Freezing Point Feature Issue 1260

Shanghai: turn a thousand bends, turn a thousand beaches

  In Shanghai, the bell of the customs building has been ringing for 94 years.

The bell at 0:00 on June 1 is particularly penetrating.

  People returning to the Bund stopped and listened when 12 bells rang through the brightly lit buildings and across the surging Huangpu River.

It was followed by the frantic honking of cars and the cheers of the crowd.

In the outer ring, fireworks celebrating the unblocking rushed into the sky and made loud noises.

Footsteps kicked, wheels rolled, and even the bridge across the river trembled.

  At this moment, countless pairs of ears in Shanghai waited for two months.

  From 00:00 on June 1, Shanghai will resume orderly access to residential quarters, public transportation operations and motor vehicle traffic.

But when Shanghai can fully recover, it seems that it will take some time.

  In many places in Shanghai, digesting the problems accumulated in the past two months has become a very important thing at the moment.

During the lockdown period, patients who were unable to see a doctor entered the hospital, pets that could not be cured flock to the pet hospital, unattended rented plants withered and waited for replacement, new hair had to be cut for two months, and the store was closed for two months. To make up, the confidence in this city has to be recovered little by little.

  Recently, several districts in Shanghai have successively reported positive cases of infection.

"The risk of a rebound of the epidemic still exists." Wu Jinglei, director of the Municipal Health Commission, said at a press conference on the prevention and control of the new coronary pneumonia epidemic in Shanghai on the afternoon of June 3, "We still need to remain vigilant at all times."

The bell rises, the bell falls, sorrow and joy are mixed

  This is something that Greater Shanghai has not experienced since the port opened in 1843.

"She is ill, not too ill," said a citizen.

  Two months ago, Pudong and Puxi were put under control one after another. A city of 25 million people is no longer a city of 25 million people. Ringing, day and night.

  On the night of March 31, a 34-year-old security guard met a drunk man on the Bund. He thought that this might be the man's last drink before he was banned.

  After that night, on this most prosperous street in Shanghai, there were only security staff on duty like him.

His eyes could see from one end of the road to the other through the bare landscape trees and empty streets.

He rarely saw anyone else on the street in those days.

He is often accompanied by "The East is Red", which rings when the bell in the customs building rings on the hour.

  Some residents living in Hongkou District and Jing'an District can also hear the bells from Huangpu District.

"Before, my residence was inaudible. Now it's so quiet, so quiet that people panic, and people feel scared." A resident of Hongkou District said that it was not the sound of boats on the Huangpu River that woke him up every morning. The fragrance of soy milk fritters, but the sound of the bell.

  In April, a young man living in Yangpu District, Shanghai set three alarm clocks every day to grab food.

In some communities, "bartering", which has almost disappeared from modern life, has become the norm. Some people take out coffee and wine in exchange for vegetables and eggs.

  Tobacco, alcohol, and Coke were once a luxury and a scarce commodity.

  One night in early April, a rider knocked on a tobacco and alcohol store with a closed glass door, asking if they would sell alcohol. Someone asked him to buy it, and the price was negotiable.

In some gas stations that are open for business, the most popular sales are not gasoline or diesel, but sticks of cigarettes. The queue to buy cigarettes can often be more than ten meters long, and there are very few cars refueling.

  In the days of staying at home, many people revisited the song "Shanghai Bund" and the TV series "Shanghai Bund".

In the comment area of ​​the song Netease Cloud Music, a person who was going through quarantine at the time left a message: "I remembered the liveliness of Shanghai before, and seeing the deserted outside today, I suddenly want to listen to this song." Some people also said: " I haven't been out for 40 days, but I still love this city so much. The number of positive cases has now exceeded 500,000, but the number of new cases per day has dropped from nearly 30,000 to 10,000."

  Someone prayed: "Shanghai will get out of the shadow of the epidemic as soon as possible. I still want to turn over, hundreds of thousands of waves, enough ups and downs in my heart."

  When the security guard on the Bund encountered the drunk again, it was late May, and two foreigners with wine bottles staggered past him.

At that time, the trees on both sides of the pedestrian street were already flourishing, and the cigarette butts that had not been seen for a long time appeared on the road again.

