In other words, not the end of the world by any means, but another way our post-COVID lives will be shrinking, culturally anyway. Obviously the loss of one theater isn't killing all culture, but it had me thinking of everything else we've lost since last March and it bummed me out.
― soaring skrrrtpeggios (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Tuesday, 23 February 2021 14:58 (five years ago)
jon, I've been putting two and two and two together lately and realizing we live in the same city, lol.
― The Mandolinrainian (Old Lunch), Tuesday, 23 February 2021 15:01 (five years ago)
At any rate, I would guess that the theater in question will be bought up by another outfit down the road.
― The Mandolinrainian (Old Lunch), Tuesday, 23 February 2021 15:02 (five years ago)
Wow, I had no idea OL.
Oh I absolutely believe it will eventually get bought out, but I fear it will be another AMC that will do away with the "arty" side with the nice lounge and replace it with an arcade or something.
― soaring skrrrtpeggios (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Tuesday, 23 February 2021 15:07 (five years ago)
I know, it's a weird thing to get bummed about. I just really liked having a theater within walking distance that we could take our son to see the latest MCU movie on a Saturday afternoon, or I could play hooky and sit through The Tree of Life on a random Tuesday. I'm sure the former part will be back when it gets bought, the latter I'm not so confident in.
― soaring skrrrtpeggios (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Tuesday, 23 February 2021 15:14 (five years ago)
Lol, one last post. Fully aware that this is small potatoes compared to the lives lost and financial devastation for those who have lost their livelihoods, but it just has me thinking about the quieter, more insidious ways this pandemic is hitting our communities and how different the landscape will be when we can truly call it "post-COVID".
― soaring skrrrtpeggios (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Tuesday, 23 February 2021 15:16 (five years ago)
Yeah, beyond the ground zero impact of COVID on people's lives, there's also going to be the subtle lingering trauma from slowly realizing how it's altered pretty much every aspect of the everyday routine we'd grown used to. Like we pretty much have to develop a new normal because the old one is just gone now.
― The Mandolinrainian (Old Lunch), Tuesday, 23 February 2021 15:25 (five years ago)
Exactly. Which I think most of us know on a certain level, I think there are just certain local reminders that drive it home a little harder and make it more real. Which is, I guess, where I am today.
― soaring skrrrtpeggios (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Tuesday, 23 February 2021 15:29 (five years ago)
Totally sympathize about the movie theater. My local is a second home to me and I'm deeply afraid it's not coming back either.
― Nhex, Tuesday, 23 February 2021 18:37 (five years ago)
not all that unusual. when all this is over, we're going to be hungry to resume some of our past activities, and some of the places we used to go to them won't be re-opening. Orlando lost the Parliament House, which was an institution here, although tbh that wasn't so much *because* of COVID, as the business was struggling for a while, but it was the straw that broke the camel's back more than likely.
lots of homes to lots of memories, it hurts when they close.
― if you meh them, shut up (Neanderthal), Tuesday, 23 February 2021 22:04 (five years ago)
I haven't checked any of my old restaurant industry websites/forums in over a year because I haven't had the heart. I've supported a couple of local ones but have a feeling when things open up again that it will be like survivors of a nuclear war leaving the bunker to find smoldering ruins everywhere.
― Rocky Thee Stallion (PBKR), Tuesday, 23 February 2021 22:20 (five years ago)
I had a dream the other night about eating hotpot with friends, and how it might be years before such intimate food-sharing will happen again...
― it's like edging for your mind (the table is the table), Tuesday, 23 February 2021 22:45 (five years ago)
https://gizmodo.com/a-womans-tragic-covid-19-death-traced-to-tainted-donate-1846335623
"A Woman's Tragic Covid-19 Death Traced to Tainted Donated Lungs, Report Finds"
oof, at this. but also, isn't it an obvious to want to avoid?
― koogs, Wednesday, 24 February 2021 10:53 (five years ago)
Was there a time last year when the virus was being presented as being almost completely stable and not changing in th eway that most viruses do. is that the thought process behind various countries talking about herd immunity coming naturally. I mean worst examp;le being Sweden and other places like UK & US giving spoken credence to the idea.Or was taht like specific areas propaganda about the fight with the virus.JUst was something I was picking up on at the time.& i don't remember when the different variants became common knowledge to any wide degree. Just listening to somebody talking about variants and that's about the 3rd thing I've heard today that mentions them.
