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Perhaps they did it to help others, warn the wider community of what could lie ahead. And in the midst of it all were the doctors and nurses, care home workers, watching it happen, day after day, hour after hour. But something changed along the way. The focus on those early days of Covid, remarkably almost two years ago, was in hearing the stories of those who had died.

Voices were raised through the barrage of statistics. They have been silent for a long time now. Only the echoes of those early victims remain in our minds, but for the families the hurt, the sense of loss, goes on. Perhaps there was fatigue.

The thought of another death, another family in mourning turning us away from the grief. Perhaps there was a change in focus to try to find something positive as the number of deaths started to rise.

Perhaps there were just too many families suffering to continue wallowing in a shared grief. Perhaps the novelty had worn off. The daily conferences held by Stormont Ministers standing together in a united front are a distant memory. Familiarity, eventually, breeds contempt. That may sound harsh, but attention turned to what we could all do to prevent grief arriving at the door of another family. For some of those families solace is sought amongst others who have grieved.

They stay private on a Facebook support group, sharing experiences, comforting each other. Many of them were unable to say a proper goodbye to mothers and fathers, sisters and brothers. In the meantime the attention has moved from variant to variant, rows over face coverings and Covid passports and the economic struggles being faced by hospitality and high street shops as we struggle to find ways to make life as normal as we remember.

But for those who have lost, the chance of going back to the way we once were will never come. On March 23 the families who lost and could not grieve will come together on a National Day of Reflection. There will be more people bringing their personal memories to the occasion than last year. With them in spirit will be Anne Elliott-King from Enniskillen. What she now lives with each day is one of those forgotten legacies of Covid.

Did he have a health condition? I had been his main carer for years. People have been so dismissive of his death, and the deaths of others like him. The ability to comment on our stories is a privilege, not a right, however, and that privilege may be withdrawn if it is abused or misused. Crystal Palace to prepare like the Watford game will happen — Patrick Vieira. Comments: Our rules. Read the full rules.

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