Here is the difficulty for me, and maybe also for you: despite all of what’s going on, life continues to exist. It goes on. It doesn’t need my approval to do so, or yours, and will brook no interpolations or injunctions. Life progresses. It does so for us, and it does so for others, and as such, those others often need us. We have dependents. We have pets. We have spouses. We have friends and family and we have that guy we locked in our cellar and we have ourselves, and all of them need us in some way. They need us to be there, to be strong, and we need them to be strong, too.
But we’re not strong, not right now.
We’re all hobbling about on a pair of broken legs, emotionally speaking.
We’re operating, at best, at half-past half-ass. I mean, okay, sure, I know some people who are like, WOWZA I’M REALLY GETTING SHIT DONE, I’M SUPER PRODUCTIVE, I JUST WROTE A BOOK AND CLEANED MY HOUSE TIP TO TAINT AND BOY HOWDY I’M LIVING MY BEST QUARANTIMES, BABY, but those people are
a) sociopaths
b) lying
or c) unaware that they are repressing some grave emotional reckoning that is about to rise up on them like a tsunami made of angry ghosts and wreckst themselves before they checkst themselves.
Assuming you’re not one of those people, you are instead a person who feels a little like Frodo after he was stabbed by the Morgul blade — you’re not dead, not exactly, but you’re passing into some spectral realm, and all you really want right now is for some brave elf lady to ride up and take you to a mythical city where you can just get some goddamn rest. And then you can get up and go home. Except, even after that you can’t get up and go home because you have a burden to carry. You have that fucking goddamn ring. And other people are looking to you to carry it, even though you are clearly not at your best. Hell, other people are hoping you’re the brave elf lady who will carry them across a river to safety. And you’re hoping they’re the brave elf lady and — well, you get the point, I guess. The shit’s not over even when it’s over. Life goes on. So does the burden.
The question is, for me and also for you, how do you balance it? How do you be there for others, and be there for yourself, when you barely feel like you’re there at all?
I wanna be upfront: I don’t know the answer to this. It’s a fucking riddle to me, too.
I’m trying to suss it out, though. I know that as a writer — and I suspect a lot of other creatives are aware of this balancing act — I have to constantly find the sweet spot between self-care and bullshit excuses. In other words, there’s this interstitial realm where I am both being kind to myself and recognizing my limits while also, in recognizing those limits, I push myself to them, and sometimes beyond them when it is most appropriate. It’s like running: I run a gentle minimum of mileage but also know that whenever possible I am to push past that minimum, often by a considerable amount if I’m up for it. It’s this weird balancing act of knowing when to be good to yourself and knowing when you’re being too good, so good that you have actually made it bad. (To explain this in a different way, you should treat yourself to ice cream once in a while, but you can’t make it breakfast, lunch, dinner, or I’m pretty sure you’ll just die. A bloated corpse, leaking melted vanilla.)
(There are worse ways to go, though, I guess.)
And so I wonder if there’s a lesson in that, here. Some general awareness of knowing that I can’t half-ass it, but I also will definitely not be able to whole-ass it, much as I want to. Of knowing that for myself and others I have to be both kind in every direction, but also know when to push on myself to get done what needs doing. Let’s call it “three-quarter-assing it.” Like, no way I’m at a hundred percent, but people also need me to be better than 50%, so here I am, pushing when I can push, and hoping that gentleness and understanding will get us the rest of the way. It’s like my kid with distance learning. No fucking way is he going to be operating at top effectiveness because this is nowhere near normal for him — it’s like he’s learning inside a fishbowl. This shit doesn’t even feel real half the time. As if it’s all some manner of bizarre simulation.
So, I don’t have any advice. Except to be gentle on yourself and everyone, but also to be there in whatever capacity you can be. We don’t simply lay supine upon the ground waiting for rain to fill our mouths and float us down the drain to the land of the sewer clowns, but we also don’t get up and run. We hobble, we walk, we heal. We help others do the same and hope they do that for us, too.
I say this feels like a slow-motion 9/11, but 9/11 at least gave us the grace to have it happen and then go through the stages of grief and mourning. Here we are, trapped in them, not really progressing through them but violently lurching from one to another and back to the beginning. We’ve no idea how this ends, we just keep going. It ends someday, somehow, but what day, and what how?
Onward, onward, ever onward.
