ready to watch Tiger King... again.
COVID-19,
the coronavirus that is shaking an entire world, has caused us all to socially
distance and shelter-in-place. My office went remote FOUR weeks ago (March
11th) and it’s been a long, weird time. As a homebody, I expected it wouldn’t
be much different than my usual life. But as things slowly started getting
taken away (like being within six feet of friends, going to restaurants, being
able to walk in Total Wine without waiting in LINE... ) I started to go a
little crazy.
This
virus is very concerning, and I’m taking it seriously. I’ve basically only left
the house to walk my dog or to go grocery shopping. OK fine, I went to Target
once or twice for non-grocery related items. But how do you expect me to work
from a home devoid of springtime throw pillows?!?! I'm washing my hands a lot,
sanitizing everything… but I cannot for the life of me stop touching my face.
That aside, I’ve come to terms with this shelter-in-place order and while I
cannot wait to go to a fucking restaurant again, I think this precautionary
situation has actually made a positive impact on my life.
I’m connecting more. I’ve had a constant group
chat going with four of my closest friends for the past two weeks. I’m checking
in on more people throughout the country and my community, and a lot more
people have been checking in with me. My mother comes over several times a week
to walk my dog (I’m sleeping when this happens so we don’t technically
interact… and she makes me sanitize everything after she leaves.) My sister has
even been texting me back, which is HUGE. I even get really excited to go to
the park to walk the dog because it’s the only human interaction I have all
day. Overall, I feel more connected to my co-workers, my friends and for
whatever reason, I just find people are being a bit more kind and gracious.
I’m moving a lot. Before all this mess,
I would (try to) work out 3-4 times a week at my barre/yoga studio in Melrose.
But because I’ve been teaching improv more at night, and facilitating more
during the day, I haven’t been able to fit the studio times into my schedule.
Now, I have literally nowhere else to be. And I don’t have to worry about the
time it takes to commute to and from the studio. A 9:15 class in the past would
require at least 30 extra minutes scheduled into my day. Now, I can roll off
the couch to do a class around 9:13, hobble over to the shower and be back
online at 10:20. I’ve taken 5-6 classes a week! And they’re actually really fun
to do at home! I don’t feel the quality or experience is being sacrificed.
My house has never been cleaner. I have
been way more on top of chores because it’s been easy to sweep or Swiffer while
listening in on a conference call, and also doing a chore is a nice break in my
day. If I’m looking at a screen too long, I’ll throw on a podcast and do the
dishes for a 10-15 minute break. I have replaced batteries, organized my
fridge, changed pictures in frames, cleaned out my purse, put all of my grocery
bags inside each other like a Russian nesting doll… I EVEN DUSTED. I WENT OUT
AND BOUGHT A DUSTER AND I DUSTED. Times, they are a-changing.
Anxiety has severely reduced. Except for my anxiety for
the WORLD right now, my personal anxiety has reduced significantly. Without
commuting, I don’t have to deal with traffic or being pushed up against a
million people on the train. Without in-office conversations, people are
prioritizing tasks and not requesting things with the same sense of urgency
they might have in the past. I have also noticed emails and conversations are
more thought through and less reactionary. Scientifically speaking, my amygdala
is being triggered way less which is causing less cortisol to be released and a
higher increase in serotonin/oxytocin because conversations are better and
there are less distractions to cause me stress. Ya dig?
I’m learning a lot. I’m going through 2-3 books
a week. I’ve watched many documentaries (you guys, “Tiger King”), I’ve been
taking the time to slow down and actually read full articles and
understand more of what’s happening in the world.
I’ve been
learning a lot about myself (ugh, gross) and what I want “normal” to
look like when things return to "normal." The world is going to be a different
place, and I think there is some good in that. It’s a good time to look at what
wasn’t “serving” me and leave it back in early March 2020 before the world
flip-turned-upside-down. Can you fucking believe we’re only a quarter into the
year?!
TL;DR (is
that still a thing?): This is a serious, scary situation. I’m grateful to be
able to stay home, continue to work and do my best to not contract the illness
and overwhelm the medical professionals.. But I’m also grateful for the
collective pause we’re all taking, and I’m using it as an opportunity to be
better on the other side.
I’m also
grateful that liquor stores are considered “essential businesses” and
stockpiling wine is ABSOLUTELY something I will also continue to do on the other
side. Frankly, I don't think I'll have a choice. Because I'm pretty sure I have now transformed into the full-blown Irish Catholic Alcoholic Bostonian I was destined to become.
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