COVID Coping Strategies
- Mellsblue
- Posts: 16082
- Joined: Thu Feb 11, 2016 7:58 am
COVID Coping Strategies
Morning all. Despite our detailed and forensic breakdown of COVID-19 over on the politics board we are not covering the important social element of this crisis. What are we doing to alleviate the boredom of self-isolation and social distancing? How are we coping with the realities that over night you are your kids’ teacher?
So, I’ll start:
The Mellsblue School for the Handsome and Gifted has a strict timetable. The morning is covered by the kids’ school but the afternoon I am on my own. The afternoon has me stealing resources from all over the place:
French - Muzzy online
Coding - MIT Scratch
Science - Royal Institution (website and YouTube channel)
Maths - Times Table Rock Stars
Architecture(!) - TinkerCAD
Georgraphy: National Geographic
I am also using bits and pieces that Yorkshire Carnegie and Sale Sharks are emailing to me. The RFU are also uploading stuff here:
https://www.englandrugby.com/news/artic ... ol-of-ruck
I have broken a life long rule of never exercising in the house, unless lifting weights. I am doing the School of Calisthenics daily sessions - live at 11am and then left on YouTube - and intermittently doing Jessica Ennis’s HIIT style workouts. I’ll admit the latter is mostly motivated by..... erm..... aesthetic reasons rather than the workouts themselves.
This evening I am partaking in a pub quiz via Zoom with school friends and WAGs. Entry to the quiz is only possibly if the male member of your team is sporting a moustache, in homage to fellow Bedford School old boy and slightly superior rugby player George Furbank, and each team member has at least one bottle of Corona. Slightly earlier the coach who teaches my youngest football (much to my disappointment) is hosting a football quiz for all his charges on Zoom.
How life has changed.
So, I’ll start:
The Mellsblue School for the Handsome and Gifted has a strict timetable. The morning is covered by the kids’ school but the afternoon I am on my own. The afternoon has me stealing resources from all over the place:
French - Muzzy online
Coding - MIT Scratch
Science - Royal Institution (website and YouTube channel)
Maths - Times Table Rock Stars
Architecture(!) - TinkerCAD
Georgraphy: National Geographic
I am also using bits and pieces that Yorkshire Carnegie and Sale Sharks are emailing to me. The RFU are also uploading stuff here:
https://www.englandrugby.com/news/artic ... ol-of-ruck
I have broken a life long rule of never exercising in the house, unless lifting weights. I am doing the School of Calisthenics daily sessions - live at 11am and then left on YouTube - and intermittently doing Jessica Ennis’s HIIT style workouts. I’ll admit the latter is mostly motivated by..... erm..... aesthetic reasons rather than the workouts themselves.
This evening I am partaking in a pub quiz via Zoom with school friends and WAGs. Entry to the quiz is only possibly if the male member of your team is sporting a moustache, in homage to fellow Bedford School old boy and slightly superior rugby player George Furbank, and each team member has at least one bottle of Corona. Slightly earlier the coach who teaches my youngest football (much to my disappointment) is hosting a football quiz for all his charges on Zoom.
How life has changed.
-
- Posts: 3161
- Joined: Tue Feb 09, 2016 5:58 pm
Re: COVID Coping Strategies
Might look at those calisthenics, always been intrigued without ever actually looking them up
Sent from my CPH1951 using Tapatalk
Sent from my CPH1951 using Tapatalk
It was so much easier to blame Them. It was bleakly depressing to think They were Us. I've certainly never thought of myself as one of Them. No one ever thinks of themselves as one of Them. We're always one of Us. It's Them that do the bad things.
- Galfon
- Posts: 4568
- Joined: Wed Feb 10, 2016 8:07 pm
Re: COVID Coping Strategies
Zoom happy-hours et al: bad news, unless the stockpile remains healthy..
https://www.google.com/amp/s/amp.cnn.co ... index.html
https://www.google.com/amp/s/amp.cnn.co ... index.html
Last edited by Galfon on Sun Apr 05, 2020 6:54 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- Which Tyler
- Posts: 9353
- Joined: Tue Feb 09, 2016 8:43 pm
- Location: Tewkesbury
- Contact:
Re: COVID Coping Strategies
I spent the first week obsessing about the virus, and tracking the numbers; challenging misinformation etc etc. Which led me to fairly dark places for my mental health.
Since last weekend I've been limiting my news intake to one broadcast a day (rather than 24 hour rolling news); and am mostly scrolling straight past anything virus related I see on social media (except for dangerous claims I see - like shit quality sanitiser recipes; or the fraudulant (almost exclusively american) colleagues).
