Facing the World,
looking for a new world
We are thinking, therefore we are. It is not the end
of the world. A world is collapsing but the world will remain. We will survive
because we are stronger than this monster. We will conquer it because, without
nuclear weapons, our medical professionals are saving lives. Yes, we are
fighting with simple hygienic gestures. We are saving lives by washing hands,
we are stopping the monster with masks, and we are destroying it with
sanitizers, we are protecting our communities by staying home. At the front
line, our medical doctors, our nurses and millions of volunteers are inflicting
the enemy an enormous defeat on every single battle. They are using every
single weapon, including ventilators to redeem millions of lives. Scientists are
spending sleepless nights in laboratories searching for the strongest weapon.
Yes! We are overcoming Covid19.
Our warriors in white, others in blue clothes do
not have missiles and heavy weapons. They use thermometers, sphygmomanometers, syringes
and medicine. For their safety, they have no sandbags, but masks and gloves, no
strategic headquarters, but halls and laboratories. At times, they run out of everything but they
cannot afford to give up when millions of people are on the verge of death and
the mouth of the monster is big enough to swallow all of them. Our warriors
have no choice but to fight barehandedly, sometimes
with no means, left with their sole depleting physical energy, their boiling
brains and the passion in their hearts to save lives. This comes at a cost, the
cost of their sacrifice and the sacrifice of their families. I wish I had a
stronger word to tell them how thankful we are. They are making the toughest
choice of their lives. “My husband and my children can wait, I can redeem my
absence, and I can apologize to my family. But mum, I cannot redeem my patient’s
breath once it is gone. I cannot afford to apologize to the families that have
lost their loved ones. Tell my children that I will be back soon, probably
after a month and fourteen days. Mum, I cannot come home now because a mere kiss
or hug may be fatal for you. I love you” and the nurse tearfully ended the
phone conversation and rushed towards a moaning patient to put him on life
support for the third time. Death was roaring again. She harried to the
medical doctor in their resting room, transformed into an ICU for younger
patients. The Doctor was on phone. The nurse only heard the last bit of the
conversation; “I don’t know if I will survive this in this foreign land. I have
never seen death too close and in fury. I am physically and mentally exhausted
but I must keep pushing to save as many lives as I can. I may lose my own in
the process. We have lost some colleagues. Be strong and pray for me ho…”
Before he finished the “honey I love you” the nurse was already yelling and
calling for help.
They rushed back to see to moaning
patient on ventilator. He had eternally kept quiet. The nurse felt guilty
losing this one like many others. They had become friends when the patient was
still able to utter some words. These medical professionals are not supposed to
cry. However, for this one, she could not hold her tears. Disappointed, she
turned to the doctor and said, “I didn’t know we will lose this one too, he had
a smile on his face. He reminded me of my husband.” The doctor was busy removing the equipment
because he knew that another patient was waiting on a bed in the lobby to be
put on life support. After he was done, he said to the nurse, “He died with the
smile because that was the only way to thank you for the sacrifice”. Indeed, in
the mind of the dying patient there were two phrases: “If I survive I will
thank this team for their sacrifice. If I don’t, I hope my people will do, instead
of complaining about what went wrong.” After a moment of silence, the doctor
told the nurse: “Thank God, we have saved many more lives than we have lost.
Nevertheless, we must tell those who are back home to be careful”. The nurse
picked her smart phone, stood by the window; video called her journalist friend
and said, “I have lost another friend. We are overwhelmed here. Stay home to
avoid the virus. Help us to help you. If you stay safe, we will save more lives
and have enough place for those who are already affected.”
The old woman on a bed behind her
smiled. The nurse came closer because she had become suspicious of her patients’
smile. However, this one had some good news. “Call my daughter-in-law for me
and tell her that I am feeling better. I know how worried she is. I miss the
smile on my grandson’s face and my son’s solicitous attitude.”
Other good news followed. The following
day, the hospital registered no death for the first time in the last 30 days. The
spirit of life was back in the hospital. The war was over. However, the nurse
knew that despite this victory, things would no longer be the same.
Things
have changed; I must change.
Indeed, things have changed; life will no longer be
the same. There is a huge gap between before and after Covid19. Now my boss has
discovered that even in a critical situation, a smaller team can do what all of
us were doing when things were normal. Now my company has understood that
field missions are not the last option; we can coordinate operations and have
meetings from various places. Now my university knows that I do not need to be
in class to learn from the best lecturers in the world we can zoom in and learn.
Now my organization has discovered that technologies can offer cheap and
accessible alternative to translation and interpretation services. Now I know
that nothing can replace my family. Now I know the magnitude of the damage caused
by my absence in my family’s life when I was pursuing success. Now I have
understood that there is no spare part for a parent’s affection. Now I know
that there are friends I should not take for granted. Now my wife has discovered
that I did not have digestion problems, I was just sabotaging her cuisine. Now
my husband knows that I used to fake headaches, I had secured a husbandable
option outside. Now I know that the problem was not the teachers but my own
children. Now I know that I can lose everything and remain with myself to start
over again.
What will I do? I will learn this new technology my
boss has discovered before I am replaced by it. I will give that human touch to
my performance to make our clients understand that there is something special
they may lose if they decide to simply replace our services with new
technologies. I will make good use of classroom time and complement it with
distance learning opportunities now that I know it works. I will develop more
remote-working skills so that I can be an option when my organization makes it
a working style. I will match my language skills with a human smile and
alternative thinking so that our clients understand that I am not only a
translator or an interpreter who can be replaced by a multilingual technology.
I will learn things that give meaning to my life and do business that can have
an impact now that I know how simple gestures like staying home can save lives.
I will love my family and give them time to enjoy my presence now that I know
that they are the only ones who will chose me when nobody else will think about
me. I will value my friends now that I know what their presence means in my
life. I will invest in education and treat teachers with dignity now that I
have learned that without people even nuclear weapons will not save our lives.
I will embrace my fears, accept my spouse’s weaknesses and learn to love the
people put on my way by destiny.
I am learning from this situation, I am changing
and growing. I will strive to make a difference and have an impact in people’s
lives because that is what matters in everything I do. Let us learn from this
experience, grow and change in order to turn this dark part of history into a click
moment for a better world.
“I value your
feedback, kindly drop a comment.”
Embark
on the growing and changing journey with Jacques
MUHINDO VYALIRENDI
He is
Professional Trainer, Conference Interpreter and Researcher.
He
speaks French, English, Swahili and Lingala respectively. He is learning
Portuguese.
His
hobbies include Reading, Acting and charity actions.
He
values your feedback. Do you have a personalized feedback? Talk to him on WhatsApp: +254720074063
The world is collapsing indeed. However, we can use this situation to grow and change because this is not the end. We still have something to offer to this world, we still have love and smile to share, etc.
ReplyDeleteThank you for these encouraging and challenging words Mr Jacques Muhindo
You are welcome Joseph Aksanti. We still have love to share.
DeletePowerful words Jacques. Thanks to you I have a better grasp of what the mediacl staff is going through in this period. From far we don't really perceive their efforts. Only God will know how to reward them for their. sacrifices.
ReplyDeleteThis one went straight to my soul :"Now I know that I can lose everything and remain with myself to start over again." So true.
Well, that one made me laugh, "husbandable option outside"😆😃,
All in all thank you Jacques for your input.
Thank you so much OK89 for your feedback
DeleteKeep writing & inspiring hope one post at a time. This is the kind of perspective we need at such a moment! Bon courage !
ReplyDeleteThank you so much Carlondu for your feedback. Je suis reconnaissant
Delete