Voices
A bad bout of empathy fatigue
I can’t anymore! I actually can’t, with everyone watching President Cyril Ramaphosa and worrying that he looks tired. Or that he has bags under his eyes.
It’s 20:00 on a Monday night when he speaks to us. Who isn’t tired? Have you seen the bags under my eyes? Speak to me mid-morning or even afternoon, and I look a lot more spritely and unquestionably less worn down.
I know the president had a busy day on Monday what with meeting the vaccines and taking selfies with the deputy president and stuff, but we are also busy. And exhausted. And it’s 20:00 for Pete’s sake! Netflix is hardly going to watch itself.
The term I heard is “empathy fatigue”, and I think I might have caught a terribly bad dose of it in recent days. It has been a sudden onset, and I appear to be suffering from a severe form.
Because quite suddenly, I find myself genuinely not caring that he looks pasty, or that our kids are having a bad year when they are privileged and cared for, or that until this week, Muizenberg beach was closed.
I might have cared in December how the president looked, mourned the loss of the year along with our offspring, or lamented beach closures when I wanted to go and couldn’t. But honestly, now, I find it difficult to be moved by any of it. And if they had to keep Muizenberg firmly shut until December, it wouldn’t phase me.
Not. One. Bit.
What do I care about right now? The vaccine. I care that we acquire, distribute, and immunise the nation. I care about people behaving responsibly. And I care about getting back to social and commercial freedom. Because I crave it.
I care about my parents-in-law and others like them who are slowly losing their minds in isolation, away from family, and who need to get the vaccine sooner than later.
I care about my one son who is waiting to get to Israel for his gap-year programme, and another who is desperate to see his friends without worry and anxiety.
I don’t care that the president looks tired. Or that he has bags under his eyes.
I care that the most vulnerable in our society are water-cannoned while waiting in line for a measly financial grant. I care that so much of the available funding has been looted, and I care that the African National Congress remains so arrogant, it thinks that it can continue to ask for financial assistance and we will trust it. We won’t.
I care that it has dropped the ball regarding vaccines, but expects us to celebrate the arrival of a delivery that in terms of size is insignificant. And whereas I do understand the symbolism of the first tranche, I also understand that this isn’t a time for symbols.
It’s a time for action.
Which is pretty much all that I care about. And Netflix.
Wendy Kaplan Lewis
February 4, 2021 at 10:28 am
Brilliant beautiful humor putting things into perspective
MARTIN HERR
February 4, 2021 at 12:03 pm
Could not agree more.
Justine
February 4, 2021 at 2:16 pm
So with you on that. I’m so awful & horrid I don’t even want to know when my sister’s best friend’s aunt has died of Corona. Need some good news, just now and then
Brenda
February 4, 2021 at 7:03 pm
And so … yes the vaccines arrived.. we watched that before 20.00
It was exciting & relieving .
UNCLE CYRIL – I respect you but …. I fell asleep 😴 soon after you repeated the story ! NEVER happened before when you talk to us.
Watched the replay . So I learned about beaches & alcohol
Truth is an announcement would have been good enough –
Pres / you also need to relax. Watch some Tv or listen to music
Keep our family meetings to tell us about :
-Measures to prevent corrupt practices in vaccination rollout
– Dates when the rest of vaccines are arriving SOON PLEASE
– START dates for phases 1 2 & 3
Then you Sir will look less tired and there will be less Covid related fatigue.
Fatigue ! You also need a break Pres !
Errol Price
February 5, 2021 at 6:27 am
As Charlie Brown might say : Good Grief ! does your contributor not know the difference between “phase”and “faze” ?