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When was the moment you realised covid was serious?

596 replies

namechanged984630 · 07/08/2021 22:54

For me I think it was when it hit Italy, so early
March. Until then I really believed it'd be a storm in a tea cup like swine flu.

I remember certain songs I was listening to as I refreshed the news in early March that still give me the heebie jeebies even now.

And I remember taking my dog for a walk at some lakes a few miles away (so drove there) and wondering, on about the fifteenth of March, if it might be the last time for a while. When I was there an elderly man said to me that it was nice to get out to forget the state of the world, I'll always remember that.

I remember seeing the Wuhan hospital be built and only paying the vaguest amount of attention. So arrogant to think it wasn't a problem for us!

OP posts:
maddy68 · 07/08/2021 23:52

When my otherwise healthy uncle died

PissedOffNeighbour22 · 07/08/2021 23:53

@TimeIhadaNameChange I had a baby too around this time and ended up back in hospital until the day before lockdown.
Nurses and doctors at our hospital were taking the piss about Covid, refusing to wear masks and use hand sanitiser before touching the babies. They said it was a common cold and people should stop being so ridiculous about it.
Surprise surprise my hospital had serious outbreaks and were on the news numerous times about how shit they were at preventing further outbreaks.

My stepdad caught it in that hospital after being forced to go in for an unnecessary procedure which they didn't even end up doing. He's never recovered and he's in a nursing home now that no one can afford to pay for which could end up making my mum bankrupt Angry.

Birminghambloke · 07/08/2021 23:54

@danadas

I don't mean this to sound as pathetic as it does but when McDonalds posted on social media to say they were closing. I don't why out of everything happening with schools, WFH etc that was the thing that stood out but there you go!
That was the final thing for me too. They’re everywhere, all day.
mummabear20202022 · 07/08/2021 23:55

When Boris announced the lockdown - I had a mini panic attack and I'm normally quite level headed (I was newly preggers so it could've been that)

By that point we were already wfh, and people were already dying, however this seemed to consolidate the seriousness for some reason.. I just remember feeling so stupid, helpless and scared, my attitude before that was basically 'fuck it' BlushConfused

MargaretThursday · 07/08/2021 23:56

13th March when dd phoned to say her uni was sending them home a week early, was the first really serious change.

Then on 16th March when I was introduced at work to the people that were coming in to turn our work into a local support hub. Things jumped about 10 gears at that point.

And again about a week later when we were told to get a night guard for the food bank (now being run at work) due to a credible threat. The police came round to check we were okay and they had tasers. Never noticed that before.

Speaking to people needing help on the phone and hearing how scared they were. Lots of tears. Lots of brilliant people offering help too. And one lovely gentleman who told me his wife had died the last year, but there was one good thing-he had no one to fall out with. I often wonder how he got on. And the lady (in her 90s with a heart condition and high blood pressure, but she was otherwise "perfectly healthy and feeling a fraud asking for help") who told me she needed a little bit of food, but not to worry yet because she had plenty for today-2 slices of bread. This was at 10am. We got a food package to her urgently.

When the first person I knew died. She was in her 60s and would have counted as vulnerable, but would have expected another 10-20 years of life. I saw her on the 15th. She told me that she was going home and was going to totally isolate. She must have either caught covid on that day or had it when I saw her. She was always busy, always smiling, and the first we knew of her having covid was when we heard she'd died. I don't think she even made it to hospital because there wasn't an ambulance available. We didn't really have time to mourn her because things were so manic. It's only really hitting in now the people we've lost.

Trying to get it across to my parents (via phone) who didn't think they were vulnerable because "we're really healthy for nearly 80yo". Eventually asked them why they thought I was risking my life to help people like them stay safe when they wouldn't stay safe. Thankfully they listened.

I kept a diary over the first lockdown. It's interesting reading, knowing what we now know. Some things changed dramatically. Other things we were working unsure and have been proved right.

Mammyloveswine · 07/08/2021 23:57

When they closed schools..I'm a teacher and my dad picked me up (was looking after my children with my mam) and he said to me "I've never known anything like this in my lifetime-it's scary" and that scared me.

It was just so surreal-I still can't quite believe it even now!

lemmein · 07/08/2021 23:57

I honestly don't think I ever had that moment. I'm quite fortunate in that covid hasn't really touched my life - I don't know anybody who has been ill, I've always worked from home, got my shopping delivered, etc and my kids are young adults now so no homeschooling.

Like a previous poster, I've suffered with anxiety for most of my adult life but have been on sertraline for the last 6 years so I think that's dulled any panic I may have otherwise had.

If this had happened when my kids were small I know I would've cracked up with anxiety. 9/11 really messed with my head for months afterwards so I'm thankful I'm medicated and didn't feel it.

XDownwiththissortofthingX · 07/08/2021 23:57

Hearing how many bodies they were planning for chilled me to the core. Horrific.

