Opening days of Coronavirus prep feels like a bad movie

By Steve Cichon
steve@buffalostories.com
@stevebuffalo

Just living life has felt like a movie, hasn’t it?

From crazy discussions at our faculty lunch table, to crazy discussions with students in class, to trying to come up with constantly changing coordinated plans for the school and the coffee shop as the ground continues to shift.

On Thursday, I went to visit my mother in the rehab nursing home where she is staying until mid-week, and as I was leaving, they were posting big Day-Glo neon-colored signs at all the entrances saying visitors were no longer welcome.

Today’s visit to the grocery store was other worldly, with so many odd things out of stock, and too many shoppers swathed in a sense of something other than “weekly grocery shopping” about them.

Toilet paper shelves were bare on Sunday, March 15, 2020 at the Tops on Elmwood Avenue.

It wasn’t like blizzard prep. The bread shelves looked like a turkey carcass– bare except occasional gristle, but Doritos were fully stocked. People weren’t buying to party for a day or two, they were buying to bolster their chances of survival.

There were hushed whispers between husbands and wives over canned goods. There were large families, carefully combing coupons trying to stretch out as far as possible what could be the last visit to the store for a while.

Then there were most folks, trying to gently move through the panic to grab a couple of things, maybe like they would on any Sunday; but the way they moved through the aisles was nothing like any Sunday anyone had ever experienced in a Tops or Wegmans or Dash’s before.

As somebody who has spent decades communicating with people through tragedies and calamities, I feel like I have an innate feeling for what people want to hear– what people need to hear during times like these.

I’ve been writing words and coordinating plans for a coffee shop and a private high school in the midst of a public health crisis, but it’s no different than hosting an overnight talk show during the October surprise storm or wandering the streets of Louisiana after Hurricane Katrina.

Just like in the movies, just like when the power’s out for weeks at a time, people want to know in the midst of chaos, that someone, somewhere, has something under control… and that the light at the end of the tunnel isn’t a mirage– and that things might be different, but eventually OK.

It’s the role we all need to play in the movie that we’re all living in.

We’re all going to need reassurance and a life preserver or two before this thing goes away… so, when you can–

Be the guy who reassures others that everything is going to be OK– and work to do whatever you can do in your power to make sure things are all right.

Be the gal who has things under control, and throw out a life preserver or two when it feels safe.

If we all feel good about reaching out when we need to… and we’re all there to grab a hand in trouble when we can… we’ll all come through this a little battered– but just fine when eventually, this all just becomes another one of those experiences that make us stronger and wiser.

We won’t know for sure about Coronavirus until its too late to do anything

By Steve Cichon
steve@buffalostories.com
@stevebuffalo

The thing is— could be nothing, could be a nationwide tragedy.

You don’t know until you know, and then when it’s your grandma who dies, you want to know why nobody told you how bad this thing could be.

Or… you can suffer through overreaction and silly TP hoarding and prepare yourself.

Human nature only allows for one of these eventualities to be true— either we’re surprised and pissed, or warned ad naseum and either hoarding or laughing.

Whether you’re scared or a tough guy right now, most of us would rather be ready for what we might be facing.

Most of the scared folks and the tough guys will be making jokes about Coronavirus in five years… unless you love one of the 50 or 500 or 5000 who perish, and you spend the rest of your life wondering if as a society we did enough.

You don’t have to like it, but wash your hands and be a decent human being until this thing passes. And then continue to do those things after it passes, too.