None of this is an answer, I realize. This probably doesn’t help. But it’s the challenge for me right now, and maybe it’s the challenge for you, too. I think we just have to recalibrate our expectations while… still having expectations. Because having expectations is, in its strange way, a form of optimism and hope, isn’t it? That anyone will need anything from us now or ever is recognition that the world still exists, that life goes on, and that while normal has gone all fucky, we are humans with needs who are interspersed with other humans who have needs. Things have changed. But we’re still here.
And I’m glad you’re here.
All of you.
Except you, in the back row. You know who you are. Gordon.
Here now, are my dogs, because if I can give you nothing, I at least have them to parade about.
Margo Karolyi says:
No one has written more eloquently about this pandemic shit than you. Thank you, from the bottom of my barely beating heart. You’re a beacon of hope in what feels like a hopeless world. We need more people speaking the truth just this way.
April 16, 2020 — 10:24 AM
Marsha Seas says:
Thank you, Chuck. I just love you. That is all. <3
April 16, 2020 — 10:27 AM
killerpuppytails says:
Holy hell. Absolutely fucking yes.
April 16, 2020 — 10:27 AM
Michelle says:
It helps…does it ever help. In fact it’s pretty much the only thing that makes any sense at all in this maelstrom of merde. Thank you.
April 16, 2020 — 10:30 AM
Jessie Voigts says:
Thank you. Yesterday was hard. Today will be better. I needed to read this!
April 16, 2020 — 10:31 AM
Gordon says:
Thank you, Chuck Wendig for the transparency. Now, I need to reconnect with my family. We are not alone. Stay healthy and safe.
April 16, 2020 — 10:35 AM
Taylor Delani says:
Thanks TerribleMinds guy, I totes resonate with you.
April 16, 2020 — 10:38 AM
Denise Willson says:
By writing this, Chuck, you are THERE for many. Me included. Thank you for that.
April 16, 2020 — 10:40 AM
Steve Fahnestalk says:
Chuck, I can always count on you for a chuck-le. Well said, and thanks. It is important that we try to keep others’ spirits up–especially when we have a bully pulpit, as you do. So keep doing you, and we’ll keep laughing and taking in your messages subliminally.
April 16, 2020 — 10:42 AM
Lynda says:
It absolutely helps. You’ve captured it perfectly, called out Gordon–who totally deserves it–and made me feel less alone when, well, we are in fact all alone, together. Please keep it coming.
April 16, 2020 — 10:45 AM
Sarah Terentiev says:
Slow motion 9/11 where the axe is hovering over all of our heads for not only emotional damage but physical danger as well.
I’ve had Covid-19, finally getting better but it’s so slow. Up and down and up and down.
Have to say coming out of it… doesn’t change the surreal-ness of any of it. The only difference is the fear. While I was sick the fear was crippling, and I had a relatively mild case. Mild meaning completely flattened in lung pain with inhalers etc… but I was very lucky.
Now I’m still afraid but it’s less and my fear tolerance has increased so this feels like a relief, even as I’m afraid for my loved ones and everyone in general. I’m worried fear and anxiety may become ingrained in many of us and become a chronic leftover Covid-19 gift that keeps on giving. Like how many of us were just completely knocked off course by 9/11 even when we didn’t personally know anyone involved.
I thought the feeling of unreality and odd muffled numbness would get better after I’d had it. But I’m still moving slow through fog. I don’t want anyone else to be stuck in this morass with me, but it helps to hear y’all out there anyways.
April 16, 2020 — 10:52 AM
Crafty says:
Thank you! I needed your words today.
April 16, 2020 — 10:53 AM
Jeanne Felfe says:
Thank you for describing what I couldn’t name. It’s like being in a slow-motion wreck where you know it’s coming, you know it’s going to hurt, but it just gets slower and slower to the point of flipping the pages in an old-timey cartoon, one page at a time.
April 16, 2020 — 10:56 AM
Sibohemian says:
Brilliant! Thank you for putting into words how I’ve been feeling for the last… humm, I don’t even know anymore… since I was born?
April 16, 2020 — 10:59 AM
Rebecca Douglass says:
What’s bugging me most is that this isn’t changing my life that much. I never go out anyway (okay, I do usually buy groceries several times a week), and we’re retired so there’s no problem about work or whatever. Yet… I can’t focus. My attention span for anything but cruising the webs for funny memes is about ten seconds. And I’m about 3 weeks behind the rest of you in this stuff, because we were abroad when the shit hit the fan (yeah, getting home took a while, but in retrospect, and compared to others, we had it easy).