― Stevolende, Wednesday, 24 February 2021 12:32 (five years ago)
xp to people who have learned how to live, this profile of a centenary covid survivor
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/02/23/nyregion/new-jersey-lucia-declerck-covid.html
Ask Lucia DeClerck how she has lived to be 105, and she is quick with an answer.“Prayer. Prayer. Prayer,” she offers. “One step at a time. No junk food.”But surviving the coronavirus, she said, also may have had something to do with another staple: the nine gin-soaked golden raisins she has eaten each morning for most of her life.“Fill a jar,” she explained. “Nine raisins a day after it sits for nine days.”Her children and grandchildren recall the ritual as just one of Ms. DeClerck’s endearing lifelong habits, like drinking aloe juice straight from the container and brushing her teeth with baking soda. (That worked, too: She did not have a cavity until she was 99, relatives said.)“We would just think, ‘Grandma, what are you doing? You’re crazy,’” said her 53-year-old granddaughter, Shawn Laws O’Neil, of Los Angeles. “Now the laugh is on us. She has beaten everything that’s come her way.”
“Prayer. Prayer. Prayer,” she offers. “One step at a time. No junk food.”
But surviving the coronavirus, she said, also may have had something to do with another staple: the nine gin-soaked golden raisins she has eaten each morning for most of her life.
“Fill a jar,” she explained. “Nine raisins a day after it sits for nine days.”
Her children and grandchildren recall the ritual as just one of Ms. DeClerck’s endearing lifelong habits, like drinking aloe juice straight from the container and brushing her teeth with baking soda. (That worked, too: She did not have a cavity until she was 99, relatives said.)
“We would just think, ‘Grandma, what are you doing? You’re crazy,’” said her 53-year-old granddaughter, Shawn Laws O’Neil, of Los Angeles. “Now the laugh is on us. She has beaten everything that’s come her way.”
― That's not really my scene (I'm 41) (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 24 February 2021 16:33 (five years ago)
... is that a life worth living, though?
― Nhex, Wednesday, 24 February 2021 16:57 (five years ago)
by the time I'm 65 I anticipate I will resemble a gin-soaked raisin
― fbclid=fhAZ3l (f. hazel), Wednesday, 24 February 2021 17:04 (five years ago)
Learned this morning that our excellent local movie theater, which did a really admirable job of running both mega-blockbusters and the arthouse stuff, is never going to reopen.
I'm waiting for that shoe to drop where I am. The two rep theatres I was going to (different cities) seemed to be just hanging on before the pandemic; when they reopened for two or three months during the summer, there were fewer than 10 people for any screening I went to. How they recover--they're still closed--I don't know.
― clemenza, Wednesday, 24 February 2021 17:05 (five years ago)
we appear to have lost a cinema I used to frequent but I think it was changing before the pandemic closed it down. i thik it had lost the cheap afternoon showing prices that had had me going to it. First dropped down t only being one day per week instead of 5 then it either stopped completely or the place shutdown cos of lockdownWell had a decade and a bit I think.JUst not sure what its future is
― Stevolende, Wednesday, 24 February 2021 17:15 (five years ago)
I want everyone to get the jab whenever they can, but I'm also starting to become angry at the people I know who don't have front-facing jobs, aren't immunocompromised, and are getting theirs now.
I already spent most of a year avoiding everyone I know and love and staring down death, only to have six "normal" months, then emerge into this. I just want to scream at these people, "Fuck your working from home, healthy early 30s self— I should have gotten that vaccine before you, and you know it."
Irrational, I know, but writing it out and acknowledging it makes me feel better.
― it's like edging for your mind (the table is the table), Wednesday, 24 February 2021 20:26 (five years ago)
JUst hearing the variants discussed on Pod Save tH ePeople. So up until a certain point there was a broadly recognisable main strain that did pick up a few regional variations etc but that just meant you had a more recogniosable version of teh same broad virus. But the recent variants are behaving differently.I just remember thinking it odd taht it seemed that the virus wasn't changing cos I thought taht was a normal result of a virus going through a population and encountering its different anti bodies etc and therefore mutating so it would automatically change over time. BUt it did seem to be more stable than previous viruses from what i understood. Didn't see how that worked .But this does seem pretty evolve anyway, more dangerous because it did seem largely symptom free until it had spread etc
― Stevolende, Thursday, 25 February 2021 00:34 (five years ago)
https://www.vox.com/future-perfect/22291959/covid-vaccines-transmission-protect-spread-virus-moderna-pfizer
― So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 25 February 2021 00:35 (five years ago)
And nursing homes are lookin' better.
Throughout the pandemic, there has been perhaps nowhere more dangerous than a nursing home. The coronavirus has raced through some 31,000 long-term care facilities in the United States, killing more than 163,000 residents and employees and accounting for more than a third of all virus deaths since the late spring.
But for the first time since the American outbreak began roughly a year ago — at a nursing care center in Kirkland, Wash. — the threat inside nursing homes may have finally reached a turning point.
