The
coronavirus’ spread been a slow burn in my corner of Germany. The first cases
were found in Heinsberg, about 60km from the Dorf and a 45-minute drive from
Aachen, where my office is located.
New cases
pop up in my state of North-Rhine-Westphalia daily, but no town is under
lockdown, like in Italy. No mass digital surveillance system – that we know of –
is watching our vital signs, like China. And there’s no sick health minister
coughing and spreading the virus at news conferences, like Iran.
Life
goes on in Germany… just a little differently. I catch a train twice a week to
work in the Cologne office and no walk through the train station is complete
without seeing a few commuters wearing surgical masks. People go to work. They hit the gym. They
go out for beers. Most schools and daycares are still open. For now.
But
beneath the business-as-usual attitude, there’s an underlying, repressed panic that’s difficult to hide. Walk
into the drug store to buy hand sanitizer and you’ll see an empty shelf. Pasta
and canned goods are popular. A local Ramen joint that used have people lined
up around the corner is nearly deserted. Kata saw a woman carting away a dozen jumbo packs of
diapers, which must be for a do-it-yourself mask that I haven’t heard about
yet.
But those
COVID-19 push notifications tell us about every new case. And if you only pay
attention to the numbers, it might make sense to hoard on canned beans, masks, and
shotgun shells. If you paused and thought a bit, you’d realize a better
tactic is washing your damn hands and covering your mouth when you cough or
sneeze.
To the German government's credit, they’ve
been open and honest about new cases and their response to it. Trust in the
health authorities here seems high.
People are worried, but they’re not hysterical or ignorant of the facts.
With the coronavirus, it seems like we don’t care
about it until it’s too late, or we expect governments to fix the problem. But mostly,
it’s up to us.
Ten years ago, I was riding a subway in Toronto. A
woman was coughing and hacking a few seats behind me. She sounded like she was
going to die. As I left the car, I looked back and saw her coughing again,
without covering her mouth. That night, I woke up coughing the same cough that
woman shared with the entire train. A day later, I visited the doctor, who
told me I had pneumonia.
The coronavirus will be around for a while, so we
should get used to taking responsibility for ourselves. That doesn’t mean stocking
up our doomsday bunkers. It means doing things we should've done more in the
past: washing our hands, covering our mouths when we cough, and not being
hoarders.