New Yorker's come together at 7pm each day to give thanks and gratitude to the city's frontline workers fighting the coronavirus pandemic. Adam Jeffery | CNBC

It has been over two weeks now since Gov. Andrew Cuomo ordered all non-essential businesses closed and for New Yorkers to stay indoors in an effort to flatten the curve of the coronavirus pandemic. Even with these extreme measures each day new cases of coronavirus continue to rise and the death toll climbs higher with each passing day. And we have not even reached the apex yet. For many New Yorkers, being forced to stay at home in a "shoebox" apartment isolated from friends, family, and colleagues has not been easy. For many who have lost their jobs, the uncertainty is excruciating. For others, adapting to a new routine of working from home while their children move to online schooling is challenging at best. The utter lack of space, contact with the outside world, and restrictions on everything we once took for granted can be downright depressing.

Medical personnel are seen outside NYU Langone Health hospital as people applaud to show their gratitude to medical staff and essential workers working on the front lines of the coronavirus pandemic as the country works to stop the spread of COVID-19 on April 4, 2020 in New York City. Noam Galai | Getty Images

But we are doing it because it will make a difference. We are doing it because we all know someone who is working on the frontlines and see every day how our hospitals are overwhelmed. Frontline medical workers are increasingly lacking critical protection. New Yorkers are staying at home to try and flatten the curve, and we are doing it because this is what we can do to help bring this pandemic to an end. Between the incessant screams of ambulance sirens rushing new patients to hospitals all day, and the non-stop negative news headlines, there is one moment each day that breaks up this daily monotony that is the new normal. At 7 p.m. each night, New Yorkers open a window, or step out onto balconies or rooftops and make some noise for two minutes. We scream, we clap, we bang pots and pans, we make music, but most of all we give thanks and gratitude to all the frontline workers who are risking their lives every day.