Happy Vaccine Day
I breathed deeply in my car. It was cold; my nose felt raw from a year inside with my allergies to keep me company. All around me, people adjusted masks, exited cars.
We didn’t look at each other. I think we were afraid to jinx it.
The vaccine.
After a year trapped inside. Scared. Confused. Bored.
I’m not at this moment certain which of those emotions is the worst for humanity.
I seized my phone with my appointment text. I pressed down on the mask over the bridge of my nose.
I followed a man inside the pavilion.
I got my sheet.
I walked to the man with the thermometer.
“Happy vaccine day!” he said.
Tears sprang to my eyes. Vaccine day. I wasn’t sure how this would end. I didn’t picture a nice man in the pavilion of a retirement home. I didn’t see a whole year … gone.
I never thought I would question my mortality in my forties or fear for my teen daughter’s or husband’s life from disease so early.
I got the shot. I sat in a chair for fifteen minutes.
I went back to my car.
I removed my mask.
I cried.
Happy Vaccine Day. Indeed.