The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

CORONAVIRU­S PANDEMIC ONE YEAR LATER Georgians recall 2020's seismic shift

Many across metro Atlanta can still describe COVID-19’S arrival and impact with stunning detail.

- By Jeremy Redmon jredmon@ajc.com and Chelsea Prince chelsea.prince@ajc.com

T eresa Sardine remembers the ominous signs: Silent, empty interstate­s. Barren grocery store shelves gleaming under bright lights. Her grandsons’ public schools closing.

“We started buying toilet paper,” she said. “We started buying as much stuff as possible because you just became scared. Everyone was panicking.”

In the months that followed the start of the coronaviru­s outbreak, Sardine, 62, who works in the legal services industry, would scramble to make ends meet as she lost income.

“No matter which way we looked at it, we were stuck,” said Sardine, who lives with her two adult sons in Fayettevil­le. “So what do we do next?”

A year after routines were abruptly halted and fear rolled in like fog, Georgians vividly recall when COVID-19 changed everything. When the loneliness, the foreboding and inescapabl­e despair made them recognize the pandemic was real, was deadly and was changing the world — in some ways irrevocabl­y.

They remember the creased faces of exhausted

nurses. Empty restaurant­s. Empty theaters. Empty stadiums. Harried parents juggling work while helping their children learn from home. No kisses hello or goodbye. No hugs. Not even a handshake. Masked mourners grieving at sparsely attended funerals.

One year ago, the World Health Organizati­on declared the coronaviru­s outbreak a pandemic. By then, there were only six confirmed COVID-19 cases in Georgia. Today, more than 830,000 people in Georgia have been infected and nearly 16,000 have died.

COVID-19 came for Sardine over the summer. She coughed, ran a fever and ached. Struggling to breathe, she tested positive and was hospitaliz­ed for five days.

She got her first vaccine dose Monday, but she still worries she will get sick again. So she doesn’t leave the house often and has decided not to fly to her nephew’s wedding this month in Jamaica.

“I am afraid of people being around me — that they might have COVID-19 or I might contract it from them,” said Sardine, who has lost two cousins to the disease. “I don’t know who is sitting next to me, and I know that I would have a panic attack.”

Can’t hold it all in

Adrick Ingram remembers fear and paranoia pulsing last year through Hancock County, a rural community 100 miles southeast of Atlanta. Residents often turn to Ingram, the county’s coroner and a funeral home director, for public health guidance. Some initially wondered whether masks were effective, whether COVID19 was like the flu and, horrifical­ly, whether the disease was somehow a conspiracy to shrink the Black population. To combat misinforma­tion, Ingram hosted an online discussion with two doctors.

Then the trauma set in. More than 50 people in Hancock have died from COVID-19 and Ingram investigat­ed many of the cases. During a funeral for a friend in June, Ingram found himself crying uncontroll­ably. His father, who’d also served as county coroner,

had advised Ingram decades ago on compartmen­talizing his feelings and focusing on grieving families. Stress from the pandemic made that impossible.

Realizing he needed help, Ingram consulted a pastor and took his wife and 7-year-old son to the beach for a long weekend. He is considerin­g not running for another term as coroner.

“2020 was the first year that I really realized that I needed to take a break and pull back because it was so much,” said Ingram, 44. “The workload increased, but also the amount of stress that comes with walking into a situation where you could simply breathe something in and it could affect you and your family.”

‘The biggest blessing in the darkest time’

Kara Nash, 30, remembers the moment during that last normal week when her world upended. The pediatric nurse got an email from her father with the results of his latest medical scan: His pancreatic cancer had returned.

For Nash, who was 18 weeks pregnant when the world shut down, the pandemic was a complicati­on as she prepared to become a mother and prioritize­d time with her father, Cliff Ramos, a former high school wrestling coach in Gwinnett. She welcomed a son, Ford, in August. She would say goodbye to her dad two months later.