I have volunteered my help to the NHS - intially in my professional capacity; but as of yesterday, in any capacity they may be able to use me.
I'm sitting in front of the piano for an hour a day - for the first time in decades.
I'm attending a couple of online seminars each (week) day; and doing plenty of reading around at the weekend.
I've discovered that World Rugby are "live" streaming classic matches Fri, Sat and Sun evenings.
I'm getting out of the house to walk the dogs for 1-1.5 hours every day just so that I'm not staring at the same walls all the time (normal enough for me, but I've had to make it the same time every day to try and put some structure into my day).
I am actually getting in some (gentle) strength training pretty much every day - though this is "normal" for me in fits and starts.
I am speaking to someone outside of the household on the phone every day - alternating between a family member or a friend / colleague.
I am drinking more alcohol, and eating more cake than I ever have (since uni for alcohol, ever for cake - as Ali has taken up baking, seemingly like everyone else - and I can't stand food waste). I need to address this.
I have helped Ali sort out the paint pots, brushes and rollers from the loft; and am not looking forward to what will be expected of me tomorrow.
Since last weekend I've been limiting my news intake to one broadcast a day (rather than 24 hour rolling news); and am mostly scrolling straight past anything virus related I see on social media (except for dangerous claims I see - like shit quality sanitiser recipes; or the fraudulant (almost exclusively american) colleagues).
I have volunteered my help to the NHS - intially in my professional capacity; but as of yesterday, in any capacity they may be able to use me.
I'm sitting in front of the piano for an hour a day - for the first time in decades.
I'm attending a couple of online seminars each (week) day; and doing plenty of reading around at the weekend.
I've discovered that World Rugby are "live" streaming classic matches Fri, Sat and Sun evenings.
I'm getting out of the house to walk the dogs for 1-1.5 hours every day just so that I'm not staring at the same walls all the time (normal enough for me, but I've had to make it the same time every day to try and put some structure into my day).
I am actually getting in some (gentle) strength training pretty much every day - though this is "normal" for me in fits and starts.
I am speaking to someone outside of the household on the phone every day - alternating between a family member or a friend / colleague.
I am drinking more alcohol, and eating more cake than I ever have (since uni for alcohol, ever for cake - as Ali has taken up baking, seemingly like everyone else - and I can't stand food waste). I need to address this.
I have helped Ali sort out the paint pots, brushes and rollers from the loft; and am not looking forward to what will be expected of me tomorrow.
- Stom
- Posts: 5939
- Joined: Wed Feb 10, 2016 10:57 am
Re: COVID Coping Strategies
I'll be honest, it's a bit of a struggle for me.
My wife and I both work from home. Usually, this would involve me getting the kids to nursery and then working from 9-12:30, when I collect them from nursery, get lunch, and then work again from 15:30-17:30. That's good for me in terms of work, and means my wife gets to work from 9:00-13:00, and 14:00-15:30.
Instead, I'm with the kids all morning, and she's with them all afternoon. But it's not quite working out like that, and my work is being squeezed into 2-2.5 hours.
I'm desperate for time away from the kids, who are struggling with the lack of nursery, my wife is stressed because she wants to spend more time sorting out her launch, plus she's frustrated about "the state of the house" and wants to do all the projects everyone else is talking about. The people who either don't have work or don't have kids!
On the plus side, my work in the kitchen is getting better.
I've perfected Italian cooking, I made the best ribs I've ever made the other day, I've done a couple of cakes, some breads, and found the cookie recipe for me. I've also perfected my soup/stock recipe, and experimented with other things.
I want to introduce a little more variety in the coming weeks, though, and the booze is running out, so need to stock up on gin, vermouth, etc.
Especially as the sun is out and screaming for a nice Americano!
Ooh, coffee, too. I want to get some more specialty coffees in and start making some really good coffee. Going to try and pick up a nice Costa Rican, and might try a Colombian or an Ethiopian, haven't decided yet.
My wife and I both work from home. Usually, this would involve me getting the kids to nursery and then working from 9-12:30, when I collect them from nursery, get lunch, and then work again from 15:30-17:30. That's good for me in terms of work, and means my wife gets to work from 9:00-13:00, and 14:00-15:30.
Instead, I'm with the kids all morning, and she's with them all afternoon. But it's not quite working out like that, and my work is being squeezed into 2-2.5 hours.