I’ll be trying for 3/4-ass. It’s a good target.
April 16, 2020 — 10:59 AM
annwjwhite says:
I feel angry and betrayed. Angry, betrayed and everyone thinks I’m a fucking elf ready to make the world better for them. I’m tired. Productivity is down. At least my house is a tad bit cleaner than it was. Anyway, I dreamed the following, it just felt so true:
She dreams in black and white, a classic film noire,
Her pace steady, the cane in one hand,
A shopping bag of responsibility pulled behind
In a wire basket to alleviate the weight of years.
She dreams of herself at twenty-two; young, thin,
Full of hope and ambition. She was a super hero then.
A trail of dreams followed her toddlers who blossomed
Like rainbows, making dinners, dresses, and dreams.
The young woman holds a pen in one hand, paper
Clutched in her pocket, companioned with tissues,
And she spins, turns, dances in the wind. Ballet and
Music were her dreams. To dance, to write, to be…
Snorting, the old woman turns back to the here and now.
A voice calls her, like the voices have always called her,
“Get me a…” “Clean this mess.” “You have to be…”
Demands that have haunted her existence. Her pen…
Once upon a time, she had the energy to face her masters
Knowing what was expected, socially responsible.
She would dream in her elder years of the art to be,
Or not to be, as time continued. But someday…
Turning the corner, she enters her yard where
Laundry flies like flags upon a battleship.
She sees the clouds mounding, twisting with
Black and knows she is like one of these.
In her anger, she seizes a pen to write, but the old
Man’s voice demands lunch, demands a clean shirt,
Demands and demands her identity focus solely
Upon him, and the words she would have written are dashed.
Cobblestones, bricks, the black of asphalt cringe
As her younger self returns to view, flying a kite
In a sea of words. It is too much to see the hope,
To know it will never breathe, never flower.
She steps in front of the girl, stopping her, warning,
That hope will never liberate her, never feed her soul.
She pushes the pen into the soul of the younger,
The ink streaming out, black and murky, killing the light.
“It is better to never hope,” she tells the dying memory.
“Sadly, it is better not to dream for dreams lie and life
Lies.” The girl lies at her feet, tears streak from her eyes.
“One has a duty to others, but never to herself.”
She takes down the laundry, folds it neatly. Enters the house
With the wire basket of responsibilities to be unpacked…
Keep writing, Chuck. You are my therapist on retainer (please don’t send a bill, I’m broke.)
April 16, 2020 — 11:01 AM
Amarand says:
I think, in its simplest terms, taking care of yourself first, so you can better take care of others, is a useful platitude. Your Ring is your art, your words. I don’t think any reasonable person expects you (specifically) to share a blog post every day, but we appreciate it whenever you have the brain spark inspiration to do so. The picture at the top of this post is mind-blowing, and I’ve been a photographer for decades! So…in your words and pictures, you inspire. You’re a funny guy, and you attract a certain type of intelligent bookish fan. Good people with good hearts. We don’t have any direction coming from our “leaders.” So we look toward the people we trust for guidance. Guidance for life, art, how to deal with this mess, how to feed that guy shackled in our basement, and so many other things! So yeah, because you’re good at getting complex concepts across in easy to digest and funny words, you’ve got a following of wonderful people. I’m sure knowing that you have people out here in the real world happily reading your blog posts is a good thing for you. I don’t think any of us expect/demand you to post with a certain frequency. On the other hand, when I see an email pop up letting me know there’s a new post on your blog, I take the time to read it. Your blog posts are the opposite of noise, and there’s a LOT of noise out there right now. I know there are executive news/book services that take big books on self-help or whatever, and compress them down into easy to digest snippets. You seem to do the same thing (randomly/topically) for free. Which is cool. I always end up coming away from reading your blog posts feeling like I learned something, and also, maybe less angry? Less upset? Because I know that as long as there are good people out there, fighting the good fight, there’s hope? Anyway…thanks for these posts. I, personally, really appreciate them!
