – Stay Home, Social Distancing, Flatten the Curve.  Why isn’t anyone screaming that these wonderful people trying to do their jobs are spiking the curve – unprotected, they are bringing the virus home to their families who in turn go to the grocery store for supplies, and those people then take it home to their families.  In addition, anyone entering the hospital a non-coronavirus related issue is also at risk because that friendly nurse coming to assist you may have likely been exposed to the virus due to lack of appropriate PPE.  So yes, we are all doing our part to flatten the curve, but there are gaping holes in our healthcare system through which the virus and all our efforts to stop it are pouring out.

My husband signed up to be a nurse to care for people, but not at the risk of his health or his family’s health. We are calling them heroes and soldiers in this fight against COVID-19, but they are being sent into battle without weapons or armor. Healthcare workers are only asking for – screaming for the proper protections so that they may do their jobs safely – for everyone involved.  They are not asking to be excused from their duties, but rather to continue to perform their jobs knowing they are supported and protected by their employers and by extension, our Country.  If our doctors, nurses and other healthcare workers all get sick or die, NO ONE will be there to take care of us or our loved ones. 

My husband and his colleagues feel strongly they have already been exposed to the illness due to the lack of preparedness on the part of hospital administration.  This same scenario is playing out in hospitals throughout the country and it is only getting worse day by day.  Meanwhile, healthcare workers are waiting for the virus to either hit them, their families or those they work alongside.  My husband wonders if each day when he walks into the hospital if it will be the dreadful day the viral load becomes too much and it will be his turn to get sick and possibly die.  Will he walk into work tomorrow to find one of his coworkers is on a ventilator? It’s all a crapshoot – Virus Roulette

He came home last night and when I reached to give him a hug and kiss hello, he pulled back, “I wouldn’t do that if I were you,” he said even though he had already changed out of his scrubs. He proceeded to immediately take a shower and throw his street clothes into the laundry.  His face is etched with worry as he and his coworker exchange war stories, and strategies for keeping themselves safe.  He anxiously watches and reads the news, watching the stories of unprepared hospitals in other states reaching capacities and healthcare workers doing their best to fight the war – like bringing a knife to a gunfight.

The other day, my husband felt compelled to reach out to the physician director of his hospital unit to express his discomfort in treating patients without the proper PPE, and in turn for reaching out, he was reprimanded by his supervisor. At every turn, healthcare workers are being told to hush – don’t speak out, keep your head down, and keep doing what you’re doing.  They are turning to private Facebook groups to discuss the situation.  They are afraid of speaking out for fear of losing their jobs.  They are concerned about themselves, their patients, their families.  They are concerned about everyone and carrying this heavy weight alone. Since when have we become a country who punishes people with the loss of their jobs if they bring up legitimate health and safety concerns?  We need to find a way to support these people if we expect our healthcare system to support us during this pandemic crisis.

Healthcare workers are dealing with:

  • Sharing, wiping down or reusing N95 masks because there are not enough to go around.
  • The use of surgical masks rather than N95 masks is resource driven rather than safety driven.
  • No direction, communication, or culpability from upper hospital management along with misinformation.
  • Scarcity of adequate PPE
  • The current hospital environment is creating a cesspool of coronavirus

Healthcare workers immediately need:

  • Appropriate Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)
    • N95s – as regular surgical masks do not provide sufficient airborne protection from the virus.
    • Gowns
    • Protective Face Shields
  • Hospital Executives
    • Reach out on worker’s behalf to secure the proper PPE
    • Provide a supportive environment for healthcare workers rather than threatening job loss when legitimate safety issues are broached.
    • Hazard Pay – some hospitals are hiring temporary nurses at double the rate of their regular                 employees.  Offer current healthcare workers hazard pay for working under duress.
    • Information – keep staff informed of the ever-changing situation and steps they are taking to address health and safety concerns.

My husband and I have had somber discussions about our wishes should either of us die. We have discussed him leaving his job, at the loss of half of our much-needed income.  We have discussed him making a stand with his employer and his union at the risk of losing his job.  He feels drawn to help, to do his job and not abandon his co-workers nor the patients who depend on him.  In NJ we are awaiting the storm.  In the next three weeks, we are expecting hospitals to be overflowing with patients.  My husband is bracing for the influx of patients at the hospital and he has already been reassigned to other areas of the hospital to assist with the crisis. 

Yes, my husband signed up to be a nurse – to care for and protect others – he did not sign up to do his job at the risk of his health, safety, and sanity and that of his family’s. Our healthcare workers are not expendable.

President Trump, are you listening?  Surgeon General, Dr. Jerome Adams, CDC Director, Robert Redfield, CEOs of Hospitals, Directors of Hospitals, Heads of Nursing Unions, are any of you listening?