WHO WE’LL BE AFTER THIS

When This Is Over, I’ll Live By the Sea

Before the pandemic, stepping off the treadmill always felt impossible

Rosie Spinks
Forge
Published in
3 min readJun 30, 2020

--

Photo illustration, sources: Ronnie Kaufman/The Image Bank/Getty Images, Abstract Aerial Art/DigitalVision/Getty Images

In the first sentence of Joan Didion’s iconic essay, “Goodbye to All That,” on leaving New York City, she wrote, “it’s easy to see the beginning of things, and harder to see the ends.”

No offense to Joan, but I actually can remember when it ended for me — the moment when I decided to leave London, the place I’d lived for nearly a decade.

It was late April, several weeks into the UK’s lockdown. I was lying on the grass outside, taking a break from reading a book. I watched an ant crawl up my leg, and marveled at how different I felt compared with just a few weeks before. Back then, I had a constant, low-grade sense of dread that was impossible to name or find a cause for. I always felt busy. And even when I pared down my schedule as much as humanly possible, I never seemed to have enough time to do what I wanted (namely, read, write, and lie in the grass). I remember in January, mapping out my year of work and leisure travel and other social commitments ahead, and feeling slightly short of breath.

Then lockdown happened. And, suddenly, that particular brand of dread was gone. I found myself in possession of something I’d…

--

--

Forge
Forge

Published in Forge

A former publication from Medium on personal development. Currently inactive and not taking submissions.

Rosie Spinks
Rosie Spinks

Written by Rosie Spinks

Writing about how to create a meaningful life in a chaotic world. Formerly a lifestyle and business reporter. Find me: rojospinks.com @rojospinks.

Responses (3)