April 16, 2020 — 11:01 AM
thelma scudi says:
half past half assed. oh, chuck! thank you
April 16, 2020 — 11:11 AM
Lindsay says:
OH MY GOD THISE DOGGIES ARE SO CUTE
April 16, 2020 — 11:17 AM
Mark Kirby says:
Nice and I feel you. This helps me because I’m a writer among other things and I thought “Great the jazz club is closed, I’ll eat rice and beans and write everyday all day.” Except not. I’ve written more than I have in years but I fall short. Some days I just watch videos of old boxing matches and football games, escaping into my youthful past.Then I kick in with some great writing work. You said it so well. Thanks, Love Kirby
April 16, 2020 — 11:22 AM
Christine Chrisman says:
Thanks Chuck. Thank you very much. I can definitely three quarter ass it. I’m not up to 100% and sometimes like like 10%. But I think I can average 3/4. ❤️
April 16, 2020 — 11:26 AM
ina says:
thanks chuck — for sharing what a lot of people needed to hear — and for the dogs
April 16, 2020 — 11:50 AM
Denise McInerney says:
“A slow-motion 911” – yes! And this also, “…it’s like he’s learning inside a fishbowl.” PERFECTLY describes how we’re living these days. Due to husband’s multiple health vulnerabilities, we’ve been self-quarantined since March 15, swimming around in our own little bowl and watching the outside world pass by the glass. Fortunately, hubby can telework, while I troll the internet for food sources and inspiration/solace like TerribleMinds (thank you, Chuck)! Occasionally we leap out of our bowl to go walk the dogs, mow the lawn or rip up weeds, which are apparently rapidly advancing their sinister plot to take over the world while we’re anxiously looking elsewhere. And whenever someone drops a food delivery into our bowl–YAY! Feeding frenzy! Never in a million years did I think I’d get so excited over a shiny new package of Mint Oreos. Has anyone else noticed there must be way fewer cookies in these pull-tab packages, because I swear, they’re emptying out disturbingly fast!
April 16, 2020 — 12:02 PM
Michelle says:
I keep waiting for some kind of emotional plateau in all this. Like some day at some point I’ll even out. But it’s becoming apparent that life right now is just swinging between joking about everything to near-crippling anxiety to swearing I’ll never get out of bed until this is all over and back to joking about it because cynical laughter is all I have some days. I’m meeting article deadlines, I’m getting a novel edited, I finished the main game in that 3D platformer. I think of it as functional, but not optimal. As long as I can stay firmly in the realm of functional, I’ll consider it a win.
April 16, 2020 — 12:03 PM
Patrick says:
I am starting to better understand the concept of Purgatory
April 16, 2020 — 12:03 PM
J.F. Constantine says:
Love, love, love you Chuck!! And those precious dogs! Dear Dog, my blood pressure dropped at least 10 points on the dog photos alone. 😉
April 16, 2020 — 12:04 PM
Lynne says:
I love you Chuck, dearly, but nobody is living their “best quarantine life”, and I wish we would stop shitting on each other just because someone else’s way of dealing makes us feel weird or sad or inadequate. This isn’t easy for anyone, even the people who are busying themselves. It doesn’t mean they’re sociopaths, or lying, or even in denial, it means this is their way of processing an unprecedented catastrophe. Some binge Netflix, some curl in the fetal position and drink toner ink. Some get busy. Survival instincts are one size fits all.
April 16, 2020 — 12:17 PM
Lynne says:
That should read “…are not one side fits all.”
April 16, 2020 — 12:18 PM
terribleminds says:
Not saying anyone should be shamed for being busy. I’m just saying the people who are like WOW THIS IS GREAT are maybe lying, or sociopaths.
April 16, 2020 — 12:46 PM
Lynne says:
Size! Jesus jump in a bucket…
April 16, 2020 — 12:19 PM
Laura Petersen says:
I’m glad you’re out there, Chuck. It’s comforting to know a like-minded soul is working hard to process this while staying sane (to some degree—you really should let the guy in your basement out).
April 16, 2020 — 12:22 PM
Tanya Stewart says:
Thank you, Chuck, for your glimmer of light in this foggy murk—-here’s my little flickering candle, glimmering back to you.
April 16, 2020 — 12:37 PM
Andrew Fairchild says:
Thank you man! For telling it like it is, and for having a good piece of advice: TRY! Try even when you don’t think you can, and be gentle with yourself. If more people can learn to want balance we will get through this better.