I'm desperate for time away from the kids, who are struggling with the lack of nursery, my wife is stressed because she wants to spend more time sorting out her launch, plus she's frustrated about "the state of the house" and wants to do all the projects everyone else is talking about. The people who either don't have work or don't have kids!
On the plus side, my work in the kitchen is getting better.
I've perfected Italian cooking, I made the best ribs I've ever made the other day, I've done a couple of cakes, some breads, and found the cookie recipe for me. I've also perfected my soup/stock recipe, and experimented with other things.
I want to introduce a little more variety in the coming weeks, though, and the booze is running out, so need to stock up on gin, vermouth, etc.
Especially as the sun is out and screaming for a nice Americano!
Ooh, coffee, too. I want to get some more specialty coffees in and start making some really good coffee. Going to try and pick up a nice Costa Rican, and might try a Colombian or an Ethiopian, haven't decided yet.
- Puja
- Posts: 18176
- Joined: Tue Feb 09, 2016 9:16 pm
Re: COVID Coping Strategies
I recognise this. We, in theory, have an ideal situation because I work and my wife doesn't and so my work are of the opinion that I can just work from home and produce the same volume as my wife can deal with the children. However, my wife has long running issues with her mental health - she copes fine when the children are in school and her responsibility is from 3.15pm till 6.30pm, but having them all day is wearing on her, especially with "the state of the house" and the social media pressure to be doing all the things with the children. So I'm reducing my hours to try and give her some breaks, which has got the fun response from my work of, "Thank you for letting us know about your situstion, we value our employees and will do what we can to help, by the way your productivity is down and you need to improve it."Stom wrote:I'll be honest, it's a bit of a struggle for me.
My wife and I both work from home. Usually, this would involve me getting the kids to nursery and then working from 9-12:30, when I collect them from nursery, get lunch, and then work again from 15:30-17:30. That's good for me in terms of work, and means my wife gets to work from 9:00-13:00, and 14:00-15:30.
Instead, I'm with the kids all morning, and she's with them all afternoon. But it's not quite working out like that, and my work is being squeezed into 2-2.5 hours.
I'm desperate for time away from the kids, who are struggling with the lack of nursery, my wife is stressed because she wants to spend more time sorting out her launch, plus she's frustrated about "the state of the house" and wants to do all the projects everyone else is talking about. The people who either don't have work or don't have kids!
Plus, as you said, the kids miss school. They're 4 and 6 and are ferociously clever, both far ahead of literacy and numeracy, so I'm not concerned about them falling behind, but they both need and misss the socialisation of being taught not to bite the other puppies. The school have been doing a phenomenal job with keeping contact and providing content for them, but it's not the same.
On the bright side, I stocked up with non-perishables and got a freezer in the garage last year on the basis that there could be supply-chain issues with a No-Deal Brexit. Felt somewhat sheepish when I did it, but it's been a godsend to have the supplies now.
Puja
Backist Monk
- Numbers
- Posts: 2463
- Joined: Fri Feb 12, 2016 11:13 am
Re: COVID Coping Strategies
Well my coping strategy is going to work every day to needlessly put myself at risk, almost all my work can be done from home but my employer insists I come in, even though I said I would attend in the eventuality I need to be on site, fucking arseholes.
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- Posts: 15261
- Joined: Fri Feb 12, 2016 11:17 am
Re: COVID Coping Strategies
I've dug a grave in the garden (or perhaps trench is a nicer word)
The main idea of which is to fill with garden waste given the tips are closed and there's no notice as to when collection of garden waste bins might resume, and I do understand moving the crews onto ensuring domestic and recycling collections continue. But as I don't want to burn my garden waste, why create extra smoke to help anyone with a respiratory condition along being the thinking there, I need somewhere to put what is now a vast mound, and thus the trench.
But if my family continue to irk me I'm satisfied I have options now
The main idea of which is to fill with garden waste given the tips are closed and there's no notice as to when collection of garden waste bins might resume, and I do understand moving the crews onto ensuring domestic and recycling collections continue. But as I don't want to burn my garden waste, why create extra smoke to help anyone with a respiratory condition along being the thinking there, I need somewhere to put what is now a vast mound, and thus the trench.
But if my family continue to irk me I'm satisfied I have options now
- Puja
- Posts: 18176
- Joined: Tue Feb 09, 2016 9:16 pm
Re: COVID Coping Strategies
Oof. What do you do for a living? My work stayed open far beyond where they should have, despite being able to operate from home, but they at least bowed to the full lockdown.Numbers wrote:Well my coping strategy is going to work every day to needlessly put myself at risk, almost all my work can be done from home but my employer insists I come in, even though I said I would attend in the eventuality I need to be on site, fucking arseholes.
