She had just finished another interview about resilience when the test result flashed positive, turning a quiet afternoon in her New York apartment into something far more surreal. In a new op-ed, the 50-year-old activist describes the moment she realized this virus would force her back into isolation, alone with a fever, a stocked fridge, and the ghosts of a year the world won’t let her forg…
Monica Lewinsky’s decision to share her COVID-19 diagnosis through a candid op-ed underscores how she continues to reclaim a narrative once defined by others. By weaving together her current illness with reflections on “viral moments” and the long shadow of 1998, she invites readers to see the human being behind the headlines. Her openness about isolation, anxiety, and the strange irony of her situation gives a grounded, relatable dimension to a figure often treated as a symbol
At the same time, her update is a reminder of how public figures can shape conversations around health, stigma, and digital culture. By framing her experience with both humor and vulnerability, she models a way of talking about illness that is honest without being sensational. As she isolates in New York, her words travel instead, continuing her broader work against shame, harassment, and the flattening effects of online discourse.