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As we celebrated the end of 2019, the future of 2020 looked very promising. It was meant to be a great year for me and many others alike. I was looking forward to finishing my General Certificate of Secondary Education (GCSEs) and then travelling in the summer. However, in a completely unexpected turn of events, 2020 has proved to be the complete opposite. I now find myself having just turned 16 and in lockdown. A situation that I would never have thought of experiencing in our global and modern world.
When the coronavirus first came to public attention, a lot of us disregarded it as a meagre ‘flu-like virus’ that would not have any detrimental effect on our lives and would be forgotten in the coming month or so. No one could have predicted it turning into a global pandemic within four months, leading to most affected nations being put on lockdown and over a million cases globally – in most countries, it’s only expected to get worse. We all continued with our lives as per normal, still working for our exams and assuming we’d be sitting our GCSEs.
As the coronavirus spread further, more havoc was wreaked. Many international girls at my school quickly packed up and left so they could return home before tighter regulations on borders were implemented.
In the UK, on 20 March, schools closed – and just a couple of days earlier it was announced that the annual public exams would not take place. I went through a whirlwind of emotions.
At first it was just plain shock. The closure of schools was expected, but I had not prepared myself for the cancellation of exams. The exams I had been working towards in school for the past two years wouldn’t be taking place – who would have thought? Slowly as the announcement settled, I went from relief to even joy, that I wouldn’t have to sit any public exams. However, as the days passed, I realised the amount of effort I had put into these exams, and that it was somewhat unfair that I wouldn’t get to sit them.
As a student in a boarding school, if I had been told, before the outbreak of COVID-19, that I would be made to return home and stay there with no knowledge of when I would be coming back to school, I would have been ecstatic. However, given the circumstances, my attitude is not at all the same to what it would have been merely a few months ago. In fact, it’s the complete opposite. When being forced into difficult situations, we finally have an appreciation for normality. That is the curse of familiarity- we take everything for granted.
Just a week ago, it was my birthday – my sweet 16. I spent the whole day in isolation, not being able to go out or see my friends. Whilst this is nowhere near to the worst of the devastation that the coronavirus has brought, it was a massive milestone for me. The coronavirus will be responsible for many missed or postponed milestones.
There is a limited number of things to do when in lockdown, but at the same time there is also an abundance of time for other activities which I would not have previously been able to do. I find myself reading more, listening to podcasts, watching movies and spending more time with my family.
What I find most incredible at this time of adversity is, despite the risks, there are people that still stock our supermarket shelves, deliver our post, answer our health needs. I am in awe of them and what they continue to do – they are holding our society together.
As I write this, the UK has paused and encouraged everyone to ‘clap for carers’ – an event in which people all over the UK applaud the NHS workers from their windows, gardens, balconies. Thank you.
Personally, I am trying to put all of this in a more positive light because the only thing I have control over is my perception of this situation. Each morning I wake up and remind myself that I am healthy and we’re one day closer to normality. Thank
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Published: 04 Apr 2020,05:09 PM IST