"I think we've gone back to เล่นสล็อต how things were at this point last year. We're back to square one."
For Ushma Shah, like many in India, it's a strange time with the rise in coronavirus cases in the country.
"I'm trying to go through this situation with a little bit of positivity, but things are not the best," the 24-year-old tells Radio 1 Newsbeat.
After lower numbers earlier this year and things looking up, India has recorded a major surge in Covid infections and deaths.
Places such as the capital city Delhi and Mumbai, where Ushma's from, are under restrictions to cope with a rise in cases.
Some areas have reported a shortage of hospital beds, oxygen and drugs to treat people.
'All of us in some way are at fault'
Ushma says many in India have been guilty of not following Covid safety rules in the past few months.
"It's been a year and people's frustration levels have spiked with the cases spiking.
"All of us in some way are at fault. But the only way out is that individual effort to follow the rules."
Scenes of mass gatherings such as election rallies and the Kumbh Mela - a religious festival where Hindu devotees bathe in the Ganges river as part of a holy ritual - have attracted criticism.
Rishit Vimadalal feels it's "very counter-intuitive" to think anyone could take part in such activities at this stage of the pandemic.
The 23-year-old says the message of public health being important but having elections and festivals do not go together - and the blame for cases spiking has to be shared.
Feeling grateful
Ishaan Kamal is from Bangalore, where like much of India, the situation isn't great right now.
As a university student, things haven't gone exactly the way he thought they would. But despite the tough situation, he's grateful.
"I live in a gated community so things are relatively safer than other places."
Despite not being able to do all the things he'd want to as a 22-year-old, he's tried to make the most of it.
"I'm getting a daily dose of exercise. And I have a bubble of friends that I can meet outside so we've been quite well-off in that sense."