“I feel like 2020was really different for me than a lot of people because COVID wasn’t always my biggest concern,” she said. “If I was stressed about something, if I was excited or sad about something, it was because of Ford or my dad.”

Her newborn son, she said, “was the biggest blessing in the darkest time.”

Three generation­s under one roof

Katherine D’alessandro was living in Boston when she and her husband saw the writing on the wall. Each day of that final week of normalcy, they noticed fewer commuters on their walks to work from their home in Back Bay.

Once their companies went remote, the newlyweds decided to leave town for a while in case things took a turn and supplies became scarce. The first stop was her parents’ house in Maine, then Duluth, to be with David’s widowed father.

It was supposed to be temporary, but life intervened. A baby boy was on the way. And Atlanta, with its warmer weather and less dense population, was more accommodat­ing to their pandemic lifestyle. Now, three generation­s of the Italian American family are sharing one roof for the first time in a century. Katherine and David D’alessandro, 24 and 28, respective­ly, have continued at their Boston-based advertisin­g and technology jobs, working remotely, but Atlanta has started to feel like home.

“Every single decision since we found out we were pregnant, it just really felt like it all fell into place,” Katherine said. “You just have to run with it, right? We’re happy with where we’ve landed.”

Embrace every moment

Chris Crossen first saw the pandemic’s impact at work. Face masks became mandatory at the Dalton Police Department, where he is assistant chief. Officers began holding shift meetings in the parking lot.

His son’s middle school shut down and the rest of his son’s baseball season was canceled. Crossen helped coach his son’s team, just like his father Roger did when Crossen was a young athlete. Roger Crossen, a U.S. Army veteran who served on the Whitfield County Commission, died from COVID-19 in November. The Crossen family has since started the Roger Crossen Memorial Scholarshi­p Fund. The first awards are expected to be announced this year.

For Chris, 48, his father’sdeath has reinforced the importance of showing people he loves them. He kisses his 14-year-old son, Sam, and tells him he loves him every chance he gets, just like his father did with him.

“He kissed me on my bald forehead,” Chris recalled of his father, “and grabbed me up and would more than once tell me, ‘Your kids don’t ever get too old to do this. So don’t ever miss out on it.’”

 ??  ??
 ?? ALYSSA POINTER/ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? FAMILY UNIT: Katherine D’alessandro (top left) passes her son Dominic “Beatty” to husband David at home Wednesday in Duluth, where three generation­s unite. The couple moved from Boston to live with David’s father, Beatty D’alessandro (above).
ALYSSA POINTER/ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM FAMILY UNIT: Katherine D’alessandro (top left) passes her son Dominic “Beatty” to husband David at home Wednesday in Duluth, where three generation­s unite. The couple moved from Boston to live with David’s father, Beatty D’alessandro (above).
 ?? HYOSUB SHIN/AJC 2020 ?? WHEN IT BEGAN: Traffic on April 1 at Atlanta’s “Spaghetti Junction” reflects the ghost town effect of the pandemic lockdown. For weeks, the metro area’s roads were eerily empty — something most Atlantans might never have predicted they’d ever see.
HYOSUB SHIN/AJC 2020 WHEN IT BEGAN: Traffic on April 1 at Atlanta’s “Spaghetti Junction” reflects the ghost town effect of the pandemic lockdown. For weeks, the metro area’s roads were eerily empty — something most Atlantans might never have predicted they’d ever see.
 ?? ALYSSA POINTER/ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? Katherine (center) and David D’alessandro (right) continue to work for Boston companies remotely from Duluth, where they’ve relocated and have made a happy home with David’s dad, Beatty, and their newborn son, Dominic “Beatty” D’alessandro.
ALYSSA POINTER/ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM Katherine (center) and David D’alessandro (right) continue to work for Boston companies remotely from Duluth, where they’ve relocated and have made a happy home with David’s dad, Beatty, and their newborn son, Dominic “Beatty” D’alessandro.

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