Who You Insult When You Call This a ‘Wasted’ Year

Many Americans have long had limited opportunities for recreation. Think of them before you complain.

Karla Cornejo Villavicencio
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Illustration: Derek Abella

Hi, it’s me, your Connecticut friend who loves the foliage, hates the ticks, is from Brooklyn but from from Ecuador. I live in a predominantly upper-middle-class white neighborhood in New Haven, a transitory town with a rotating door of Yale graduate students. Because of Yale’s Covid-19 rules regarding campus living this year, there are some undergraduates podding together in houses in the neighborhood, so when I leave my attic apartment to walk my dog, it’s very, very Yale.

I’ve been living in New Haven some 10 years, and I’m still struck, as a city kid, by how green it is. How many trees. For the past 10 months, and especially recently, I am now struck by the number of undergrads and graduate students who are not masked. And when I escape them, find refuge in my home, and look on social, I can’t escape seeing able-bodied American citizens talk about how 2020 was a “wasted” year of life or planning the first thing they’ll do when they’re vaccinated, which tends to involve vacations and parties.

A life. What makes up a life. Jonathan Larson, who wrote Rent, was very clear that when your life is at risk and mainstream society considers your…

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