To make it through COVID fatigue, get an accountability partner

This morning, I hit a real lockdown low. I found myself thinking about getting a haircut—something I had postponed back in March, pushing it off to some distant, vague future. I finally made an appointment for a date that once felt impossibly far away, and then I completely forgot about it. But today, when I checked my calendar, I realized the day had actually arrived. My appointment was set for this Friday. Reader, before you start panicking, let me clarify: I canceled it. I have asthma, and with rising COVID-19 cases in my area, I just didn’t feel safe. But what unsettled me the most was that, for a moment, I almost talked myself into going through with it. I’ve been pretty strict with my lockdown rules. My friends joke that they’ll go to a restaurant just to watch me lose it. A few weeks ago, I even wiped down an eggplant with a Clorox wipe before putting it in the fridge. So the idea that I was seriously considering something that’s a 7 out of 10 on the risk scale made me pause. It felt like a sign that maybe I was starting to crack under the pressure. I don’t think I’m alone in feeling this way. In the U.S., we've been living through a pandemic for four months now. We're all suffering from pandemic fatigue, and we’re desperate for things to return to normal. The problem is, the activities we pushed off for “sometime this summer” are now creeping up on us. But at the same time, cases are still rising—or, in some places, never really stopped rising. The real challenge isn’t deciding where to draw the line or accepting that others might have different limits. Everyone has to find their own comfort zone. No, the real struggle is sticking to *my* own rules. How can I stay cautious when it feels like this will never end? When should I reschedule my haircut? Maybe 2022? It's easy to feel lost in this cycle of uncertainty. We're tired, we're frustrated, and we're longing for a sense of normalcy. But the truth is, we have to keep going. And sometimes, that means making tough choices—even if they feel small, like skipping a haircut. Because in the end, staying safe isn’t just about big decisions. It's about the little ones too.

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