Wuhan strikes 丨 reporter's notes: their strength props up the city

There are many reasons to admire beauty in Wuhan. It is no exaggeration to say that when they were put to the test in this city, they held up half the sky.

When it comes to praiseworthy groups, the first thing we think of is doctors and nurses. A total of more than 100,000 people have been assisted by local medical aid. Half of the doctors are women and more than 90% of the women are nurses.

I interviewed teenage doctors and female nurses, and everyone refused to be praised. They take what they have done for granted and say they don't want to be heroes. But at this time, they are.

Get along with them a lot, it is easy to draw a conclusion: with them, the sky in Wuhan will not fall.

Among them, Academician Li Lanjuan, 73, is probably the oldest. People have seen from the photos on the Internet that after taking off the mask, the indentation is deeply embedded in her flesh, and the marks and wrinkles are no longer clear.

For Li Lanjuan, sleep is a luxury in Wuhan. Every day, she is busy seeing patients, doctors, and heads of government departments, and telling everyone what she thinks about epidemic prevention and control. Those who have touched her can truly feel that her words carry a power that makes many people practical.

Wang Nan, an anesthesiologist at the Tongji Hospital of Central China University of Science and Technology, is tasked to intubate critically ill patients every day. This is perhaps the most dangerous of the many scenarios for treating patients with new coronary pneumonia.

Viruses are always eager to replicate on new vectors, and under heavy protection, this is their rare opportunity-the patient's mouth opens, a lot of virus is expelled, and the doctor's face is 10 cm away. No doctor likes this scene, but no one will hesitate when it comes to people. When patients come between life and death, only the weight of this hose is known to them.

Among intubated doctors, women are not a minority. They come from all over the world and have very different personalities. Put on a mask, put on protective clothing, and walked into the intensive care unit, they became the same person-the intubation was fast and stable, and it was unambiguous to save people.

The heroines in this city are not only intubated doctors, but also many "little people". They have passed you and me countless times, doing things that few people would notice. In this special time when the possibility of trivial matters is at stake, they use their own way to maintain the city's breath.

After the Spring Festival, Chen Hongmei decided to open her "little Sichuan restaurant". She said everyone always eats, and her restaurant may be able to help, and Wuhan No. 6 Hospital is right next to the restaurant.

Soon after the ordering platform went online, orders came in a steady stream. Chen Hongmei turned on the fire, cut up the vegetables, and turned the spoon upside down, and from morning to night, she took a box of lunch to the hospital.

Some people praise her: it can be called great to take the risk to stay in business. Chen Hongmei waved her hand, "It's far from enough, but thinking that I've finally worked hard, I feel happy."

The lens mount is high, and the busyness of the Vulcan Mountain Hospital construction site is broadcast live online. The dense helmets swim back and forth in the video, but few people can see clearly that there are many women under the hats.

It takes ten days to build a large hospital, and coordination can't be slow. After working in the industry for more than 30 years, he has done more than 100 major projects, and Wang Xiaohong is handy for this. She is no stranger to everything from drawings to technology, from supplies to the scene.

But at this site, the anxiety in her work was the first time she had encountered it. Eat fast, sleep less, make hundreds of phone calls every day, and keep jogging on the construction site. Wang Xiaohong said that working on the construction site of Vulcan Mountain Hospital, she didn't want to delay for a minute, feeling that she was one minute faster, like saving a person.

It is said that people want to stand in their thirties. Counting it out, most post-90s girls are still young. But in the face of the virus, growing up seems to be overnight.

In order to take care of the 89-year-old grandmother, 26-year-old Wu Shangzhe became a rare patient who was transferred from the square cabin hospital to Vulcan Mountain Hospital. After making the decision to transfer to hospital, she was also a little afraid. On the day of going to the Vulcan Mountain Hospital, she bolded herself and wrote 4 words on Weibo: Nothing to look back on.

At the hospital, Wu Shangzhe used Vlog to record his life. She frequently took selfies and said she wanted to be an optimistic girl. She posted text and videos online and received countless encouragements and blessings. Some people say that it is easy to see through a mask, and the virus cannot erode her strength.

The epidemic locked the city, and everyone was a victim and a supporter. Everyone who encouraged Wu Shangzhe was not cured by her.

In the cabin of Qingfang District, separated from the wall of the ward, a small platform for broadcasting was set up in the aisle. Put on the computer, mount the microphone, Hua Yuchen, a post-90s primary school music teacher, sat on a small plastic bench. Her voice began to pass through the wall, and a new day began in the square cabin hospital.

From poem recitation to news express, from the vibrato "Divine Comedy" to birthday wishes, warm sounds such as floating antidote slowly let the irritability in the ward disappear, and joy began to fill here.

In the days when the school could not be opened because of the epidemic, Hua Yuchen took her students to complete a special homework-"Cloud Chorus" a "Brightest Star in the Night Sky". Everyone recorded their own part at home, and then composed a song. Hua Yuchen felt that when the crisis was covering Wuhan, so many people doing things silently, like the brightest star in the night sky, illuminated the city.

Winter comes to spring, and the number of confirmed patients decreases every day. It won't take long for the bustling Wuhan to return. At that time, everyone would take off their masks, carry backpacks to travel, put on makeup and go shopping.

These amazing heroines will melt their lives into roadside stalls and hot pot restaurants, and will pass you and me again. However, we will always remember that their power once propped up the city during the most difficult times. (Economic Daily-China Economic Network reporter Yuan Yong)