TAMPA, Fla. – Lennise Germany’s personal and professional lives were twisted, tangled and turned upside down in a matter of minutes last year.
Germany was sitting in a hospital room with her husband and their 12-year-old son when she got an email that forced her small catering company to temporarily close its doors because of the coronavirus pandemic.
What should have been gut-wrenching news barely caused Germany to flinch because doctors had just diagnosed her son with cancer.
No pivot on the planet could make her situation seem anything but dire. “All of us would be lying if we said we didn’t have some level of fear,” she said.