April 16, 2020 — 1:50 PM
Jeny says:
Thank you – this was what I needed to hear today.
April 16, 2020 — 4:20 PM
Tamlyn Corr says:
Like a superb hammer strike to the nail. Thank you for clarifying my thoughts and feelings.
April 16, 2020 — 4:31 PM
paigevest says:
Goals, goals, yes. I have to have goals to keep me going, otherwise I flounder, I stumble, I start thinking really bad things and I lose hope. So thank you for this reminder.
April 16, 2020 — 5:10 PM
Heather Ormsby says:
To continue the Tolkien theme, it’s like traveling on food through Mirkwood. Everything is the same every day and there is no end in sight. So depressing. But we can climb a tree once in a while and feel the breeze and see the gray butterflies.
April 16, 2020 — 5:23 PM
Wulfie says:
Yes, Heather! That’s right. That’s where I’m at…now if I could just reach that first branch on the tree……
April 17, 2020 — 1:10 PM
victoriagrimalkin says:
Seems silly to add another comment to all these, but I really enjoyed your words. Even though my spouse and I spend all our time together surrounded by pine trees and acreage in solitude, the fact that we are staying home even more than usual has not made me more productive. My art work has stagnated, and I find a reason to avoid dusting my curio cabinet or my geodes and minerals every day. I guess I am a sociopath with a penchant for entropy.
April 16, 2020 — 5:24 PM
Terry Hickman says:
I’m busy earning my PhD in Flailing. Getting pretty good at it, too. And I am one of the lucky ones: I’m retired, on a frugal income, but I own my house and my car outright, my city has grocery delivery services, and the Black Tide has only just started to chew at a couple of places in our state – my city being one of them. I’ve self-isolated since March 5th (my friends thought I was nuts but few people ever told Cassandra she was right and they should have listened to her) and I worry about them and my family so far away, and in the epicenter of one of the biggest case populations in the country. Your description of the flailing is comforting, I daily cycle through feeling OK, then like a worthless slug, then just like my normal introverted life … I fear we’re in for a long slog but as with the grief process, I have a sense that if I can ride those undulating waves of feelings I’ll be okay in the end. Thanks for your sharing. We are all in this together even though we’re all apart.
April 16, 2020 — 5:47 PM
tcinla says:
For me this is a helluva time. Being both of us are older and “at risk” (me, a modest COPD – her, Parkinson’s), the plan was from the first report to go get the necessaries (done before the general panic set in) and stay out of the way. I was telling myself “Thank goodness writing is a job best done at home, alone,” and I was going to finish the current book I’m contracted for.
Except reality came busting through the door and tossed the good plans out the window. She fell down on March 3 and couldn’t get up. The X-ray at the ER revealed a fractured hip and femur. The next day she got a nice shiny steel replacement, and 20 days in a nursing home I couldn’t go visit after Day 2 because they shut it down for the patients’ safety. She’s been home for 3 weeks now, we get 2 physical therapy sessions a week and I am the therapist the other 5. As well as chief cook and nursing assistant.
As well as solo Person Responsible For Keeping The Roof Overhead. Another thank goodness is, if you’re into the topic you’re writing on, you can do it just about any time, and going back to a story where the people in it can at least see the enemy they’re shooting back at is emotionally more satisfying than contemplating the plague. I find that it isn’t solitude I enjoy, though I thought I always did. It was the *voluntary* solitude – the solitude that could be broken by going out and doing Other Things at the time of my choice. None of that.
I am completing the book – despite all the caregiving, even more rapidly than my usual rapid work. And my publisher is happy to get the next book proposal early. Not because I want to say how productive I’m being, what an organized writer I have finally become. Nope. It’s all down to this: how do you keep food in the refrigerator and the lights on? Write.
Fortunately the current topic and the one to come take me away from this damn hole we’re in for the times I’m “there.”
April 16, 2020 — 6:43 PM
Gary says:
(scoots away from Gordon) Oof….Happy to be here reading your words, Chuck. I have faith it can only get better, not soon enough though unfortunately. I quote Alfred. “Endure, Mr. Wayne.” Love you long time, all of you.
April 16, 2020 — 7:07 PM
angieoakley1 says:
Hey Chuck
Please allow me to remind you that before all this, what for you was ‘normal’ looked like warp speed to the rest of us marvelling at your capacity for fantastic writing, writing and more writing, while taking care of other writers and your family, all the while fighting for a new world order of goodness and decency. All done with your signature excoriating wordsmithery.
