I haven’t worked in an office in a year.
One year ago today I was attending a training with a group of coworkers, and I distinctly remember that when a coworker I hadn’t seen in awhile greeted me, she went in for a hug. I stopped her and stuck out my elbow for a bump instead. The next day I worked from home, and the day after that we were told not to come into the office because someone on staff had been exposed to COVID-19. We have yet to return.
I’m sure I’m not the only person who is looking back on the final days of “normalcy” a year ago, when COVID was scary but not scary at every moment. Reflecting can be good, and we all have a natural desire to mark anniversaries and milestones.
But I don’t want to live in the past to the detriment of my mood now. A year seems like an infinitely long time to have been living like this, which can be depressing and sad. So I thought about this anniversary, tweeted about it, but then it was time to move on with my day. If the past year has taught me anything, it’s to cling to a good mood if I’m lucky enough to get one.
CDC released guidelines Monday designed to ease restrictions for Americans who are fully vaccinated against COVID-19, my colleague Adrianna Rodriguez writes.
The agency’s guidance says those who are fully vaccinated may get together with other fully vaccinated individuals in small groups inside their homes without masks or physical distancing. They can also visit with unvaccinated people from one other household who are at low risk for severe disease.
“You can visit your grandparents if you’ve been vaccinated and they have been, too,” CDC Director Rochelle Walensky said in a White House briefing Monday. “If grandparents have been vaccinated, they can visit their daughter and her family even if they have not been vaccinated, so long as the daughter and her family are not at risk for severe disease.”
You can read Adrianna’s full story here.
Until everyone can get a vaccine, it’s still important to stay safe. Unfortunately, our early quarantine motivation to bake sourdough and learn to knit has stagnated, leaving some of us less energized to continue taking precautions.
Contributors Emily Balcetis and Dennis Aronov explain what professionals are calling pandemic fatigue.
We’re tired of our “new normal” and — to a dangerous extent — exhausted from the constant anxiety.
And pandemic fatigue is contributing to the decline in the use of personal safety precautions. A study published last month in The Journal of the American Medical Association found in April 2020 80% of people stayed at home except for essential reasons, but by November only 40% did so. The researchers noted that such declines in mitigation efforts appeared in every single U.S. region tested.
Here’s how to combat it:
To read more, click here.
Meet Sam.
“I thought I’d share my couch potato cat Sam with you all,” writes Kimberly Helgeson in Pennsylvania. “Hoping you’ll agree he’s pretty comfortable.”
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