Do you guys get a pile of criticism if you drop your positive approach somewhere? Is it only on Yoors that a positive attitude around 'the whole situation' (I hardly dare to write down or pronounce the word) gets a like?
My modern fairy tale, with a positive message, in any case shakes firmly on the tree!

Whole discussions erupt, with people emphasizing the negative, such as hoarding and that there is no 'together'.
Then I kindly try to counterbalance with 'volunteers make hundreds of mouthmasks' or 'people with some medical knowledge voluntarily submit to help with the specially set up GP posts for triage', isn't that a community?
But then there is still a search for arguments to equalize the positivity with the bottom.
Apparently, a lot of people think that the lack of toilet paper is the ultimate blow to extinguish every bright spot.

Well, let me just tell you this.
My brother and my brother-in-law are on the front line now.
For a whole week without the essential protection, which has only recently been replenished.
Urgent operations are carried out, including on corona patients (removal of gallstones must also be done if you are infected), with the clumsy protective clothing on, limiting you in very precise movements.
Which means you can not disinfect the operating room with low pressure enough to still be able to use it in people who are not infected, because the virus survives 72 hours on metal.
Try pouring alcohol over devices that are full of buttons, holes and tubes...
Everything that was used must be left in that room.

But they don't complain. Not even if they have to stay at home for days, pick up their overtime, waiting for the fact that they might have to work for 12 hours at a time.
The days at home are unpaid. If there are no overtime, they go to a negative balance, which may be replenished later. If they don't get sick, at least. Because when they're sick, they don't go overtime, of course, and that negative balance remains. So they won't be paid.

One lift is barricaded, especially for the use of corona patients. Whole departments are emptied. Tents are set up in front of the entrance to the emergency room. People from all services are trained to do things they never had to do before.
“Our medical staff are ready,” says the government. Or the experts.
And they are, as well as they can.
With scared hearts.
Because they also have a family.
But they go for it.
They trust each other.
To their team spirit.
On “we drag each other through”.

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