"Okay!" He sighed, Shanghai is coming back soon.

  On May 23, the day after the first four subway lines in Shanghai resumed operation, there was a lot of noise near the Bund.

An elderly three-wheeled motorcycle whistled frantically and galloped past Sichuan Middle Road where there were a few pedestrians walking.

A teacher from the Chinese Department of East China Normal University took the subway to Nanjing East Road, and took pictures on the slightly depressed street.

At that time, most of the shops on the pedestrian street had not yet opened, and there were only a few people hanging out.

  "Happy and sad." The teacher said that she missed the surging crowds on the Bund and the performance of the Peace Hotel's old jazz band.

  On her way home by subway, this Shanghai local aunt met a girl who was about to leave Shanghai and returned to her hometown. The girl confided to her about her experience in Shanghai.

She saw that the girl's eyes were full of tears, and she was about to leave with a suitcase, a pot of bluegrass that had been with her for many years, and her complicated feelings about Shanghai.

At that time, there were more and more trains leaving Shanghai, and public transportation had not yet fully recovered. People walked or cycled more than ten kilometers every day to Hongqiao Railway Station.

  The girl told her that she had been busy for half a month to get the certificate of returning home and the permission to leave the community, and she had gone through twists and turns to get the ticket. Now that her mobile phone is almost out of power, she has to sleep in the underground garage of the train station for one night to catch the train.

She gave her power bank to the girl.

  "I hope the strange strangers will not be disappointed in my city, she is only temporarily ill," she said.

  At the end of May, there were fewer and fewer new crown patients in the hospital, and the number of "closed-and-controlled areas" in Shanghai also dropped again and again.

On the Bund, motorcycles roared by occasionally, startling the bike-sharing riders on the roadside; some young people took watermelons, skateboards, and champagne out of the community to meet and drink in the open space on the Suzhou River.

  People started trying to slowly get back on track.

  On June 1, the first thing Lin Jingqiu, a 75-year-old Shanghai old man, did was go to his son's house to play checkers with his little grandson. He didn't leave until the evening to hang out on the Bund.

She had not experienced such a bland and free life for two months.

She also went to pay homage to the statue of Chen Yi, the first mayor of Shanghai after liberation.

She saw that the Bund was as lively as a festival, the crossroads were crowded with people, and the steps by the Huangpu River were full of people.

  She compares the Bund to the "reception room" in Shanghai, and is secretly happy when she sees the "reception room" gradually returning to its former glory.

Because the Bund is also her "hometown".

  Her ancestors came here from Ningbo to do business, bought a house and opened a shop near Nanjing East Road, and opened a shroud shop at Lane 466, Henan Middle Road.

She spent her childhood on the Bund, graduating from Shanghai No. 6 Girls' High School in 1966.

She said that the current Shanghai New World Daimaru Department Store was built on the site of her old house.

  On the second day of Shanghai's unblocking, Lin Jingqiu returned to Mengqingyuan Park on the Suzhou River to meet her old sisters after a long absence, and continued the morning exercise that she had been insisting on for more than 10 years.

The gray-haired old man who had been playing saxophone in Mengqing Garden all the year round came back with his musical instrument and sheet music, with a big back, gold-rimmed glasses, trousers and leather shoes.

The old man blew a song that was widely sung during the epidemic - "So Many People in the World".

  By the Suzhou River, she saw an old man in cloth shoes, with a chair and lunch, flying a kite on the Changhua Road and Bridge.

In June of previous years, on the Dragon Boat Festival, there would be dragon boat races in the Suzhou River, but now only the river flows.

  However, Shanghai is indeed recovering, which can also be seen from the amount of domestic waste disposed of.

  The Xupu Base of Shanghai Environmental Logistics Co., Ltd. undertakes 70% of the domestic waste transfer work in the urban area of ​​Shanghai.

In March, the base's daily average household waste disposal volume was 3,924 tons, and in April, it dropped to 2,852 tons per day. The lowest daily average household waste disposal was on April 6, at 2,114 tons. By May, the daily average was 2,114 tons. Disposal volume returned to 3910 tons.

  Recently, a peak appeared. On June 2, the amount of ordinary household waste reached 4,979 tons.

