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Archive for: May 2020

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Pandemic Days 78-79: Reopened sort of

“What a long strange trip it’s been,” goes the song. If anyone had told me in January that we would be reopening in May, I would have asked, “Reopening from what?” But we don’t have to ask now. We know.

Pandemic Days 76-77: Going Out

For me nothing since January and February of 2020 has been normal, so those are my standard. Those months had open stores, open beaches, open churches, birthday parties, and vacation plans. Now going anywhere seems daring. I was daring twice this weekend.

Pandemic Days 74-75: Normalcy

I know about the word “normalcy.” I know it was Warren G. Harding’s campaign slogan, that he didn’t so make up the word as revive it, and that it sounded unusual even in 1921.
So why am I hearing that word more now than I have since the seventh-grade?

Pandemic Days 72-73: Contagion

Rapid contagion makes a great movie device–the bite of a zombie, the bloodlust of a vampire, the sneeze that tells you the man is doomed. No movie-goer would have patience with a plot where the victim might or might not get a fever in two weeks. But that’s more typical of the world we’re living in.

Pandemic Day 71: COVID Apps

Did you know there are more than 20 COVID-19 apps for your cell phone or tablet? Find them in your app store under coronavirus or under covid. There are way too many for me to review in depth, but I took a quick look at what’s out there now and what’s on the way.

Pandemic Day 70: Good News

Hope is in the air. I was going to write about contagion today–looking at how viruses spread, why some are so fast, and what difference this has made historically. But not today. I feel so hopeful after my morning scan of the news that I would much rather write about that.

Pandemic Day 69: Change

Remember the headlines of March 17?
News coverage is an index of change. My fascination with the news started two months ago when headlines suddenly centered on new viruses, outbreaks, quarantines, stranded cruise ships, sweeping travel bans, and history. Not history of the past, but history of the future, the leading edge of an era that will change life as we know it.

Pandemic Days 67-68: Civic Layers

The yellow tape was gone yesterday. Does that mean the playground is open?
After a few hours of research this morning all I can say is, probably not, but I’m impressed by all the levels of government weigh in on making this kind of decision. There’s nothing like a pandemic to make you acutely aware of how many layers of regulation affect your everyday life.

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