Notes from a locked down country
Isabelle Roughol
Editorial strategy, product & leadership for news and mission-driven organisations | Journalist & public historian
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Despair and solace in complete isolation
NORMANDY – What do you write in times like these? First I was paralyzed. Living through history takes a moment to sink in. I kept waiting for the hidden cameras to pop out. “Haha, gotcha!” the producers would say, as I finished writing the pledge on my honor required to step outside my own door. Then I felt I could only publish something perfect, something commensurate with the circumstances. But nothing is, so I stayed quiet. That won’t work either.
I’ll just tell you what the last few days have been like for me. This won’t be literature, not even journalism, but at least it’s not another brand telling you how they’re disinfecting their stores. Maybe it’ll help you. Honestly, I’m writing it to help myself.
I last took public transit on March 11. That was the day I sat in my last café and gave my last hug to a friend, briefly, with my face turned away. I have since been in cars with two people, there was one worker in my house. Deliveries were dropped on the doorstep. I turned down three in-person meetings and a birthday in a pub. I shopped in a bakery once, with gloves on. I washed my hands often enough to crack the skin. I saw one landlord and three neighbors, from a distance. Two parents.
This is my rosary. Counting my few human contacts reminds me I was more careful than most. When Londoners around me were still going to pubs and plays, I hunkered down. The biggest risk was heading home. Concerned by the laissez-faire attitude in Downing Street, I joined my parents in Normandy rather than face weeks alone in London. The decision was an agony; it continues to be as I tick off the days the virus could be incubating and passing to them. A less soothing rosary.
I am luckier than most: I have company and a large garden, no children to mind, no business to run, no financial concerns. I am not a medical professional. For perspective, I even started a list of everyone who has it worse than me in France. I’m on page 4. Yet yesterday I gave in to despair. It wasn’t the first time and it won’t be the last. If one more person tells me Newton discovered gravity and Shakespeare wrote King Lear in isolation, I might virtually punch them. It’s not enough to stay sane in this madness, I have to create my best work, too? The two things I fear most are losing my loved ones and living in a cage. Both are becoming very real. You’ll excuse me if I’m not inspired.
Still, there is solace in small moments: muted laughter over family dinner, a glimpse of a child over the garden fence, storks nesting not far away. Wherever you are in the world, however far you are from making those same decisions, I hope it helps you to know there is a certain peace on the other side of options. I don’t expect to leave this house until May. All I can do now is wait. Everything else is out of my very clean hands.
Enough about me. I’d like this newsletter to look outward and provide solace in these trying times, however much it can with its author stuck among fields and dairy cows. What would you like to read that you’re not getting elsewhere?
This newsletter comes out via email a few days before reaching LinkedIn. You can subscribe here.
Consultor (Profesional independiente)
4 年I love ?the sunshine!
Lead Consultant/Chief Strategist @NanavilleMC - Delivering the Power of Visibility to Small Business Owners.
4 年Your writing is refreshing even as you share your hopes and despair during this period. Eventually, when people do emerge from lock downs imposed on them in different cities all over the world, it won't be surprising for some to have new personalities and mindsets. Hang in there and soon, I believe it will be over.
Bonjour c'est avec un plaisir de rejoindre la communauté en ce moment où le monde vit un calvaire qui n'est pas encore le plus fatal de l'histoire de l'humanité car on a eu plus grave que ?a. Résidant au Cameroun la situation est plus que tragique, déjà que nous sommes un pays envoie de développement on ne saurait parler d'un confinement total car le gouvernement n'a pas encore les moyens de cette politique. La majorité des camerounais vivent le jour le jour et sont pas salariés il faut sortir pour trouver de quoi manger. Personnellement je suis un networker en freelance) donc j'effectue plus les taches en ligne (commuty management, graphiste, rédacteur web, organisateur d’événements...) ce qui fait que j'ai peux travailler depuis ma maison. Par contre la réalité est que la majorité des clients ne sont pas encore habitués aux outils de l'information et de la communication. Pour les événement par exemple tout est en suspend pour le moment car le gouvernement pour le moment a proscrit les rassemblements de plus de 50 personnes. Et en Afrique on fait tout dans la masse passant par des obsèques, les baptêmes, anniversaires aux mariages et bien d'autres. C'est une gangrène qui touche la plus grande source d'investissement qui est l'Homme. Alors si l'Homme est à la fois le fabriquant et le consommateur qui va désormais produit puisque le personnel se voit réduit et qui va également consommer car les salaires ne passent plus le graphiste qui montait des flyers des panneaux pour individu ou sociétés est désormais voué à son propres échec. Les maux de cette pandémie sont énorme dont on ne saurait les étaler en un coup. Moi depuis 2 semaines je suis à la maisons car le local où se trouve mon bureau de prestation de service a été fermé par le propriétaire. Mon quotidien c'est mon PC la télévision, le téléphone, me balader sur la toile pour échanger et trouver des jobs à distance transcripteur ce que je m'efforce à faire avec atexto.com ou encore appen.com. Bonne journée à toutes et chacun bien que la majorité s'exprime en anglais ce que je comprends bien mais je préféré écrire en fran?ais; si oui le site propose la traduction en sa langue maternelle donc pas de problème. Cordialement Emmanuel SIFFO.
Thank you Isabelle, I've started looking forward to your well crafted words ever since I got a taste of them a few months ago. At the risk of getting punched, with another month ahead, I see a 'King Lear' lurking round the corner.
Absolvent?
4 年Same story, different country. I'm glad someone feels like me..