At the same time, another data continued to decline.

  "After the epidemic is under control, the special waste will go downhill." Yang Qingqing, the head of Xupu Base, told the China Youth Daily and China Youth Daily reporter that these special wastes mainly come from domestic waste in the closed and controlled areas.

The single-day peak of the special waste disposal volume once appeared on April 25, reaching 900 tons. Statistics on June 2 show that it has dropped to 165 tons.

  "Back", not only household garbage.

The "Tiger Fighting" also came back. On June 1, Zhang Bencai, the chief procurator of the Shanghai People's Procuratorate, was suspected of serious violations of discipline and law, and was subject to disciplinary review and supervisory investigation by the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection and the State Supervision Commission.

On June 2, the Shanghai No. 3 Intermediate People's Court held a press conference and released 6 typical cases of environmental pollution prevention and control.

"Drinking and driving" has also returned. On June 3, Shanghai traffic police investigated 70 cases of drunk driving and 845 cases of passenger trucks.

  When the city reopened, a Shanghai-based gardening company found a lot of work waiting for them.

During the epidemic, in office buildings, shops and other places in this metropolis, a large number of rented and placed plants were left unmanaged.

  On some boulevards, the road under your feet is often sticky due to not being cleaned for a long time.

A sanitation worker said with a smile that he had never seen grass in the lawn on the side of the street, growing to knee-deep like this year.

In the spring, the lawn mower would mow the lawn once a week, and the grass would at most cover the instep.

  After the lockdown was lifted, Wang Fang, a young researcher and doctoral supervisor of the School of Life Sciences of Fudan University, had a dazed feeling when he walked from the community to the street, "In the past two months, just looking at this street scene, it seems that nothing has happened. "But he knows that the restoration of the urban landscape is quick and there are some things that may take longer to restore.

  This spring when he was locked up in the community, he traveled around the community and found that dragonflies, fireflies, and water striders had disappeared, and there were fewer toads, frogs, and tadpoles.

In the 15 days after the large-scale disinfecting, he found new tadpoles, but the fireflies, which are more sensitive to air pollution, have not yet appeared.

  Judging from the infrared cameras deployed by his team in the wild in Shanghai, the number of wild animals in many urban parks has decreased, but their activity time has become more flexible due to the disappearance of people. Weasels and raccoons, which are often considered nocturnal animals, in During the day, it swaggers out for activities and foraging.

  "The relationship between urban animals and people will be more complicated," Wang Fang said. "Many times, people's activities are actually supporting their existence." At the same time, their infrared cameras have repeatedly photographed stray dogs forming a group. Punching wild cats, some raccoon dogs have also been killed by stray dogs.

  After Shanghai was unblocked, complaints from citizens about raccoon dogs increased, "Why are these wild animals rushing around so boldly, can you take care of it?"

  During the lockdown, the raccoon dog will go through the process of being born, growing up, and exploring the city.

During this period, the city looked very quiet and natural, with fewer people and cars.

But the food provided by humans is also decreasing, and they are forced to move to larger areas, to gardens and even commercial areas.

  Wang Fang feels that citizens need to understand wild animals.

They also have to adjust, they have to go back to their evening activities, they have to hide again.

"Cities haven't always been sealed like that."

The patient comes, the patient goes, and the healing continues

  On May 27, Liu Li, deputy director of the emergency department of the East Hospital of Renji Hospital Affiliated to Shanghai Jiaotong University School of Medicine (hereinafter referred to as: Renji East Hospital), ended the closed-loop management and returned home.

The son is worried that his mother is just coming back and leaving again.

He was happy when it became clear that his mother could go home after work.

  I haven't seen each other for two months. The little cat that I just brought back when I left has grown up. When the pet dog saw Liu Li coming back, he was stunned for a while, and then became affectionate again.

  The husband cooked a table of dishes, such as pigeons, octopus, cream of mushroom soup, etc., and also took a photo and posted it in the WeChat group of the community building.

After experiencing an epidemic storm, the family of three finally had the opportunity to sit down and have a meal in peace.

  From that day on, Liu Li gradually recovered not only the doctor, but also the family routine that belonged to his wife and mother.