Yes to this.

I was fortunate, in that although I caught Covid it made me ill, but not so much that I recognised it for what it was and I thought it was merely a really bad but short-lived cold. I normally ache in my muscles and joints whenever I get a slight sniffle, so the fact it floored me for a few days didn't actually make me twig. That only came in hindsight when I found out about the Wuhan returnee and later had an antibody test.

So at the time I'm hearing all about this killer virus, not realising I'd actually had it, and the figures about infection rates and deaths start coming out of China and Italy. I do some basic arithmetic, and realising that Brits are essentially in no way less vulnerable than Chinese people or Italians, wonder why my government is taking an approach to this that will see 45-50 million UK citizens infected and 400,000-500,000 deaths.

Why it took a university study to point out the exact same thing to the government is beyond me.

ZingDramaQueenOfSheeba · 07/08/2021 23:57

[quote NationMcKinley]@ZingDramaQueenOfSheeba just read your post about anxiety. This was very true for a friend of mine who has significant health and generalised anxiety to the point it affects her everyday life. I initially thought she would really spiral when covid hit but actually it was quite the reverse![/quote]
it was like topsy-turvy world.
every time someone said something hysterical I felt like replying "now you get it, welcome to the club"

I didn't go food shopping for over 8m.
the very idea of one way systems and rationing gave me panic attacks (I feel it even now, just writing about it) - we have 7 kids so it was a fucking nightmare.
I pretty much shut down though and DH was a bloody hero: WFH, doing shopping, washing, cleaning, cooking, taking care of everything.
Long Covid affected me very badly on top of everything else so I was pretty useless last year.

Got myself into gear in January though and things are better now. Hope your friend is ok

atlastifoundit · 07/08/2021 23:58

When we had started getting dozens of cases here and the situation in Italy started to look really dodgy. It started to concern me that the government did nothing to close our borders; and being a fan of flightradar24.com I was watching thousands of flights coming into the UK from all over the world, including from countries where the virus was already out of control.

That's it, I thought, we're buggered. It's too bloody late now.

Tealightsandd · 07/08/2021 23:58

When China locked down Wuhan - a city of 11 million, and had people in hazmat suits spraying the streets with disinfectant. It was obviously serious.

tothelakes · 07/08/2021 23:58

Pretty early on and I remember being laughed at in the office for being concerned.
Being told it will never be like Italy here and the scaremongering was ridiculous.

fibeee · 07/08/2021 23:59

Reading what the Italians were saying on Twitter (I think in Feb or early March 2020) saying that the hospitals couldn’t cope with the numbers and 30 year olds were dying of it. The U.K. at this point was still in “wash your hands and sing happy birthday” mode.

Thesearmsofmine · 08/08/2021 00:00

When the pubs shut.
I was listening to the radio and cooking dinner and cried when it was announced. I don’t even drink but it just felt like shit was getting real after hearing and reading about covid for weeks and I was scared.

Gakatsbsk · 08/08/2021 00:02

When my university closed down and the NMC announced student nurses would be be put into paid roles.

After seeing multiple people be very sick, and also die in ICU

LittleMowf · 08/08/2021 00:04

Early March. I remember my manager coming in asking us about what we had at home in terms of tech and equipment, in case we had to WFH. I remember telling DH I would feel better if he didn’t go to a work meeting in London (we’re in the north) as many people were WFH then and travel was starting to be advised against. He thought I was being daft but he decided not to go and then the meeting was cancelled anyway.

Then on Friday 13 March (won’t forget that date!) I had a swollen gland in my armpit, a temp, a sore swollen throat and a dry cough. We isolated. I was terrified - no tests or anything at that time. DH, DS and DD got symptoms the following week - DS (he was 5 at the time) was horribly ill, coughing, sweating, roasting hot for a week - and we couldn’t take him to the GP or anywhere as that was the first week of lockdown. Advice on the phone was to ‘give it time.’ Thankfully we all came through it but DH got the weird ‘covid toe’ a few weeks later so I think we did have it.

I was looking through some old photos on my phone from early January 2020, as it started to spread in China. Some pictures were taken on what was a beautiful day; if only we’d known what was to come just 10 weeks later! The DC playing on the beach in the winter sun, all wrapped up against the cold, aged 5 and 2. They’re 7 and 4 now - it’s strange to think that almost half of DD’s life has been spent dealing with lockdowns and restrictions.

EveryFlightBeginsWithAFall · 08/08/2021 00:06

I was very glad of the prepping for brexit threads on here. I managed to keep family and friends in loo roll

That still feels surreal. A fb post came up in March that my froend sent me from a year ago of a picture of Tesco with absolutely no loo roll

PostMenWithACat · 08/08/2021 00:08

I don't think the seriousness has hit us yet. That will come when it becomes evident the country is bankrupt, interest rates increase, inflation increases, unemployment increases. Then the increased cancer deaths will hit us, increased MH issues, etc., a generation of young people deprived of GCSE, A'Level and university experiences. Time will tell us whether locking down caused more or less damage. Personally I don't think the roller coaster ride is over yet.

