When COVID-19 Caught Up With Me

For this 21-year-old, life was all about friends, college classes and the road ahead. Then, the deadly coronavirus struck

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For this 21-year-old, life was all about friends, college classes and the road ahead. Then, the deadly coronavirus struck

As the COVID-19 pandemic rampaged across the globe, dismantling life as we knew it, I remember remaining indifferent at first. But all that changed, in late March, when I contracted the novel coronavirus.

Until then, my life was like that of any regular 21-year-old’s. As a master’s student of economics at the London School of Economics, my regular day involved waking up, rushing to classes or seminars and studying in the library. I never thought this routine could, or would, change.

Soon, as the virus spread through the world, our university started prepa-ring for the now-inevitable lockdown. It operationalized the shutdown in phases—it was early March when the school announced the transition to online classes. Shortly after, they shut down campus buildings. I coped as everyone else did: trying to not panic, following the news, maintaining personal hygiene and being careful, whenever I stepped out of my dorm.

In the days that followed, the entire country found itself firmly gripped by this scourge—the numbers refusing to plateau. Caught in this grim spiral, I made a quick decision to return home to India. Within 24 hours, I had cleared out my room, booked my tickets and got on the flight. It was 15 March—I had no symptoms when flying back, and even upon landing in Mumbai, I felt healthy and normal. I passed screening at the airport, but even though I felt alright, I isolated myself from my family. I practised physical distancing and avoided contact with friends and loved ones as far as possible. My plan was to carry out the recommended 14-day quarantine.

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It was about two or three days after my arrival that extreme fatigue began to set in—my body felt limp, as if all energy had been sucked out of it. Soon, a fever, which steadily rose as high as 102°F, accompanied it. I felt waves of pain, especially in the lower half of my body. My head hurt, I felt dizzy and thre...

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