Those household chores such as grocery shopping, vacuuming, mopping the floor, etc., she didn't like to do.

Liu Li said that after two months of closed-loop life, things that used to be everyday have become extravagant.

"Now that I can do it, I'm actually quite happy."

  On the morning of June 1, on the way from home to the hospital, Liu Li wanted to find a shared bicycle to ride, but could not find it.

"There are a lot of people on the road," she said. "Everyone I met seemed to be very happy, and they were finally able to come and go freely."

  And in the emergency room of Renji East Hospital, many changes are taking place.

  The observation area of ​​the emergency room has gradually returned to order, and small compartments have been added for patients and their families; most of the patients who were stranded in the ward on the second floor have returned home, and new inpatients have increased; the part that was temporarily dispatched to support The doctor withdrew, and some doctors were left to work in the emergency department as usual; the emergency department re-arranged special doctors for patients who registered themselves.

  However, Liu Li recently noticed that the number of patients with some inflammatory infections is higher than that of the same period in previous years, some of which are due to the accumulation of patients who "have not come to the hospital during the lockdown period".

  "We have encountered several (patients) with liver abscesses in the past two days. The lungs were infected and turned into lung abscesses." Liu Li told the China Youth Daily and China Youth Daily reporter. One of them impressed her a lot. construction worker.

At first, I had a fever and cough. I didn't go to the hospital, so I got some medicine and took it myself.

"The screen (holding) one screen has delayed the treatment time. I can't hold back and look at it again, (lung infection) is relatively serious."

  She also met a diabetic patient recently, who has been taking insulin all the time, but was locked in the unit during the epidemic, and the unit did not have insulin, and he was not able to buy the medicine in time.

"Then the blood sugar was very high, and ketoacidosis was sent here." Liu Li said, "He is not fully recovered, and he is in a hurry to be discharged because he wants to resume work and production, and wants to go back to work."

  Similar things happened to Lin Jingqiu's relatives.

  A relative who was diagnosed with advanced lung cancer last year was planning to do the fourth round of chemotherapy in early April.

"I didn't expect that the two sides of the strait would not be closed for a week, but for a full two months." Lin Jingqiu said, "Due to the traffic jam, the medicine he needed could not be delivered. It was not until the end of May that (the hospital) notified that, This medicine has been shipped in." The fourth chemotherapy was finally completed at the end of May. "Fortunately, during this period, the condition did not deteriorate significantly."

  Even the veterinary hospital is busy with work that has been saved for two months.

  Wang Qi, director of Shanghai Barbara Pet Hospital, told China Youth Daily and China Youth Daily that the number of pets admitted to the hospital has at least doubled recently. "We used to see about 30 cases a day, but now there may be 60 cases. Sterilization and vaccination."

  In the emergency room of Renji East Hospital, the number of first-class patients (endangered patients) sent by 120 ambulances did not drop significantly, and the number of second- and third-class patients (critical and emergency patients) who came to see a doctor on their own increased.

Although the total number of patients who came to see a doctor was higher than when the epidemic was severe, the medical staff who took off the "white" and put on blue isolation suits were able to deal with it more easily, quickly and for a longer time.

  Tao Wei, a Shanghai 120 ambulance driver, also took off his "big white".

"After the unblocking, 120 has basically returned to normal." Tao Wei said that the number of vehicles has returned to before the epidemic, but the number of emergency patients sent to the hospital were mostly elderly, and there were patients who could not seek medical treatment during the lockdown.

Recently, every time he sends a patient to the hospital, he sees some tertiary hospitals.

  Judging from the number of outpatient and emergency visits in Renji East Hospital, it has basically returned to the average level before the epidemic.

However, judging from the situation in Shanghai as a whole, due to the needs of epidemic disposal work, after entering June, 25 medical institutions including Pudong Hospital and Zhoupu Hospital still suspend some medical services.

  The day before Shanghai’s restart, the National Convention and Exhibition Center (Shanghai), the largest Fangcang shelter hospital in Shanghai, was closed.

In the makeshift hospital of Shanghai New International Expo Center, the isolation and treatment of new crown patients has not stopped.

