(WWJ) A Clinton Township woman is devastated, mourning the loss of her mother and two aunts — all of their deaths believed to be linked to COVID-19.

Sylvia Taylor lost her mother, Janie Giger, as well as her mom's two sisters to the virus; all within a three-week period.

Taylor was first lost one of her aunts in late March. Then her mother fell ill.

Sylvia Taylor (Photo: Vickie Thomas/WWJ)

"When my sister told Mama to the hospital they said, well we'll take her, but you can't come in," Taylor told WWJ Newsradio 950's Vickie Thomas. "And that even hurts worse...Like, hey, I'm just dumping her? I guess that's how they do things because of this coronavirus."

Taylor buried her mother on Friday. Giger's youngest sister then died the very next day.

The three sisters were the last of a group of 11 siblings. (Photo above credit Stephanie Taylor-Coleman)

"It's been really hard," Taylor said. "Just imaging that the three of them are no longer there... It's like you're in a fog and you're gonna wake up, and it's not gonna be true. Nobody's gonna call and say, yes, she's gone too, and then yes, now she's gone too."

"You know, all three of them, just bam, bam, bam. They're just gone," she said. "It's been hard."

To those who think the pandemic is over-hyped and don't want to following the guidelines, Taylor had this to say:

"I think they need to take it serious. They need to think about themselves, and not even thinking about themselves, how about the people around you? They're saying that you could be asymptomatic, but that doesn't mean that you're not carrying the virus and you still could infect somebody."