Puja
Backist Monk
- Numbers
- Posts: 2463
- Joined: Fri Feb 12, 2016 11:13 am
Re: COVID Coping Strategies
I.T. mate, so every man and his dog suddenly need laptops, I can do the vast majority of what needs to be done from home though.Puja wrote:Oof. What do you do for a living? My work stayed open far beyond where they should have, despite being able to operate from home, but they at least bowed to the full lockdown.Numbers wrote:Well my coping strategy is going to work every day to needlessly put myself at risk, almost all my work can be done from home but my employer insists I come in, even though I said I would attend in the eventuality I need to be on site, fucking arseholes.
Puja
- morepork
- Posts: 7860
- Joined: Wed Feb 10, 2016 1:50 pm
Re: COVID Coping Strategies
Numbers wrote:I.T. mate, so every man and his dog suddenly need laptops, I can do the vast majority of what needs to be done from home though.Puja wrote:Oof. What do you do for a living? My work stayed open far beyond where they should have, despite being able to operate from home, but they at least bowed to the full lockdown.Numbers wrote:Well my coping strategy is going to work every day to needlessly put myself at risk, almost all my work can be done from home but my employer insists I come in, even though I said I would attend in the eventuality I need to be on site, fucking arseholes.
Puja
Tell them you have a sore throat (and fuck off).
- Galfon
- Posts: 4568
- Joined: Wed Feb 10, 2016 8:07 pm
Re: COVID Coping Strategies
...or even say yer missus has, that's an xtra week..
Mrs G went down with 3 of the main simpsons, albeit mildly so I had comply.Back in a few weeks but not entirely comfortable given ICU stats show that I sit bang in the majority grouping..
-Had to go compost for cuttings/loppings.
-Had to go self-clipping for barnet - choosing number 2 seemed apt, but strangely got more complements from old dears down the road.
-Bird-bath showing no ash/pollutant debris at all these days.
-Joggers on the pavement are becoming a bit of a problem - not surprised Paris moved 'em aside.
Mrs G went down with 3 of the main simpsons, albeit mildly so I had comply.Back in a few weeks but not entirely comfortable given ICU stats show that I sit bang in the majority grouping..
-Had to go compost for cuttings/loppings.
-Had to go self-clipping for barnet - choosing number 2 seemed apt, but strangely got more complements from old dears down the road.
-Bird-bath showing no ash/pollutant debris at all these days.
-Joggers on the pavement are becoming a bit of a problem - not surprised Paris moved 'em aside.
- Numbers
- Posts: 2463
- Joined: Fri Feb 12, 2016 11:13 am
Re: COVID Coping Strategies
I did have to self isolate for 7 days as I had flu symptoms, the problem is that people need the work to be done and it is required, it just doesn't require me to be on-site all the time which is the issue I have with this.morepork wrote:Numbers wrote:I.T. mate, so every man and his dog suddenly need laptops, I can do the vast majority of what needs to be done from home though.Puja wrote:
Oof. What do you do for a living? My work stayed open far beyond where they should have, despite being able to operate from home, but they at least bowed to the full lockdown.
Puja
Tell them you have a sore throat (and fuck off).
- Buggaluggs
- Posts: 1267
- Joined: Sun Feb 14, 2016 2:50 pm
Re: COVID Coping Strategies
My firm does civil engineering and is considered essential as we do water and waste utilities. We only have 18 emps and most can work from home. We have managers who still equate working from home with fully paid time off, but the reality is that it works. Our utilization rates are still good and on any given day only 3-4 people actually go to the office. For some folks, I think they do more at home than they do in the office.
Other than that I have fixed just about every thing that needs fixing in the house and I'm looking forward to planting season for the veg patch to keep me occupied!
Other than that I have fixed just about every thing that needs fixing in the house and I'm looking forward to planting season for the veg patch to keep me occupied!
- Mellsblue
- Posts: 16082
- Joined: Thu Feb 11, 2016 7:58 am
Re: COVID Coping Strategies
Lockdown affects us all in different ways:
- Stom
- Posts: 5939
- Joined: Wed Feb 10, 2016 10:57 am
Re: COVID Coping Strategies
I would love to see travel to work included in your paypacket up to a certain point. So 1h a day is paid.
It's something I've said to potential employers when talking contracts: If I'm expected to come into the office 4 days a week, I'm going to be wanting pay for the time away from the family. All of it. I wouldn't be making that journey otherwise.
