As the week drew on, strange things started to occur. My university, where I’m studying to become a paramedic, cancelled my placement. All the pubs and restaurants were closed. I started to get a little more concerned. However, the sun was shining and there were waves, and the fact that I was not working meant I could surf. So, I did; two surfs a day, beers in the evening watching sunsets at my favourite spot.
One of my housemates had developed a cough, mild, then got better, she reckoned she had been slightly unwell and could have had a fever. I started to get a minor sore throat, a little tired maybe. I put it down to all the surfing I’d been doing. At this point there were hardly any cases reported in Cornwall where I live, I did not suspect that I was coming down with the coronavirus.
Monday the 233rd of March was the first news I had watched in a long time. The prime minister stood in front of flashing lights and small pulpit with his unkept blond wig-like hair and dictated in the voice of a drunken aristocrat the rules of social distancing and self-isolation. The question on many of our lips was, can we still surf? One form of exercise was allowed, so I guessed so…
The next day was big surf, spring tides, I went for a short surf, there was no one around. My chest started to feel tight, I put it down to nerves.
I got out and ran over to some tourists, two parents, two kids, marching towards the torrents of swirling rip synonymous with larger surf at Porthtowan and advised them not to enter the water. The run made me feel out of breath. What were they thinking entering such a dangerous ocean? I imagined if an incident had happened, no lifeguards. It would have been a tragedy
That evening I was a little bit wheezy, I’m asthmatic so took my inhaler and fell asleep.
I woke the next morning, felt tired, my face felt sore and my ears were blocked but nothing that a big cup of coffee wouldn’t sort out. I quaffed my coffee and headed down to the beach, the sunshine seemed extra bright, my throat seemed extra dry, something did not seem right. I put it to the back of my mind as I drove through hazy morning towards the beach. I saw my friend at the carpark. We hurried getting changed, feeling like criminals, and ran down the cold stones and sand with a biting southeast wind on the back of our necks. The surf was over head and clean, the sun was shining, the water green peaks that shifted on a swift moving tide.