I know, you’re tired of COVID-19. I’m tired of it, too. For months, we’ve all had to deal
with the constant threat of illness, layoffs and deaths while being denied our typical
coping methods. It’s led to a widespread emotional exhaustion that now has a name:
COVID fatigue. And COVID fatigue hurts more than our mental health. It puts our
physical health at risk, too.
Recently, Lancasteronline.com interviewed 12 food industry professionals from
Lancaster County about living and working in a pandemic and how the past year has
affected them both professionally and personally. Michelle, a prep kitchen chef from
Lancaster, tells her story... in her own words...providing an inside look at COVID fatigue
“restaurant -style”.
“Pre-pandemic, I worked 50 to 70 hours a week. I was constantly tired, overworked, out
of shape and gaining weight. When indoor dining closed (in March 2020) and I was
furloughed, I finally got rest. I felt great. I started an online exercise program with free
YouTube videos. I was actually able to eat three balanced meals a day. I felt and looked
better than I had in a long time (at least physically).
I went back to work in June when indoor dining resumed. I started slow because
working with others in-person in a cramped environment made me pretty anxious. I got
used to the anxiety because really, what choice do I have? Wearing a mask for six to
eight hours a day in a kitchen is hard. Really hard. Some coworkers wear masks with
vents. Some don’t clip the nose part, so their mask is constantly falling down. I’ve had
coworkers take their mask down to talk. I ask them to pull it up and they comply, but I
can’t and won’t be the mask police.
Money is hit or miss. Some weeks I’m making “enough.” Other weeks I’m going
backward — not getting enough hours to pay bills but getting too many hours to collect
supplemental unemployment or the $300 a week from the federal government. I stress
out about money a lot. I can’t live on less than full-time hours forever. I’m tired,
especially mentally. I cry, a lot. That’s hard to say and admit, but it’s true.
I currently double-mask with a surgical mask worn over a KN95, and I wear glasses or
goggles. One of the main and most common symptoms of COVID-19 is loss of smell and
taste. What would that do to my job/career? Not to mention how devastating it would be
to me personally. Someone who lives for food and wine. I know a woman who is, just
one year later, getting her sense of taste back. I cannot risk that; it’s way too high a price
to pay.
For me, 2020 was, in three words…Frustrating, Sad, Stressful!
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