FACING A POST PANDEMIC WORLD

We’re getting our vaccines this week. After the second booster shot, we’ll be good to go. But where? How soon will we get our lives back? If you visited East Germany decades after the end of WWII, you could still see the effects of that devastating event. Shattered windows, bombed buildings. The post war period was a time of hard-sharp and suffering that lasted for years. This covid-19 pandemic has been compared to a world wide war. How can anyone believe that everything will be the same when it’s finally over?

FACING A POST PANDEMIC WORLD. Life is not going to be the same.
Facing a post pandemic world.  Will you ever feel safe in a crowded room?

About a month after being vaccinated, we should  feel a bit less apprehensive about shopping, socializing, and visiting relatives. But we octogenarians comprise only 4% of the population. Which means that 96% of the people we see every day are still vulnerable. Yes, we can feel safe eating in restaurants  and visiting relatives, but we’ll still have to wear masks and social distance.

The stock market is booming. People who kept their jobs now have bulging bank accounts, because they haven’t had anywhere to spend their money. Investors are betting that a huge buying spree is on the horizon. But is it? Will you ever feel the same in a crowded theatre with the sounds of people coughing and sneezing? Remember all those conferences you attended for work? You got to see cities and visit places you’d never been before, and it was all paid for. But do you really want to sit in stuffy conference rooms listening to presentations, while seated next to strangers from all over the world? And what about indoor sporting events? Remember the first cases of Covid in this country came from the gymnasium of a basketball game.

I grew up in the era of the big department stores. Even in our small town, we had a couple of them. You could spend half a day smelling the perfume, trying on clothes, going from department to department just to dream about all the dazzling merchandise. Guess what, most of those stores are gone. Shopping online isn’t half as much fun. And often you have to go to the bother of dealing with returns.

Are we ever going to feel perfectly safe without masks during the flu season? Will we shake hands when introduced to someone? A cougher or a sneezer will not be welcome anywhere. We all know  too much about the way viruses are spread.

Millions of people have lost jobs or closed their small businesses. Their lives will never be the same. After climbing out of debt, they’ll have to re invent themselves and start all over again.

Are you ready to face a post pandemic world?

SCARED SHOPPERS WEARING FACE MASKS

We aren’t accustomed to seeing people wearing face masks in  the grocery store.  Here in the USA, they’re mostly worn in hospitals.  Anyone seen with one in a public place raises questions.  Is the masked person sick, afraid of getting sick, or about to commit a robbery?  We used to see them occasionally  in Mexico and other foreign places like Asia.  But now,  the coronavirus has brought out our worst fears.  Scared shoppers here in my Indiana hometown are wearing face masks in public places. 

Most hospitals and doctor’s office provide surgical masks at the door.  You’re  asked to wear them if you have a cold or the flu.  Their purpose is to prevent you from spreading infectious diseases and contaminating the air of those around you.   Therefore,  if someone  nearby coughs or sneezes, you are still  at risk of catching whatever it is they have.     Infectious disease specialists  say that the masks are too thin and loose fitting to completely prevent the inhalation of unfiltered air.

Scared shoppers wear face masks so they won't catch the coronavirus
Scared shoppers are wearing  face masks, but they don’t offer much protection against the coronavirus.

And yet, this past week, I’ve seen one or two people wearing a face mask every time I go out to shop.  But  Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious disease specialist at Vanderbilt University has said that regular surgical face masks will not protect you from the coronavirus.

Consequently, respirators are the only thing that will protect you from the coronavirus. They are heavy duty, and form fitted to your face.  The CDC says they filter out about 95% of airborne particles, including viruses and bacteria.  But there are drawbacks.   Respirators aren’t comfortable, and many people have trouble breathing while wearing them.

Meanwhile, I took comfort from a news report last night about the coronavirus.  Apparently, 85% of all cases are mild, 12% are severe, and only 3% are fatal.  Which seems pretty much like the seasonal flu we experience every year.