The closed cemetery of Bolgare, Lombardy, during a funeral ceremony during the Covid-19 pandemic. Credit: Piero Cruciatti AFP/ Getty

I’ve been aware since I was diagnosed five years ago that my leukaemia could kill me. My version is chronic rather than acute, so I’ve never had that sudden blind panic of imminent death that a cancer diagnosis can lead to. More of an extended — five year long, so far — musing on when and how the point would come when it moves towards being a more immediate death sentence, and the obvious hope that this would not be for many years.
Until today.
This morning, I received – along with one and a half million other people – formal notification from the NHS that I might well die within a few weeks. The letter, of course, is designed to avoid that, recommending that I “shield” myself from as much human contact as possible. And — not being one of the so-called ‘covidiots’ who ignore official advice — I intend to follow its lead. So from now until 14th June it’s me, my bed, my desk (and, if he sneaks in, my cat) and the same four walls.
But the urgent purpose of the letter is to make starkly clear the real threat I and the other 1.5 million of us face. This could be it.
My treatment began in January, in what I now like to think of as a spectacular piece of comic timing. My leukaemia means that my body has been making too many white blood cells which crowd out the red cells. Eventually, left untreated, my organs would not work properly and I would die. For five years, my consultant has observed a “watch and wait” protocol, monitoring me every couple of months until the moment came when that threat became real. That moment was a few weeks ago. I was put on a newly developed targeted treatment which has, so far, followed exactly the expected and hoped for course.
One consequence of the treatment, however, is that my already impaired immune system is even weaker. At exactly the moment when a rampaging virus is on the loose. In my head, this is the opening premise of a dark sitcom in which I am starring.
The coronavirus pandemic has upended almost everything for almost all of us. But it’s upended one particular part of my existence – that section of my mind which has been dealing with my mortality. After the initial shock of the leukaemia diagnosis, my reaction has been a form of denial.
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