“Alone Together”: Mental Illness and Covid-19
(originally published in the Times of Israel; reprinted here with permission)
As I write this, the world is turned on its head, still in
the grip of the Covid-19 pandemic and its economic repercussions, which is to
say that all humanity is still living with news reports of death and illness,
and in a state of uncertainty and anxiety. Yet, while our lives are on hold, we
must still simultaneously perform the rudimentary aspects of living. We still
need to eat, so we shop for food, or have it delivered. When we must move about
in public - only as “essential” (meaning that we only shop
for food, or seek emergent medical care), we wear masks, stay away from one
another, and carry bottles of hand sanitizer with us. Each time we venture out
of our cocoons to come in contact with or speak with others – while socially
distanced - we are conscious that we face the possibility of contracting a
virus which has proven fatal and has taken the lives of people we know. It has
proven to be unnerving.
I’ve never experienced a pandemic, so why, I ask myself, did
I have a feeling of déjà vu? I couldn’t shake the nagging anxiety, though I am
not anxious by nature. It felt both deeply personal and so palpable; it was a
weight on my heart that wouldn’t leave. And, it felt so completely familiar.
I awoke one morning with the stunning realization that I had
lived with the constant awareness of the “sword of Damocles” hanging over my
head once before. I lived this life during the latter part of 2012, from the
day I discovered my son’s near lifeless body after he attempted suicide the
first time, on July 20th, until the day of his death on December 16th.
It became my life the moment I acknowledged the reality and severity of his
mental illness. The only difference between my personal experience of then and
now is that these days I share my existential dread with all of humanity.
Fear and anxiety have hijacked our lives and have become the
wallpaper of our minds as we cope with a socially distanced reality and await a
vaccine. When we speak with friends, family, or strangers both near and far,
the conversation inevitably turns to: the state of the world enmeshed in
Covid-19, our feelings of heightened stress, our hope for a return to normal,
and a review of the difficulties and uncertainty of the future. As the wife of
a physician who works at a hospital I am often asked: What does your husband think?
When does he think this will end? When we see friends in the distance while
walking they ask him directly whether it is safe to visit with their elderly parents/children
and grandchildren or have them over for holidays, about how it will be possible
for schools to open, and when a vaccine might be developed. The questions are
many, but they are singularly focused. It is all about when we can finally let
our collective guard down and return to normalcy. There are no definite
answers, but there is comfort in sharing the questions, thoughts, opinions, and
information. It is as though the entire world has become a support group. In stark
contrast, during the time between my first awareness of Jonathan’s illness and
his death by suicide my family and I endured on our own, in secret and isolation,
without support.
Reliving these painful emotions and feelings of helplessness
and uncertainly in the context of Covid-19, I believe that not only do they
correspond to those emotions experienced by parents of mentally ill children,
but the need for communal support is similar as well. Sharing frustrations and anxiety
with friends makes things somewhat easier to bear and we might even get some
new information or ideas on how to cope. Though our situations are unique, we do
not need to suffer alone in our emotions. We can be “alone together”. It’s my
hope that we can achieve this same ability to reach out in support when dealing
with mental illness. Sharing our humanity helps us all. As with Covid-19, every
life might not be able to be saved, but we can heal ourselves and move forward.