This At 4am Sick With Covid: I Wrote

Let me describe the scene: A single, sweat-stained pillow. A water bottle that is now room-temperature and somehow tastes of copper. The soft blue glow of a laptop screen, brightness turned down to its lowest setting to avoid triggering a migraine. Outside, the suburban street is silent except for a single dog who, like me, seems to have forgotten what time it is.

[Your Name]

Tylenol. Cold water. The dog next door who finally stopped barking. i wrote this at 4am sick with covid

“We spent three years building psychological bunkers against this moment. Masks, boosters, social distance. And yet, when the fever finally comes for you, it is not dramatic. It is boring. It is a wet towel on the forehead. It is the realization that your body is not a fortress but a rented room with a leaky faucet.” Let me describe the scene: A single, sweat-stained pillow

What did I write? Fragments. A grocery list that devolved into a haiku about lemons. An email to my boss that, upon rereading in the sober light of noon, was simply the word “waves” repeated twelve times. And one coherent paragraph about the nature of isolation: Outside, the suburban street is silent except for

I woke up at 11 AM. The laptop had gone to sleep. My notes were a mess of typos and half-finished metaphors. The fever had broken, leaving behind only the dull ache of recovery and a faint embarrassment.