Had two minor Covid scares this week: one at work (we're mostly still remote, but I happened to be in the office on the same day as the person who tested positive) and one at home (our babysitter). In both cases, I got tested, as did my wife and kids, and everything came back negative. We're all vaccinated, so I was never particularly worried about anyone getting severely ill, but these experiences drove home the fact that I really don't want to get Covid.
I'm not talking about the societal-level response to the pandemic. I'm just saying on an individual level, I don't want to have to deal with it. The hassle of having to quarantine, the worry about exposing my immunocompromised mother-in-law (who we see weekly), and above all, the fact that if anyone in the household tests positive, my younger son's school requires him to stay home for 10 days.
That doesn't mean I'm going to go back to full lockdown or anything. In fact, I had been starting to ease up even more on a lot of stuff in the past few weeks, ever since I got my booster. In between those two scares, I attended a conference in Orlando, and while they generally had decent safety protocols (it was a medical conference, after all) there were still plenty of times when I was unmasked indoors with strangers. So I will definitely continue to take calculated risks when it's an activity I really want to do.
But the notion that I'll view the pandemic as "over" just because I'm vaccinated and no longer have to worry about serious illness, hospitalization or death? I wish I could -- and I kind of envy those of you who can -- but I'm not there yet.