Huge crowds of Armenian Americans march during an annual commemoration of the deaths of 1.5 million Armenians under the Ottoman Empire in Los Angeles Wednesday, April 24, 2019. The march was intended to press demands that Turkey, the successor of the Ottoman Empire, recognize the deaths as genocide. Turkey contends the deaths starting in 1915 were due to civil war and unrest. AP
Most of us have experienced hard things: Betrayals. The loss of a loved one. Cross-country moves. Failed marriages. Sick children. Combat. Empty refrigerators. Empty hearts. But the majority of us have never lived through a pandemic. This is hard.
We’re not used to being told to shelter in place and stay at home. We’re not used to waiting in line to get into the grocery store. We’re not used to figuring out online classes and virtual school. We’re not used to canceled events, vacations and graduations. We’re not used to overwhelmed hospitals. We’re not used to this many people being sick and dying all at once.
This is hard.
But some of us remember living through the Great Depression. Some of us remember what it was like during World War II. Some of us lived through genocide.