Since the arrival of vaccines, which were prioritized to long-term care facilities starting in late December, new cases and deaths in nursing homes, a large subset of long-term care facilities, have fallen steeply, outpacing national declines, according to a New York Times analysis of federal data. The turnaround is an encouraging sign for vaccine effectiveness and offers an early glimpse at what may be in store for the rest of the country, as more and more people get vaccinated.
From late December to early February, new cases among nursing home residents fell by more than 80 percent, nearly double the rate of improvement in the general population. The trendline for deaths was even more striking: Even as fatalities spiked over all this winter, deaths inside the facilities have fallen, decreasing by more than 65 percent.
― So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 25 February 2021 14:16 (five years ago)
my doc offered as part of my bloodwork to test for COVID antibodies to see if I still had them after the vaccine. Me being a rube, I said "yes".
It came back "negative" and I got anxious, but then I read this IN THE ACTUAL EXPLANATION OF RESULTS:
"Individuals who have received the COVID-19 vaccine willhave a negative result. This assay tests for antibodiesto the N (nucleocapsid) antigen, which is typicallypositive in persons who have been previously infected withCOVID-19."
and then I find out the CDC recommends against antibody testing for this reason.
WHY'D YOU OFFER THE TEST THEN, DOC?
― Red Nerussi (Neanderthal), Thursday, 25 February 2021 17:55 (five years ago)
Meet you at a crowded bar, Neanderthal, for happy hour.
― So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 25 February 2021 18:02 (five years ago)
mother in law got her second shot two days ago, mother got her second shot yesterday, partner is in line for her second shot now, sister just got her first. that's most of the core people that i was most worried about. I'm two weeks off from my second. i know it's only my small world but it matters a lot to me.
― That's not really my scene (I'm 41) (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 25 February 2021 18:13 (five years ago)
It does -- congrats! Me, if everyone in my immediate circle has the vaccine, then I'm totally cool with my not getting yet.
― So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 25 February 2021 18:21 (five years ago)
Yeah, as I stated in the KIP COVID thread, I'll breathe a lot easier when both of my parents, both of my wife's parents (and her stepdad) get appointments on the calendar. So far only one of them does, my mother-in-law's first jab is tomorrow, but I guess that's a start!
― soaring skrrrtpeggios (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Thursday, 25 February 2021 18:23 (five years ago)
congrats forks. it's an incredible feeling when the people you most care about/are worried about get their final shots. I couldn't believe the relief I felt with my folks.
love hearing good vaccination news itt
― Red Nerussi (Neanderthal), Thursday, 25 February 2021 18:38 (five years ago)
Boy, I just heard a whole bunch of troubling covid-adjacent news. A good friend of mine is a top cancer doc at Stanford, and she told me she has been busier than ever treating cancers that are bigger than ever, because so many people postponed going to the doctor for so long. I have a feeling there might be similar stories from other medical fields, too. And then there's colleges, which have been seeing record numbers of applications at the top level (like, 110,000 applications to NYU, for 6700 spots; my Stanford friend told me over 10,000 applications for 90 medical school slots), which not only makes those top schools even tougher to get into, but have actually led to delays in acceptances, because the admission staff is overwhelmed. At the same time, applications to other typically easier to get into schools are apparently way down, because so many families are in such dire financial straits that their kids can't even consider school right now. The longterm impact of this thing is potentially going to be terrible in ways many didn't even imagine.
Meanwhile, my daughter is qualified for the current vaccine phase here, but because she is under 18 (but old enough for the Pfizer vaccine) no one will give it to her. Frustrating. And my mom still can't manage to get one in PA.
― Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 25 February 2021 20:33 (five years ago)
Yeah, that worries me too (the medical thing specifically). I have a couple of things I'm supposed to get checked for every six months, because I'm at a somewhat elevated risk for them, and I've just been completely letting that slide because the risk of getting covid seems higher than the chance that I'll turn out to have cancer at age 36. But then when I think of everyone else who's making that same calculation - many of them much older than me - it's very scary.
― Lily Dale, Thursday, 25 February 2021 20:41 (five years ago)
In case that seems clueless, I realize I am still taking a risk by not going to the doctor, it's just a matter of trying to balance risks. Don't know if I'm making the right call.
― Lily Dale, Thursday, 25 February 2021 20:43 (five years ago)
I've been to the GP twice since the original (UK) lock down and, to be honest, it seemed as safe as anywhere.
No routine appointments - everything triaged via the phone. Nobody in the waiting room - some people waiting outside. Face coverings. Use of different doors than usual to avoid wondering through the building.
A subsequent visit to hospital was remarkably unstressful (few people hanging around etc). I'd at least talk it through on the phone with someone.
― djh, Thursday, 25 February 2021 20:55 (five years ago)
Yeah, I've been to the doctor, dentist, eye doctor, etc., as needed this past year, and so has everyone in my family. Our reasoning each time was always that hey, you never know when these places might get shut down for real, so might as well go while you can. We've also used Teledoc once or twice, which was a great experience.
― Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 25 February 2021 20:59 (five years ago)
Ugh, I really hate those last two posts of mine, I feel like they came across as dismissive of the reality that lots of people do have cancer young (and I certainly know people who have.) Was just trying to say that throughout the pandemic I've been scared to go to the doctor and nervous about the long-term effects of not going, and that's the sort of calculation that can work out fine for the individual if you're lucky but is disastrous if you have a whole country full of people making it at once.
I should probably start going to the doctor; my parents have had to a couple of times, and it's worked out fine for them.
― Lily Dale, Thursday, 25 February 2021 21:00 (five years ago)
every time I go to the doctor, I get worse news about my health, which isn't surprising because I depression ate really badly and still am, so COVID giving me an excuse not to go and get bloodwork done was something I took wholeheartedly
― Red Nerussi (Neanderthal), Thursday, 25 February 2021 21:02 (five years ago)
Part of why I haven't made it to the doctor is that my doctor retired rather than work through the pandemic (as did my dentist), and lockdown has made me even worse than I was before at dealing with things like finding a new doctor.
― Lily Dale, Thursday, 25 February 2021 21:10 (five years ago)
I've kept up doctor/dentist/eye doctor visits as needed, thankfully no problems with any of them. (Even had an ultrasound followup on my hernia surgery given some lingering pain -- thankfully nothing major found.)
― Ned Raggett, Thursday, 25 February 2021 21:14 (five years ago)
x-posts. I didn't read those two messages as dismissive, btw.
― djh, Thursday, 25 February 2021 21:14 (five years ago)
My dad has had multiple procedures, my neighbor got cataract surgery, multiple ppl I know have had babies, I've been in a hospital for check ups and appts 4-5 times...unless you have your own reasons for being extremely cautious, it seems like normal medical care is still happening and is okay?
― Ima Gardener (in orbit), Thursday, 25 February 2021 21:20 (five years ago)
I don't have any good reasons, I'm just scared of covid and have been locking down as much as humanly possible. Skipping one set of checkups seemed like no big deal at the time; now that it's been a year of lockdown I'm reconsidering.
― Lily Dale, Thursday, 25 February 2021 21:27 (five years ago)
after a year, yeah, please get those checkups done. To echo Ned, my dentist, blood work, PCP, etc. followed every procedure; in some cases I waited in my car until my turn.
― So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 25 February 2021 21:37 (five years ago)
Ok, will do. Thanks, everyone, for the advice and reassurance.
― Lily Dale, Thursday, 25 February 2021 21:44 (five years ago)
More good news
New: The FDA just approved Pfizer’s request to store its Covid-19 vaccine for two weeks at temperatures commonly found in pharmaceutical freezers.https://t.co/7tfvuzeVTk— Berkeley Lovelace (@BerkeleyJr) February 25, 2021
― Ned Raggett, Thursday, 25 February 2021 22:16 (five years ago)
That should reduce a lot of logistical tightrope walking and make distribution much easier.
― Judge Roi Behan (Aimless), Thursday, 25 February 2021 22:35 (five years ago)
And I'm thrilled to learn my sis will get her first shot Sunday, so that'll mean all my immediate family will be covered.
― Ned Raggett, Friday, 26 February 2021 01:03 (five years ago)
Lily Dale, get that stuff done-- speaking as someone who had cancer in his thirties, I kick myself for not getting regular scopes and blood work done, mostly because I either didn't have health insurance or was frightened of what tests would reveal.
― it's like edging for your mind (the table is the table), Friday, 26 February 2021 02:30 (five years ago)
I’ve been going to one doc or another at least once every two weeks bc of some stuff that happened to me in the summer and the only thing that makes me uncomfortable is weirdo patients in the waiting room, and that’s only been once or twice. I otherwise feel way more safe there than any other indoor situation other than home!
― Clay, Friday, 26 February 2021 02:46 (five years ago)
xp Thanks, table, I will, as soon as I can. I guess I hadn't really thought about how long it had been until I saw Josh's post.
― Lily Dale, Friday, 26 February 2021 03:05 (five years ago)
I've been taking my partner to get blood tests done to rule out some stuff recently and I've been blown away by how meticulously strict both the GP surgery and the bigger health centre have been. The former has a security guard operating a strict regime and it's made me feel much more confident about going along. Even though all I do is walk them to the place so they don't get anxious and then just wait outside, I can see how efficient and thorough everything has been.
Make those appointments and go. And if you are worried about feeling unsafe, practice saying things out loud before you go so you've got some stock phrases ready. "I'm not comfortable with this any more so I'm going to have you to stop and we can reschedule" isn't a phrase any reasonable person can push back on.
― boxedjoy, Friday, 26 February 2021 10:48 (five years ago)