  From March 31, when the cabin was opened to treat the first patient, to June 6, it has been 67 days. A total of 47,722 new crown patients have been treated in Shanghai New International Expo Center Fangcai Hospital, which accounts for 40% of the total number of new crown virus infections in Shanghai. Thirteenth.

  Sitting here is the medical management team of Renji Hospital. The chief commander is Zheng Junhua, Secretary of the Party Committee of Renji Hospital. He was the captain of the first batch of medical teams in Shanghai to aid Hubei in 2020.

Recently, he sent away the medical teams from seven provinces including Hubei, Tianjin and Jiangxi, and welcomed 766 local medical staff from Shanghai First People's Hospital, Shanghai Tenth People's Hospital and other hospitals.

  These medical staff who chose to "continue to heal" were not able to reunite with their families after the lockdown was lifted in Shanghai.

  They still maintain a daily life of "two o'clock and one line", starting from the closed-loop station in the morning, going to the new National Expo cabin, and returning to the station in the evening.

On the way, Zheng Yuhui, the deputy chief physician of the Respiratory Department of Renji Hospital, passed by the house. He often waved from a distance with his daughter standing on the balcony through the car window.

The moment he looked at each other through the window was a moment of comfort when he was away from home for more than two months.

  After most of the makeshift hospitals have been closed one after another, this medical team will fight until mid-June, continue to treat patients in the hospital, and deal with sporadic patients with local epidemics.

The Expo shelter, which was previously closed on May 25, is being repaired and rebuilt, and will continue to exist as one of the normalized reservations in the future.

  The epidemic in Shanghai came with the cold spring, and gradually subsided after the beginning of summer.

  On the morning of June 6, the data reported by the Shanghai Municipal Health Commission showed that there were still 523 confirmed cases in hospital in Shanghai, including 28 severe cases and 20 critical cases.

On this day, Shanghai added 4 local confirmed cases, 4 asymptomatic infections, and 1,298 discharged patients.

Among them, 313 people were out of the cabin from the Xinguobo Fangcai Hospital on this day.

  Recently, the lunch boxes sent to the cabins have been decreasing day by day, and the medical waste sent outside the cabins has also been decreasing day by day.

  With the gradual closure of makeshift hospitals and designated hospitals, the amount of medical waste generated in Shanghai also dropped from 1,407 tons during the peak period to 583 tons on June 5.

  "Although the (emergency response) level has not changed, it is getting closer and closer to the critical line of 555 tons for the third-level response." Ruan Jianbo, head of the operation management department of Shanghai Solid Waste Disposal Co., Ltd., told China Youth Daily and China Youth Daily reporter. , "When I made the plan at the time, I thought that 555 tons could not happen, but I didn't expect it to break through 1,000 tons all of a sudden."

  Despite the huge output of medical waste, the problem of disposal was not that big, but the biggest problem at that time was transportation.

  "We usually only have these conventional hospitals with a set route, but now it's all overturned. There are more than 200 square cabins at most." Ruan Jianbo said, on the basis of re-planning the transportation route, more than 100 vehicles were subsequently transferred. And the corresponding manpower is used for medical waste transfer.

  During the current round of the epidemic, the amount of medical waste in Shanghai exceeded 1,000 tons for the first time on April 14, and reached a peak of 1,407 tons 10 days later.

When the amount of medical waste fell below 1,000 tons again, it was May 20.

Among them, due to the implementation of closure and control management in Shanghai, the conventional medical waste in general hospitals dropped to a low point on April 4, with only 100 tons. After the closure of Shanghai, the amount of conventional medical waste also gradually recovered.

  With the restoration of normal life order, Ruan Jianbo found that they encountered another problem in the transportation of medical waste: the transfer vehicle would be blocked on the road.

Drivers can no longer be as smooth as they were before June.

  Not everything will go back to pre-pandemic anytime soon.

  Since the beginning of May, there have been no more positive patients in the emergency room of Renji East Hospital, but there are still concerns about the "appearance of positive patients".

"Everyone's protection level has been lowered, and the observation room (personnel) is relatively dense, and there is concern that another positive patient will appear." Liu Li said that a buffer zone is set up for patients who do not have a "negative nucleic acid test report". Such measures , will continue to be retained for a period of time in the future.

