Ans
the under lined word.
Disappointing
Write a
pandemic uzing
panogakaph on
Cavid - ig pandemic
chies given below
Stay home
face mask
Sanitizen
6.
socal distacing
Wash hands
Do not shake hands.
Answers
Answer:
Amid an unprecedented global pandemic, tearing up over a canceled girl’s night might seem a bit selfish.
Despite my best intentions, I feel my eyes well up as soon as I think of my lost monthly Saturday drinks. It’s the same every month. The same group of girls I’ve known for years. The same overpriced bar, which is almost always too crowded for us.
Yet it’s become something of a tradition. It’s the one time we all find space in our busy lives for each other. And I miss it.
If I’m being totally honest, I miss my old life.
But saying that feels like an insult. A disregard to the doctors and nurses, teachers, delivery drivers, and food service workers that are working tirelessly to keep us all afloat — the people who are holding our country together as everything around us seems to fall apart.
What’s easy to forget is that these emotions can happen simultaneously. We can lament our small and insignificant losses while understanding the bigger picture.
These small things that seem frivolous when weighed with the state of the world do matter.
You’re allowed to weep for the tinkling glasses, waving lighters, and pounding music of gigs you won’t see. Or feel a pang of devastation about canceled birthday parties.
It’s a privilege to be lucky enough to experience these events in the first place, even more so to be able to mourn their cancellations. Still, the cancellation of baseball season is a bitter pill to swallow for fans.
We all need things to look forward to. A summer holiday, a wedding, even a girl’s night out.
You see, no matter who we are, we’re all feeling the loss of something.
It’s hard to manage our collective disappointment, especially without our friends and family to anchor us.