One year in, here's how the pandemic has changed us

Locals reflect on hardships, perspectives gained and silver linings of the coronavirus shutdown

Oak Knoll Elementary School first-grader Hannah jumps rope while wearing a mask during recess at the Menlo Park school on Sept. 29, 2020. Photo by Magali Gauthier.

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One year in, here's how the pandemic has changed us

Locals reflect on hardships, perspectives gained and silver linings of the coronavirus shutdown

Oak Knoll Elementary School first-grader Hannah jumps rope while wearing a mask during recess at the Menlo Park school on Sept. 29, 2020. Photo by Magali Gauthier.

We all remember a moment last year when unease about the coronavirus started to creep into our consciousness.

Maybe it was when we heard about the long lines outside of Costco and the shelves inside stripped bare of toilet paper and bottles of water. Or the first time someone elbow-bumped us instead of shaking hands (jokingly, but not really). Or when we started seeing people walking around wearing blue surgical masks — and we didn't even own one, let alone know where to get one.

And then came March 17, the day that the Bay Area's stay-at-home order took effect. It was the first in the nation, initiated by our alarmed public health leaders.

In the seemingly endless year since, our unease has turned into a multitude of emotions and unusual, only-in-a-pandemic experiences.

To give us the chance collectively to pause and reflect on the impact these past 12 months have had on our lives, The Almanac is publishing this two-part series of profiles and recollections of local residents.

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This week, we feature the stories of those who've been on the front lines, including medical staff, gig workers and an educator. And we also catch up with one person who got COVID-19 even before the public health mandate kicked in.

In two weeks, we turn these pages over to our readers, who are stepping forward with their insights about how they've changed as a result of the pandemic.

It's not too late to share your story, whether brief or lengthy. Send it to us by emailing [email protected] or by leaving us a three-minute voicemail message at 650-223-6514 by Friday, March 12. Include your full name and a way for us to contact you, and we'll be in touch.

Jessica Clark, educator

"Before the pandemic ... it was just go, go, go all the time. When all of that stopped, it made you say: Was all that really important?"

Jessica and Jeremy Clark and their children, Kaitlyn, 17, Penelope 11, and Eli, 15, in Palo Alto on Feb. 23. Photo by Magali Gauthier.

When the Palo Alto Unified School District started talking about elementary schools reopening last fall, Jessica Clark reacted both as an teacher's aide and a mother watching her child fall through the cracks at home.

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She couldn't help but feel like a guinea pig, but she said her husband's work supervising the respiratory department at a hospital helped ground her. Throughout the fall, she watched heated debates over reopening intensify in Zoomed school board meetings and on social media, pitting teachers against parents.

But Clark also knew firsthand there were children who desperately needed in-person support. "If I was going to be a parent wanting (my child) to go back, then I needed to do ... my job as well," she said. Read more of her story by clicking here.

Sunny Johnson-Gutter, firefighter-paramedic

Palo Alto Fire Department paramedic Sunny Johnson-Gutter. Photo by Magali Gauthier.

"It's just a constant barrage of needs, needs, needs and needs — people who are sick, and they need care and compassion."

Last month, Palo Alto Fire Department paramedic Sunny Johnson-Gutter and three of his colleagues found themselves in a hospital in Bakersfield that was overflowing with COVID-19 patients.

They stayed for two weeks, helping to administer medication, take vital signs and move patients in a fast-paced environment. Even though the four paramedics had different shifts, they made a point to still meet daily for outdoor meals to share what they'd experienced and support one another.

When they returned, each member of the team went through a debriefing session with a department therapist. The trip, he said, left them feeling "on edge." Read more of his story by clicking here.

Kerry Boynton, medical assistant

Kerry Boynton. Courtesy Kerry Boynton.

"We're at the stage of the pandemic where we can have hope that it can be alleviated, or at least contained."

Kerry Boynton doesn't sugarcoat her experience working as a medical assistant during the pandemic: It's been a year filled with sadness, depression, grief, stress and anger. During the holiday surge in coronavirus cases, she received messages almost every day from her union that another employee had died from COVID-19 while just doing their job.

But with the vaccines rolling out, she now says she has hope she'll see the end to all of that. Read her story by clicking here.

Francisca Vazquez, gig worker

Francisca Vazquez and her siblings, Jorge Amir and Zamantha De la Luz. Photo by Magali Gauthier.

"We are barely recovering."

The beginning of the pandemic felt like a sprint to Francisca Vazquez. That's when she and her household of five at Buena Vista Mobile Home Park in Palo Alto found themselves scrambling to come up with a month's rent in April.

Now a year into the public health crisis, Vazquez — like so many others still struggling with the consequences of the pandemic — tells of a seemingly endless marathon for survival, and a life that has largely been put on hold.

To add to the financial instability, there's now a new challenge: Vazquez and her family have to move out of Palo Alto, and soon, owing to a complicated ownership situation at the Buena Vista Mobile Home Park. Read more of her story by clicking here.

Monica Yeung-Arima, COVID-19 survivor

Monica Yeung-Arima. Photo by Magali Gauthier.

"I have some immunity, but I still wear my mask and socially distance and do all of the things other people do."

Surviving COVID-19 hasn't blunted Monica Yeung-Arima's caution toward the disease. She follows the research and is aware that her immunity might not protect her against the virus' variants. She also doesn't know how long her immunity will last.

But over the past year, Arima says she's also grown concerned about another type of pandemic: xenophobia. Some people have used the virus' origins in China as an excuse for violence against Asian Americans.

It feels more daunting than the virus itself, she said. Read more of her story by clicking here.

Vanessa Bain, nonprofit leader

"I feel the onus of responsibility to keep my family safe and protected, which has definitely changed the way that I would normally live my life."