Give yourself a minute. Look backwards. The view is good, and will remind you that it’s all still there and will come back. I was ‘inspired to resurrect my musty dusty blog to post something to that effect. It’s at https://spryandretiring.wordpress.com look for ‘Isolation Consolation’ or don’t. I just needed to tell you from 10,000 miles away that we need you back full-arsed when life resumes.
April 16, 2020 — 8:15 PM
Deborah Makarios says:
O Wanderers in the shadowed land,
Despair not! For though dark they stand
All woods there be must end at last
And see the open sun go past:
The setting sun, the rising sun,
The day’s end, or the day begun,
For east or west all woods must fail.
The Second Great Command is to love others as you love yourself. The way I see it, that includes showing yourself the grace you show to others, i.e. if you wouldn’t be an arsehole to others in your situation, don’t be an arsehole to yourself either.
April 16, 2020 — 9:21 PM
JD says:
Thanks for this post, Chuck. Reflects how I’m feeling.
April 16, 2020 — 10:20 PM
David Lott says:
Oh, man. Been years since I’ve perused your blog Chuck. And I needed this. Right now.
Thanks.
April 17, 2020 — 12:59 AM
disgruntledpeony says:
In the month of February, I’d developed a habit of writing during my twins’ naptimes. I still… sort of do that sometimes? When I can. I’d been planning to work on my novel-in-progress and some other larger projects during the month of April, but that… isn’t going great, so I’ve been defaulting back on short stories, which works better for me right now.
Some days, I’m not up for writing. At one point, I took a full week off. But I still have that time, so I’m trying to use it in ways that help me feel better. Sometimes, writing helps. Sometimes it doesn’t. I’m just doing my best to roll with the punches and stay sane right now.
April 17, 2020 — 10:52 AM
Penquillity says:
I am sewing masks because it’s something I can do without too much creative energy, which is not flowing well these days.
I am listening to the handyman talk with my husband from the other side of the house because hubster let him in, shook hands with him, then walked him to the repair job in my sewing room – no masks on either of them, no sanitizing wipes, definitely no social distancing! I am mentally preparing to wipe everything down when this guy leaves, then firmly remind hubster about the risks surrounding pandemic responses or lack thereof!
April 17, 2020 — 12:49 PM
Steph says:
I’ve been binge watching Supernatural for almost a month now. I think it’s time to move on to Good Omens. If only for the subtext of; In a time of doubt and confusion, even the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse rely on each other for emotional support…including the Demon puppy.
April 17, 2020 — 12:53 PM
Wulfie says:
A slow mo 9/11 is right.
And yes, up then down then twirling all around just trying to maintain some sort of balance….even if it’s a wobbly off-kilter drunken balance. Sometimes just trying is all we can manage. Other times there’s that ability to push for more even if it’s one step. I walked (paced?) back and forth on the porch today and, numb as that sounds, that was a big deal for me.
Thank you for your words. You help a lot of us. Be well. Breathe. Don’t forget to feed the guy in the cellar once in a while.
April 17, 2020 — 1:16 PM
Nita Sweeney, Author says:
Thank you so much. I made a stab at something similar a few weeks ago, but you captured it much more eloquently. I appreciate your authentic, crazy, wise self always, but especially right now. https://nitasweeney.com/2020/04/guilt-in-the-time-of-covid19-write-now-columbus-april-2020/
April 18, 2020 — 4:48 PM
Formerly just Craig says:
Thank you, I want to be able to do so much more and It just won’t fly. My business is just a banana peal from slipping into a grave. Meanwhile I tried to do good and am left quarantined because of it.
I have held a certificate as a first responder for thirty some years. I offered my help to the local EOC, they agreed. They also had no clue. Their job is to mitigate hurricane disasters.
After getting a few sick people into a hospital I coughed. That was the end of that, though it is high pollen season here.and my sinuses suck.
Now I can only sit at home and watch as my place in the testing queue falls way down, past the point where a test matters. It scares me that I might be a carrier of a disease that I can pass along.
That is where everyone is failing, we can not know for sure if we are clean. 0.1 percent of our society being tested will never tell us where we are, as far as the road to recovery.
April 18, 2020 — 10:34 PM