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Nicola Sturgeon says coronavirus has changed her outlook on life ahead of 50th birthday

Scotland's First Minister, Nicola Sturgeon.
Scotland's First Minister, Nicola Sturgeon.

Nicola Sturgeon said the coronavirus crisis changed her perspective on turning 50 and the way she thinks about life.

In an interview with Holyrood magazine she spoke about how there were times when she felt “overwhelmed” by the situation.

The first minister, who is 50 on July 19, said: “In a strange sort of way it has absolutely changed my approach and mindset to turning 50 and in a way that makes me much more, if not positive about it, then just less depressed about it, because I think it’s more important that we concentrate on the things we have got as opposed to the things we don’t,” she said.

“I wouldn’t be human, though, if I hadn’t at times over the past few months felt pretty overwhelmed by the magnitude of this, but I’ve forced myself to keep very focused on it and just get through every decision, every step, every day, every week.”

Her own difficulties were “nothing” compared to those of her sister, she said, who works as a medic taking blood samples from patients with coronavirus – doing long shifts in full PPE.

She continued: “It’s been grim.

“There were periods where I genuinely wondered if we would get through this without literally everybody knowing somebody who had died from it and that’s what we were trying to avoid,” she said.

“Unfortunately, we didn’t avoid that for more than 4,000 people and that will always live with me.”

The first minister was sure next year’s elections to the Scottish Parliament would go ahead as normal life resumed.

She said: “We will see some sense of normality return.

“I think the election will happen next year. In fact I’m pretty sure the election will happen next year, and debates about the country’s future will restart, too, and we will go back to normal politics, but hopefully thinking a bit more about how we conduct our politics.

“But I don’t think the country is quite there yet,” she added.

“I think I have probably learned already that I’ve got an even deeper resilience than I might have ever thought possible, and I think I will also come out of this with a much lower tolerance for some of the c**p of politics.”