Hello Hypochondria, My Good Friend

Obsessing with a feeling of unease, slight feverishness and a bit of body ache? Is it ‘season change’ or the C-word?

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Obsessing with a feeling of unease, slight feverishness and a bit of body ache? Is it ‘season change’ or the C-word?

Bengalis have a very specific untranslatable condition called “ga myaj myaj”. It’s a feeling of unease, slight feverishness, a bit of body ache and more-than-usual ennui. It’s a staple during this time of the year which Bengalis call “season change”. This year, of course, the usual hypochondria that afflicts the Bengali body and soul has a new name—Corona panic.

The other day, a neighbour made polite noises about how unusually pleasant the Kolkata weather was for a March evening. Then he said ruefully, “Of course, now everyone is anxiously awaiting the full heat of summer, hoping it will fry the Corona virus as well.” We are never happy.

Yesterday Once More

Bengal, which has bandh culture in its bone marrow, can easily comprehend what is fashionably being called social distancing these days—schools shut, movie theaters closed, stores shuttered. It feels like yesterday once more.

Actually, the malls are not yet shuttered since Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee thinks that could lead to food shortage. Instead, there are people at the entrance squirting hand sanitizer. Of course, the new divide between the haves and the have-nots is between those who have the luxury to self-isolate and those who don’t because their jobs require them to man the gates of malls, work in hospitals, and keep the buses running.

A Connected Community

I get a barrage of emails from everyone, from food delivery apps to airlines to retail chains, all titled “An important message for our community” instead of offering discounts.

The irony is we have all discovered how connected we are as a community thanks to a virus that requires us to self-isolate. Of course, we all have our own ideas of what self-isolation and community mean. I am sure some of us piously going into self-quarantine think we are all alone...

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