  In order to deal with the possible mental patients among the sporadic new crown infections, the designated hospitals for new crown pneumonia are also equipped with professional mental health teams.

Such measures will also transition to normalized epidemic prevention and control.

  "There won't be a big change in the short term." Liu Li felt, "The impact of the epidemic may not be resolved within two months, but a relatively long-term process, including the impact on people's living conditions." It also takes time to slowly transition to the state before the epidemic.

Turn a thousand turns, turn a thousand beaches, be careful

  Shanghai people have often asked themselves recently: Can Shanghai return to the past after the lockdown is lifted?

  "It will take at least a year for social life to fully recover, including human psychology," Lin Jingqiu said.

She has experienced too many things in her life, but few are like the past.

In more than two months, she has done 35 nucleic acid tests and more than 50 antigen tests.

  The most difficult thing is that in mid-April, she and her wife were at home with only a few kilograms of rice and two bags of noodles. She had eaten gnocchi soup at night for 10 consecutive days.

She has never seen a Shanghai where supplies are so tight.

  After the lockdown was lifted, Lin Jingqiu still felt uneasy in her heart, "Someone in the society reminded me that rice and rapeseed must be stocked."

  After the unblocking, many people live in fear of "whether the community will be blocked again", and they live their lives carefully.

  After June 1, due to sporadic local confirmed cases in Shanghai society, some communities have just been unblocked and have been blocked again.

On June 5, a 27-year-old woman in Baoshan District was diagnosed with new coronary pneumonia. The Tianxin Garden Community where she lives was originally designated as a prevention area on May 15, but is now designated as a medium-risk area. About 8,200 people have entered a closed management state again.

  This is exactly what Zhao Yong, a hemodialysis patient, is worried about.

  Now, living in Pudong New Area, his life and medical treatment are slowly returning to the way he used to be.

  "The food market at the door is open. Green vegetables are 4 yuan per pound, and the highest before was 15 (yuan) and 20 (yuan)." Zhao Yong said that he has returned to the blood plant in the west hospital district of Renji Hospital since June 2. Dialysis room, regular hemodialysis for 4 hours three times a week.

  He no longer has to go to the temporary hemodialysis center of Pudong Hospital in Caolu Town, and he no longer has to wait for a car that the community does not know when it will arrive.

  Since he can't walk long distances, every time he goes out, he still asks his mother to push the wheelchair and accompany him on the bus.

Because he still needs a 48-hour nucleic acid test negative certificate to go to the hospital, he still has to do nucleic acid tests every day to avoid delaying hemodialysis.

The only thing Zhao Yong is afraid of is, "If anyone gets infected again, we will close the community again." He was afraid of returning to the chaotic moments like March and April again.

  "On the one hand, it is the basic living needs, and on the other hand, it is the medical needs." Zhou Zhou, secretary of the party branch of the Jing'an District Mental Health Center in Shanghai felt, "If these two problems can be better solved, it can alleviate some of the residents' problems. psychological pressure."

  On June 1, there was a video showing that there was a long queue on the side of the road outside the Shanghai Mental Health Center.

  A similar situation has also occurred in the Jing'an District Mental Health Center.

"On June 1 and 2, we opened the clinic normally, and the outpatient volume was more than twice (usually)." Zhou Zhou told reporters that there were initial consultations and follow-up consultations.

"Newly-visited patients account for about 3%, and the rest are returning patients."

  Zhou Zhou feels that in the coming period of time, the government still needs to better lead everyone to jointly boost confidence and restore normal living conditions. There must be a relatively clear schedule or a clear deployment arrangement, so that the rhythm will be faster. Efficient.

The 24-hour psychological consultation hotline should continue to be maintained, and offline face-to-face psychological consultation channels should also be opened gradually.

  Some people did not wait until June 1 in Shanghai.

  With three days left until June 1, a couple who opened a butcher shop in Shanghai decided not to wait any longer. With their child who was still drinking milk powder, they left Shanghai from Shanghai Hongqiao Railway Station and returned to their hometown in Anhui.

Among them, the father of the child said that he had been in Shanghai for more than 10 years, but he was not sure about the recovery status after June 1 in Shanghai, and the child was about to run out of food due to the difficulty in purchasing milk powder.

