Luis Barcelo, 25, had spent a full week hanging out every day with a woman he’d recently met on Bumble. In the beginning of March, Christine O’Donovan-Zavada, 26, had gone on two great dates with a guy she met on Tinder they’d cooked dinner together at her home on the second, and she was planning to meet up with him again for a third. This had particularly brutal consequences for people who had been enjoying the giddy, touchy-feely early stages of a romance.
For many people who were confined to their homes, physical location suddenly flattened into a binary of “here” and “not here.” Any person who didn’t live in your home was essentially accessible only via phone or videochat, whether 5,000 miles were between you or just a few city blocks.
When stay-at-home measures aimed at curbing the spread of COVID-19 went into effect earlier this spring, something weird happened to our sense of geography.