Vanessa Bain, who was a gig worker for Instacart at the start of the COVID-19 outbreak, has transitioned to working full-time as the executive director of the gig worker organizing nonprofit Gig Workers Collective. Photo by Sammy Dallal.

As an advocate for essential workers, a mom and one of eight family members stuck mainly at home together over the past year, Vanessa Bain has had to figure out how to juggle the demands of advocating for gig workers, protecting her family and taking care of herself.

"You're not really any good to anybody else if you're not feeling OK or feeling capable of doing things," she said of learning the importance of self-care. "While it's challenging, (it) is long overdue." Read more of her story by clicking here.

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One year in, here's how the pandemic has changed us

Locals reflect on hardships, perspectives gained and silver linings of the coronavirus shutdown

by Embarcadero Media staff /

Uploaded: Fri, Mar 5, 2021, 11:44 am

We all remember a moment last year when unease about the coronavirus started to creep into our consciousness.

Maybe it was when we heard about the long lines outside of Costco and the shelves inside stripped bare of toilet paper and bottles of water. Or the first time someone elbow-bumped us instead of shaking hands (jokingly, but not really). Or when we started seeing people walking around wearing blue surgical masks — and we didn't even own one, let alone know where to get one.

And then came March 17, the day that the Bay Area's stay-at-home order took effect. It was the first in the nation, initiated by our alarmed public health leaders.

In the seemingly endless year since, our unease has turned into a multitude of emotions and unusual, only-in-a-pandemic experiences.

To give us the chance collectively to pause and reflect on the impact these past 12 months have had on our lives, The Almanac is publishing this two-part series of profiles and recollections of local residents.

This week, we feature the stories of those who've been on the front lines, including medical staff, gig workers and an educator. And we also catch up with one person who got COVID-19 even before the public health mandate kicked in.

In two weeks, we turn these pages over to our readers, who are stepping forward with their insights about how they've changed as a result of the pandemic.

It's not too late to share your story, whether brief or lengthy. Send it to us by emailing [email protected] or by leaving us a three-minute voicemail message at 650-223-6514 by Friday, March 12. Include your full name and a way for us to contact you, and we'll be in touch.

Jessica Clark, educator

"Before the pandemic ... it was just go, go, go all the time. When all of that stopped, it made you say: Was all that really important?"

When the Palo Alto Unified School District started talking about elementary schools reopening last fall, Jessica Clark reacted both as an teacher's aide and a mother watching her child fall through the cracks at home.

She couldn't help but feel like a guinea pig, but she said her husband's work supervising the respiratory department at a hospital helped ground her. Throughout the fall, she watched heated debates over reopening intensify in Zoomed school board meetings and on social media, pitting teachers against parents.

But Clark also knew firsthand there were children who desperately needed in-person support. "If I was going to be a parent wanting (my child) to go back, then I needed to do ... my job as well," she said. Read more of her story by clicking here.

Sunny Johnson-Gutter, firefighter-paramedic

"It's just a constant barrage of needs, needs, needs and needs — people who are sick, and they need care and compassion."

Last month, Palo Alto Fire Department paramedic Sunny Johnson-Gutter and three of his colleagues found themselves in a hospital in Bakersfield that was overflowing with COVID-19 patients.

They stayed for two weeks, helping to administer medication, take vital signs and move patients in a fast-paced environment. Even though the four paramedics had different shifts, they made a point to still meet daily for outdoor meals to share what they'd experienced and support one another.

When they returned, each member of the team went through a debriefing session with a department therapist. The trip, he said, left them feeling "on edge." Read more of his story by clicking here.

Kerry Boynton, medical assistant

"We're at the stage of the pandemic where we can have hope that it can be alleviated, or at least contained."

Kerry Boynton doesn't sugarcoat her experience working as a medical assistant during the pandemic: It's been a year filled with sadness, depression, grief, stress and anger. During the holiday surge in coronavirus cases, she received messages almost every day from her union that another employee had died from COVID-19 while just doing their job.

But with the vaccines rolling out, she now says she has hope she'll see the end to all of that. Read her story by clicking here.

Francisca Vazquez, gig worker

"We are barely recovering."

The beginning of the pandemic felt like a sprint to Francisca Vazquez. That's when she and her household of five at Buena Vista Mobile Home Park in Palo Alto found themselves scrambling to come up with a month's rent in April.

Now a year into the public health crisis, Vazquez — like so many others still struggling with the consequences of the pandemic — tells of a seemingly endless marathon for survival, and a life that has largely been put on hold.

To add to the financial instability, there's now a new challenge: Vazquez and her family have to move out of Palo Alto, and soon, owing to a complicated ownership situation at the Buena Vista Mobile Home Park. Read more of her story by clicking here.

Monica Yeung-Arima, COVID-19 survivor

"I have some immunity, but I still wear my mask and socially distance and do all of the things other people do."

Surviving COVID-19 hasn't blunted Monica Yeung-Arima's caution toward the disease. She follows the research and is aware that her immunity might not protect her against the virus' variants. She also doesn't know how long her immunity will last.

But over the past year, Arima says she's also grown concerned about another type of pandemic: xenophobia. Some people have used the virus' origins in China as an excuse for violence against Asian Americans.

It feels more daunting than the virus itself, she said. Read more of her story by clicking here.

Vanessa Bain, nonprofit leader

"I feel the onus of responsibility to keep my family safe and protected, which has definitely changed the way that I would normally live my life."

As an advocate for essential workers, a mom and one of eight family members stuck mainly at home together over the past year, Vanessa Bain has had to figure out how to juggle the demands of advocating for gig workers, protecting her family and taking care of herself.

"You're not really any good to anybody else if you're not feeling OK or feeling capable of doing things," she said of learning the importance of self-care. "While it's challenging, (it) is long overdue." Read more of her story by clicking here.

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