As The Dread Of Coronavirus Spreads, What Can A Writer Do Make A Difference

At least one thing you can do that will make a hell of a lot of a difference.

Neera Mahajan
4 min readMar 24, 2020

--

Photo by Engin Akyurt on Unsplash

We are going through unprecedented times in the history of humanity. Never before the whole world had come to a standstill in a matter of a few weeks. Never before have countries shut down their borders, companies have ordered their employees to work from home, and airlines have grounded their fleet and stood down their workforces.

And this is just a tiny snippet of what is going on.

Thousands of people have died.

Each day the news is more grave, more devastating.

At times like these, the natural tendency is to reach for more news. Is it the best way to face a crisis?

Staying up-to-date with news is a good thing: we need to know the seriousness of the situation and what authorities ask us to limit spreading the virus.

But too much news is an invitation to negativity in life.

Negativity breeds more negativity, which causes dread, panic, and anger, which we need to avoid.

At times like these, we need to be compassionate, understanding, and grateful.

Social distancing and self-isolation have provided a unique opportunity to slow down and reflect. It is not the usual kind of slowing down and reflecting we are expected to do with mindfulness training but a deeper kind encompassing humanity.

We are the most resilient species on this planet. We have come out of many crises before. We will come out of this one too.

Yes, this one is not like anyone before.

Yes, the worst hasn’t even arrived yet.

Yes, the economic impact of this pandemic will be more than anyone could imagine at the moment.

But we will come out of it by staying together, looking after each other, helping each other, responding to it like a unit, by fighting it together.

What can a writer do to make a difference?

You should write.

You should write like never before.

You should write letters to your great-grandchildren and great-great-grandchildren, telling them how humanity got together to fight a crisis like never before.

You should tell them how a total stranger in the supermarket gave you the last can of tomatoes.

You should tell them that working from home, and you put in extra, extra hours even when no one counted because you were grateful you still have a job and want to give more to your employer who is going through a bigger hardship to keep his business afloat.

You write to them telling you that you kept working even when your employer couldn’t pay you because you thought that is the best use of your time, and it might help your employer save the business.

You write to them saying that you learned to live with less. You learned to waste less. You learned once again to appreciate simple pleasure life. You learned to cook. You learned to paint and draw and read the books you wanted to read for a long time. You learned to spend more time with your loved ones. You played with your children. And You hugged them. You read to them. You sang with them.

So when your great-grandchildren ask you what you do when the crisis hits your generation, you can tell them that you spread hope.

A writer’s job is to spread hope.

Hope is our biggest asset. Hope, keep us going. Hope makes tough situations more bearable. Hope is an inherent part of being a human being.

No one else can spread hope more than writers. No one else can see the perspective in a dire situation better than writers. No one can showcase the goodness that is still going on around us when everything seems to be bleak and desolate.

You should observe, listen, think, and write. The lesson we learn fighting crises like these must be captured for the next generations.

Write the stories of what is going around you.

Write the stories of people clapping from their balconies to hail our nurses, doctors, and health professionals for their care to the sick and vulnerable.

Write the stories of people singing to each other across the empty squares, keeping their windows open, so that those who are alone may hear the sound of family around them.

Write the stories of hotels and restaurant owners who are offering free meals and delivery to the housebound and of the young woman who is busy spreading flyers with her phone number through the neighborhood so that the elders may have someone to call on.

Write the stories of churches, synagogues, mosques, and temples are preparing to welcome and shelter the homeless, the sick, the weary.

This article first appeared at www.neeramahajan.com.

If you liked this article, you might also like this related article.

--

--

Neera Mahajan

Author of Dare To Create, Eight Steps To Be An Authorpreneur, and How To Write an eBook In One Week | Write Your Book with me in 30 days.