How are we doing? Isn’t this whole Covid-19 debacle just
completely… exhausting? I am so tired from checking the updates, from living my
life as normal, from making sure my house is stocked with the perfect amount of
“not-overreacting but being prepared” supplies, and from just talking about
(but can we really stop?). I totally understand and relate to what everyone is
thinking and feeling. It’s just a glorified cold, you’ll be fine if you get it.
Yup. It’s detrimental to the elderly
and those without compromise immune systems. Yup. We need to keep schools open. Yup. We need to close schools. Yup.
We need to live our lives. Yup. We
need to reduce large public gatherings. Yup.
It’s just so surreal; I’m grading and fantasizing about summer break, and yet
there’s this huge, scary, life-as-we-know-it altering-thing lurking in the
background. I have so little confidence in the government, in the response of
my fellow man, and even in hand sanitizer. Fast forward six months down the
line? I think we’re going to be okay.
This weekend we are laying looooooooow, both because of the
virus shutting a lot of places and events, but also because we’re having
strange, foreign, “wintery” weather here in SoCal (read 65 degrees and rain). I
hope to get some grading done, lots of reading, and working on a new cross
stitch project I have planned for my Etsy shop. I think we are also going to my
friends’ son’s birthday party for a few hours, so that will be nice. I’ll be
the first to admit that, after people dying of course, the next reason I am
most bothered by the virus is because I need to be busy and leave my house in
order to feel happy. Those opportunities being jeopardized really disturbs me.
Luckily I don’t think they will close down hiking trails and beaches for this
(I don’t think anyway).
Evidence of me in fact NOT being a coffee snob whatsoever: I
am so excited to try Wendy’s Frosty-ccino. It’s coffee plus Frosty- how can I not love it? It’s like the least
classy affogato ever.
My friends and I at work were discussing books that we read
when we were younger that we remember liking but don’t exactly remember and
need to reread. On my list? Henrik Ibsen’s A
Dolls House, Isabel Allende House of
the Spirits, William Golding’s Lord
of the Flies, and Jane Eyre by
Charlotte Bronte. I am generally not a fan of rereading, just because there are
so many books out there, but I also know the value of rereading, since the
books I teach at work are the ones I know best.
Yup, I am so exhausted by COVID19 talk, but I can't turn it off because I work at a school and I have to stay up to date about what we're doing.
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