"It will come back, but after Shanghai recovers."

  At the end of May, a young woman found that she still had the habit of "panic hoarding", "It's not enough to have only 60 eggs, buy 60 more. The freezer must be filled, otherwise panic".

After the unsealing, she went to the supermarket for the first time, and faced with the full shelves, she was still used to getting one more of each.

"I don't know how long it will take for the sequelae to heal."

  Some people bought a new freezer immediately after the lockdown was lifted; some people went downstairs for a walk as soon as they had time, for fear that they would not have a chance to go out; some people were woken up by the sound of horns early in the morning and thought it was the neighborhood committee calling to go downstairs to do nucleic acid testing. Collect old color TVs, refrigerators, washing machines".

Some people who were afraid of quitting their medicines queued up to go to the hospital for follow-up visits and started to stock up on medicines.

  没解封之前,林静秋担心解封后物价飞涨,当她解封后走进超市,看到货架上货源充足价格平稳,她就不再那么害怕。“稳定了民心。”林静秋说,实际情况比她想象得好,她开始给家里的冰箱“去库存”,“有的食品、水果要加快消灭”。

  最近,林静秋发现,家附近建筑工地上复工的吊机响了起来,莫干山路上恢复了水泥罐车排队的景象,沿街商铺大多开始营业,家常菜馆、咖啡店也重开店门,理发店门外有人排队等候。

  6月1日,东方明珠电视塔恢复营业,有数据显示,这一天,上海市大型公共建筑的用电强度也恢复至3月上旬的72%,上海今年首轮集中供地也在儿童节这天启动,首日拍卖土地总计成交金额达495亿元。

  住在北京的人发现,能够收到来自上海的快递;身在上海的人,拿到了刚“封控”时网购的面粉。

  一些东西在慢慢找回,而一些东西则永远地失去了。

  比如,一位安徽来上海打工的农民失去了一个“最出活的”春天,只干了10余天工,却休息了两个月;比如,一个从新疆来这里卸货的男人,失去了一份快递装卸工的工作,还感染了新冠肺炎,花完了身上的钱,日子需要重头开始;比如,一个河南籍的卡车司机,也是一个白血病儿童的父亲,在上海的马路边滞留两个月,直到6月1日才重新上路。

  一家黄浦区的花店3月中下旬开始歇业,冒险在5月20日“网络情人节”那天开门营业。营业前,花店扔掉了枯萎的花,提前3天从云南进购鲜花。那一整天,鲜花订单“爆单”,店里的员工一刻不停地包扎花束,忙得连吃饭时间都没有。尽管如此,5月20日这天,花店的订单数量尚未赶上往年5月20日的三分之一。

  5月29日,上海市人民政府官网公布了《上海市加快经济恢复和重振行动方案》。上海决定实施阶段性缓缴五险一金和税款、扩大房屋租金减免范围、发放援企稳岗补贴等八个方面50条措施,全力助企纾困。

  6月1日上海启封那天,那家花店准备了200束鲜花,下午就卖没了。但6月1日过后,花店的销量不怎么理想,“(与往常)减少了三分之一”。花店老板发现,街上大部分的门店都开了,但大家的生意比以前差一点儿。

  "It's been a long battle," said the florist.

  April and May belong to the season of flowers. On both sides of the elevated road, roses are in full bloom, but no one is watching.

  Now, the roses are almost exhausted.

Fortunately, the familiar Shanghai is coming back.

The new radishes in the office building replaced the withered radishes, the flower boxes on the roadside were replaced with new flowers and plants, and the decorations returned to the busy streets.

  "If you lose the cherry blossoms in 2022, you can't miss the hydrangea again." In June, a young girl posted a photo of herself with the hydrangea on the street on Weibo.

She said: "I can see that the scene on the road doesn't seem to have changed. However, various current restrictions, venue codes, nucleic acid points, restaurants that cannot dine in, and small shops that I don't know if they can still open their doors are reminding me that the time change.”

  (Lin Jingqiu is a pseudonym in the text)

  China Youth Daily and China Youth Daily reporter Li Qiangwen and photo Source: China Youth Daily