Psience Quest

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I thought I'd launch this thread, yes yet another virus thread Horror, as a place where forum members, if they feel the need, can share information regarding the effects, health- or other-related, of the pandemic on their lives and their close ones.

My main motivation is that I skim through the other CV threads for my own sanity and may miss posts, and I wouldn't want to miss or not respond to someone sharing personal bad news affecting them directly. (If you want to share good news, that's great too!)

Let's try to keep this thread free of any other CV-related discussion, medical, political or otherwise.

Hopefully this thread will stay empty and that in itself will be good news!

Wishing the best for all of you - physically, mentally and spiritually! Thumbs Up
I think this thread is a good idea.

I don't have anything personally bad to share. I will be leaving in a day or two to move my daughter out of her dorm. Her university, like most others, has switched all current classes to online only, and is clearing out the dorms wherever possible. I would have been moving her out in May anyways. And the extra cost for storage will probably be more than offset by the refunds in housing and food costs from the university.

For my road trip, I have gloves, two N95 masks, and a bag of homemade sanitizing wipes which I can refresh on the road. Please note that I have the gloves and masks because I use them for dyeing, and the only ones I kept for myself were those I had already used. All my unused masks and gloves have already been distributed to high-risk friends and family, and donated to health-care workers.
  
I am trying to use any good fortune I currently enjoy to make it easier on others - supporting local, small businesses as much as possible, sewing masks, not hoarding flour...

Linda
Here's my report from downtown Austin Texas.

The streets are relatively empty of normal traffic and pedestrians while the number of bums has stayed roughly the same, and I assume the bums are getting quite a bit more hungry than they were. This makes walking down Congress Avenue a bit scary.

We're sticking to the West side of downtown and the hike and bike trail around Lady Bird Lake now which seems a bit more crowded than normal due to the nice weather and the gyms being closed. The parks are full of people doing yoga and meditating and working out.

The grocery stores got hit pretty hard a couple weeks ago but have since mostly re-stocked.

This has forced me and my wife to cook more and eat more sandwiches... we were spending too much money on restaurants anyway, so this is good.

I started working remote at the beginning of this year, so this hasn't really affected my job situation except that one of our employees tested positive for COVID-19. He's doing fine in self-quarantine. He probably infected the rest of the company (about 150 employees) since he interacted with everyone, but so far everyone else is fine.

We have lost business due to the oil and gas prices taking a hit as well as the price wars with Russia and OPEC, but on the whole our company is doing fine. This industry is always boom/bust.

My grandmother, age 91, passed away a week and a half ago in lock down with no one able to visit her. She tested negative for COVID-19. Her service was Friday but no one could come because of lock down.

I hear reports that police are arresting people who violate the stay at home orders.

I received a letter from my employer to print out and keep in my vehicle stating that I work for a company in the Oil and Gas industry which is deemed an essential business; therefore, I'm allowed to travel. This all feels very totalitarian. (Papers please?)

As we strolled around downtown the other day, amongst joggers, and others, someone rolled down the window and screamed, "SOCIAL DISTANCING!!!" in a menacing tone... I think they were joking, but not sure.

About 1 in 5 people at the grocery store are wearing masks. Mostly younger people out and about.

Approximately 200 people out of the 1.22 million people in Travis county have tested positive so far. 1 death reported in a woman over age 70 with significant underlying health conditions.

American flags have started going up on people's balconies. A few Mexican flags and other nationalities as well.

That is all I can think of to report at the moment.
All my sympathies for your grandmother Hurm.
(2020-03-30, 08:32 PM)Ninshub Wrote: [ -> ]All my sympathies for your grandmother Hurm.

Thank you. It was her time... her health and mobility had been decreasing steadily since my Grandad passed away about 4 years ago. We're planning to have a remembrance for her in May assuming we're allowed to assemble by then.
Update 4/6/20

More people wearing masks while out and about now... about 60%. Social distancing rules and signs continue multiplying.

Everyone at my place of employment got a temporary 20% pay cut today. Others being laid off. I had worked for a year and a half to get a guy hired and finally got him on board. Today was his first day and had to break the bad news he’ll get 20% less than what we promised him.
Max, is it too personal to reveal what puts you at a higher risk? If so, then just ignore my question.
Not sure which thread this belongs in so I'll post it in both. Mods can delete one if necessary. I originally posted in the "What Governments should be doing" thread.


Sciborg_S_Patel Wrote: Wrote:New Zealand isn’t just flattening the curve. It’s squashing it.

I was unfortunate enough to book my bucket-list trip to the F1 Grand Prix in Melbourne this year, only to arrive just as the concerns about the virus spread were getting very serious, so I was one of those thousands left standing at the Albert Park GP entrance only to be told that the event had been cancelled. By the time I was back in my hotel I learned that my return to NZ a couple of days later would be subject to the new self-isolation rules (especially since I am in a high risk category due to age and pre-existing health issues).

My travel agent phoned to tell me that she could get me on a flight out of Melbourne in time to beat the self-isolation deadline (at a considerable extra cost) but that the seats were being grabbed quickly. I decided against that anyway and I'm so glad I did. Those deadline-beating flights were crammed and my flight after the deadline was almost empty (no problem with social distancing - the nearest occupied seat was about three rows away).

Since then I've been in continuous isolation which is somewhat hard on those who, like me, live alone anyway. Under normal circumstances, I look forward to my games of bowls or visits to my family for social contact so even these must now be denied. However, it is all worth it because, as seems clear, NZ is doing a good job in keeping down the case count and, as I write this, we have only one death. Thankfully I don't have a job to worry about but the government here have put money into the pockets of those in most financial difficulty. I think that, being English born and raised and only recently resident in New Zealand, my decision to emigrate here was probably one of the best I've ever made.