Mattis, 28, software engineer
interviewed on 28 May 2020

This came at the perfect time for me. The biggest thing I felt was that there was no fear of missing out. I’m more introverted, and before that, I was trying to play the extravert. And at that time, there was nothing going on, so I didn’t have to play the game; I was more myself than before. That was the main thing: it was a very positive experience. I got to know myself more. Maybe during the later stages, when it was almost over but not over, I had a little bit of this anxiety about how to go back to that life before the crisis.
I’m a software engineer, and I worked from home, so it wasn’t a big change for me. And now, it’s hard to push myself back into the office, but I know it’s good to be there. I feel it’s better when the workday starts, and workday ends, but at home, it lasts hours longer.

I started pushing my training routine, so every day, I worked out and did running. Around three months later, I’m planning to run a marathon. It was something I discovered that is helping me. When you run, you don’t have any thoughts. For me, it’s a meditative state of mind, so you have this daily break from everything, and you are just on the road.
I missed cultural events, traveling, or the feeling that sometimes you can do things that you feel kind of pop at you at the moment. But nothing major. I didn’t have any plans that were canceled; just a few possibilities: a few festivals outside Estonia. I had an event I was planning to go to at the end of May, but it was postponed until December. It’s a sports event that I wanted to watch in Germany, but it was postponed, so it’s still ok.

I think the lockdown itself wasn’t hard for me, but the period after was a bit hard because it goes to normal, but it’s not the same as before: it’s a totally new world. I cannot make any travel plans, even though the flights are going, I have to be more careful with those plans because I don’t want to get stuck somewhere. I think it’s the new normal; it’s never going back there. It’s in the middle of something, maybe not exactly the new normal.

“Tell me your story”, virtual exhibition

Raimi

Anett

Andrey

Arvo

Pjotr

Maria

Vasilina

Marina

Dmitry

Roman

Nastya

Tanya