There's a Hungarian punk song with lyrics: 8 hours working, 8 hours resting, 8 hours entertainment.
Nowadays it's more like 10 hours working, 4 hours getting to work, 6 hours resting, 4 hours entertainment...
It's something I've said to potential employers when talking contracts: If I'm expected to come into the office 4 days a week, I'm going to be wanting pay for the time away from the family. All of it. I wouldn't be making that journey otherwise.
There's a Hungarian punk song with lyrics: 8 hours working, 8 hours resting, 8 hours entertainment.
Nowadays it's more like 10 hours working, 4 hours getting to work, 6 hours resting, 4 hours entertainment...
- Numbers
- Posts: 2463
- Joined: Fri Feb 12, 2016 11:13 am
Re: COVID Coping Strategies
That's brightened up my day, cheers.Mellsblue wrote:Lockdown affects us all in different ways:
- Which Tyler
- Posts: 9353
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- Location: Tewkesbury
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Re: COVID Coping Strategies
For anyone bored, plenty of education courses available for free here: https://www.futurelearn.com/courses?fil ... _courses=1
- Which Tyler
- Posts: 9353
- Joined: Tue Feb 09, 2016 8:43 pm
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Re: COVID Coping Strategies
Why is it where you choose to live, your employer's responsibility?Stom wrote:I would love to see travel to work included in your paypacket up to a certain point. So 1h a day is paid.
It's something I've said to potential employers when talking contracts: If I'm expected to come into the office 4 days a week, I'm going to be wanting pay for the time away from the family. All of it. I wouldn't be making that journey otherwise.
There's a Hungarian punk song with lyrics: 8 hours working, 8 hours resting, 8 hours entertainment.
Nowadays it's more like 10 hours working, 4 hours getting to work, 6 hours resting, 4 hours entertainment...
- Stom
- Posts: 5939
- Joined: Wed Feb 10, 2016 10:57 am
Re: COVID Coping Strategies
Up to a maximum. So 1h a day, for instance.Which Tyler wrote:Why is it where you choose to live, your employer's responsibility?Stom wrote:I would love to see travel to work included in your paypacket up to a certain point. So 1h a day is paid.
It's something I've said to potential employers when talking contracts: If I'm expected to come into the office 4 days a week, I'm going to be wanting pay for the time away from the family. All of it. I wouldn't be making that journey otherwise.
There's a Hungarian punk song with lyrics: 8 hours working, 8 hours resting, 8 hours entertainment.
Nowadays it's more like 10 hours working, 4 hours getting to work, 6 hours resting, 4 hours entertainment...
- Galfon
- Posts: 4568
- Joined: Wed Feb 10, 2016 8:07 pm
Re: COVID Coping Strategies
For those of us not pre-villaged to live in western parts where clear skies are normal, the pollution-lite skies delivered a stonking super-moon tonight (biggest of the year); combined wi' a brilliant Venus (brightest of planets and only one on show in night-sky this month), remindful of how natural order continues even when there's 120nm pieces of spherical sh!t causing absoloute mayhem in the here-now.
- morepork
- Posts: 7860
- Joined: Wed Feb 10, 2016 1:50 pm
Re: COVID Coping Strategies
I got wankered last night and viewed this moon through a scope. The Tycho crater was immense.
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- Posts: 20884
- Joined: Tue Feb 09, 2016 7:52 pm
Re: COVID Coping Strategies
There's a dark side to you...morepork wrote:I got wankered last night and viewed this moon through a scope. The Tycho crater was immense.
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- Posts: 20884
- Joined: Tue Feb 09, 2016 7:52 pm
Re: COVID Coping Strategies
well yes. Kind of assuming a seller's market. I suspect if an employer wants you enough, they'll make sure it works for you- if they don't, they won't.Which Tyler wrote:Why is it where you choose to live, your employer's responsibility?Stom wrote:I would love to see travel to work included in your paypacket up to a certain point. So 1h a day is paid.
It's something I've said to potential employers when talking contracts: If I'm expected to come into the office 4 days a week, I'm going to be wanting pay for the time away from the family. All of it. I wouldn't be making that journey otherwise.
There's a Hungarian punk song with lyrics: 8 hours working, 8 hours resting, 8 hours entertainment.
Nowadays it's more like 10 hours working, 4 hours getting to work, 6 hours resting, 4 hours entertainment...
- Mellsblue
- Posts: 16082
- Joined: Thu Feb 11, 2016 7:58 am
Re: COVID Coping Strategies
Episode 2 of Being In Lockdown Makes People Do The Silliest Things: