By Shawne K. Wickham, New Hampshire Sunday News
For nearly two years, the pandemic has upended our lives.
Thousands of Granite Staters have lost loved ones to a cruel illness, and more than a quarter-million have been infected. Arguments over mask mandates, vaccines and medical treatment have inflamed our politics, divided our communities and disrupted our schools, workplaces and families.
Maybe it’s time to think about what happens after the health crisis finally ends.
How will what we’ve been through change how we do our jobs, teach our children, worship our God, spend our leisure time?
Who will we be after this is over?