I'm still slightly in shock that the three week lock down in March 2020 extended until July, then we locked down again in November for another month, then after Christmas and until 12th April, and that we are all still wearing masks.

Of 1000 employees I am aware of about 20/30 who have had covid; all recovered, although one was ventilated. I know three people who have died: a 97 year old man who had had multiple TIA's and caught it in hospital and died within 28 days at his care home - after another TIA; a young man in his early 40s who had stage 4 cancer, who caught covid, recovered but died within 28 days; a neighbour with complex health issues who caught it from her carers and who was on end of life care.

I think the last 17 months have been surreally dystopian but Covid has killed a tiny, tiny percentage of people overall and who have contracted it and I have grave concerns about how statistics have been disseminated to us and the extent to which our human rights and freedoms have been eroded.

thestrawberrygirl · 08/08/2021 00:08

In Feb 2020 I lived in one of the small towns first hit in Italy. It was announced at lunchtime on the Friday and by the evening Army tanks, trucks and tractors had blocked every entrance and exit to the town, with armed soldiers and helicopters checking none of us left, it was surreal, a mix between a Sci-fi film, Gilead and China. We were too scared to open our windows in case the virus was in the air. Then TV stations world wide started broadcasting from the just outside our tiny town, trying to inform Europe what was coming, but no one took us seriously enough. We heard ambulances non stop every minute of the day. We had no food and lived on rations for a good few months, we didn't see another person outside until mid June when we were finally allowed to leave our town, this block lasted only for a few weeks and was lifted in May this year. The town will never forget and everyone still wears masks, despite no longer being mandatory outdoors. This is what lockdown is really like.

RubyFakeLips · 08/08/2021 00:08

Weird moment when my super fit and healthy friends started being hospitalised following half term trips skiing in Italy. Realising they had been out and about and presumably this virus was now all around us. Was on the tube, got a text saying friend has been taken in an ambulance, as a woman coughed heavily opposite me. Made me think of the Dettol ad where you see the germs.

When I knew the country was in a pandemic was when my office closed and I walked my commute as it was so dead in central London. I went into several super markets thinking I better get food in and they were stripped bare. The disaster movie felt like it was becoming real.

FakeFruitShoot · 08/08/2021 00:09

My parents went abroad on holiday on 7th March.

By the time they returned on 14th the world had gone fucking mad.

They were sending me pics of the beach and their suntans while I felt like the fucking world was on fire.

On the way home from the airport they stopped for groceries and it was a massive shock to find there were basically none to be had. I found it so hard to articulate the "yes, that's what I've been trying to tell you!" feeling.

On the Wednesday of that week - the 12th? - I'd said to my DH how devastated I was because I thought we'd all been together with our extended family for the last time.

Luckily - very luckily, I take stock every day - I was wrong - we haven't lost anyone. Just missed out on time together.

IthinkIsawahairbrushbackthere · 08/08/2021 00:09

The middle of March. The end of February I went away for a weekend with teenage DD. She bought antibac wipes and sanitiser for the journey and wiped down all the hard surfaces we used on the train. A few days later a friend who is a microbiologist posted a status questioning attitudes to the virus and and saying that she was concerned that people were not taking it seriously.

A fortnight later DH and I went out for a picnic. It was the first time in a while I had been to the supermarket and I was shocked by people in face masks and gloves. We drove to the beach and went for a walk. As we passed people on the path we all nodded nervously at each other and stuck to the edges. As we drove home I said to DH that I felt a real sense of doom and anxiety.

adeleh · 08/08/2021 00:10

Towards the end of Feb 2020. I was a bit obsessed as DH in hospital for five weeks waiting for open heart surgery and I was really worried it would be cancelled. I watched Italy v closely, which is why I remember them begging us to act, weeks before Johnson brought in any kind of lockdown.

FunnyWonder · 08/08/2021 00:11

At the Peace Proms at the SSE Arena in Belfast to watch my then 11yo DS in the choir. It was 1st March 2020. I took DS2 to the toilets during the interval and there were warning posters up about coronavirus and the importance of hand washing and not touching surfaces. The expression 'my blood ran cold' was never so apt. It just suddenly felt real and scary. And then we had to go back and sit in a packed auditorium for the second half. It was a fantastic show, but that poster is one of my abiding memories. The next time I was at the SSE Arena was to get my covid jab a few weeks ago.

user1471560845 · 08/08/2021 00:11

When wuhan locked down and they basically cancelled Chinese New Year. Vividly remember thinking shit fuck this is really weird. Remember saying to husband, this shit is serious, the football season won’t be finished!

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