I tested positive for COVID on Christmas day.
Christmas means family to me. So when I lost my big sister, Queen, in September, I just knew it was canceled for this year. You can't experience festivity three months after losing your sibling, it's ridiculous. Covering up the pain and thoughts by watching other happy people while I play Christmas carols on my saxophone seemed like the perfect plan.
Now with the whole COVID-19 scare and all the regulations
that came with it, my entertainment gigs were mostly canceled. However,
Christmas weekend arrived soon after I had signed a sweet deal with Serena
hotel and I was over the moon. Let alone working with this envied brand, this
was the perfect solution for my pain during the season. Imagine spending Christmas
weekend in Rubavu, playing saxophone by the lake shores! How dreamy!
But nah. 2020 couldn't let me have that, either. I pictured
it saying ‘just kidding’, with a little smirk on the face.
As you might know, to access hotels (as guests), one needs to
test for COVID-19 and I was no exception, but as usual, I was simply testing
for a routine procedure. Only this time, the test was positive, even though I
almost laughed at the doctor when he gave me the news. So to quench my
disbelief, I decided to take a second test, which turned out to be positive
too, marking the beginning of an interesting Christmas.
I know I was initially far from festive but sleeping on a
wooden bench for hours, and later on, a sickbed in a little clinic in Rubavu
was not what I had in mind for Christmas. And the rain, it has a way of
amplifying misery, and boy- did it rain that day! I remember feeling
desperately cold and hungry, while blankly staring outside the window watching
heavy drizzles, like a scene in a sad movie. All of a sudden, I developed
strong envy for the people that walked around in the rain while going about
their business, without a care in the world! Oh, how I missed that freedom!
Isolation is hard enough when your heart is pain-free but
5-hour isolation, far away from home, on an empty stomach with a pre-existing
heavy heart is no way to spend Christmas. Receiving 'Merry Christmas' messages
from my contacts (phone contacts, not COVID 😊) felt like mockery,
and let's just say all I wanted at this moment was my warm bed with warm soup,
watching Netflix, and being a Grinch in peace. I would achieve this many hours
later after what seemed like a series of practical jokes played on me by this
outgoing year.
The public address system opposite the clinic didn't disappoint
either as it continuously broadcasted COVID-19 prevention measures. The irony
got me chuckling amidst my misery and hunger.
walk of shame', and crowning all this was a paddock-like area (rope-fenced) where all we people with the virus were convened. Stepping out of this fence was illegal.
Later on, my colleague (that tested positive too) asked one
of the medical attendants if we could please get some food since we were
starving and his answer was a sneer, followed by a sarcastic comment. This
broke my heart a little because all the boy asked for was food, not a trip to
Nyungwe. By the way, thanks to this guy, (my colleague), the journey felt like
a group project, not a one-person struggle because in a place where empathy was
a luxury, my misery was desperate for company.
I won't even talk about the struggle that encompassed
getting our bags from the hotel before we embarked on our final journey back to
Kigali. Or my poor saxophone that wasn't touched that weekend, after being set
up and all tuned out for the dinner. All I can say is that this day was
necessary to successfully brand 2020 as an exhausting year.
Anyway, did I learn anything from all this? Yes, of course.
Every cloud has a silver lining. For instance, did you know that ambulances
don’t have seatbelts? So amusing. What about hunger on Christmas day, you
probably don’t know how different it hits.
Also a silver lining, I had COVID-19 in 2020. I can assure
you, my children will not hear the end of that story, the year when I tested
positive and survived! Heck, I might even add it to my bio. 'Stella Tush ~
Saxophone player and COVID Survivor'.
PS: My gratitude goes
to friends that offered their support; giving me access to their kindle
accounts, dropping off bags of fruit, wine bottles, flowers, and even Ballistic
burgers to my apartment!
'No one should have to go through COVID isolation solo,' one
said.
The love was felt. And to the reader, should you get the
virus, I hope you are lucky enough to receive compassion while at it.
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