Back to normal (whatever that means)

And true to their word - in combination with months-honed contact tracing and genome-sequencing, our little UK variant outbreak is contained and we can move back to Alert Level 2 (and to Level 1 come Monday if all goes to plan).

I read an interesting article about the UK variant on Stuff the other day - if you can get past the long advert on the video, it’s well worth a watch as the difference in spread in NZ of UK Covid with the risk mitigation’s in place (alert level protocols) compared to not having them is quite interesting. While the genome sequencing lets us know it’s the same variant, I guess our “habits” of bubbles, social distancing, masks and washing our hands have something to do with the spread being slower or smaller which buys a bit more time.

In theory, locking down should get easier each time, but for some reason, it doesn’t. I thought it might just be me: our comms at work goes UP as the levels do, so I feel constantly on a tenter hook waiting for the next bunch of copy for an email/web blast to come through. But after talking to others, they felt this week was a bit of a slog too.

Don’t get any of us wrong - we are flipping lucky population to be where we are, how we are, and who we trust to lead us - we have a LOT of things going our way at the moment. But hard is hard, OK? And I’m thankful it’s a) the weekend and b) we’re in Level 2 with Level 1 clearly in sight.

Covid Alert Levels

The weather is gorgeous and we are at home. Working from home; staying away from others; hanging on every news report and briefing; taking money-less bets on what might happen next.

Up until ten minutes ago it was pretty much “I reckon they’ll drop us down to Covid Alert Level One” but now, they’ve found two more community cases at the same school. Not sure they know how it got there, but the UK variant of Covid-19 has two more positive cases so: all bets are off.

Changing habits one baby step at a time

Something I do for comfort is buy books.

I don’t necessarily read (whole) books, but I do enjoy being in a book store, deciding to purchase a book, bring it home/load it on my Kindle, and have that book.

Sitting here at my desk at home I can see a bookshelf of books that I have purchased in the past but have not read. Some of them were purchased more than 20 years ago.

Yesterday I visited a webpage that noted the 100 best books of 2020 and I thought yip! loaded up amazon.com.au and loaded each of the books I thought would be worth reading. I ended up with about a dozen of those books as tabs in my browser. Most of them had Kindle or Audible versions so I was about to add them to my Kindle library when I suddenly remembered the Library. I looked up each of those books and easily 10 of them were at the library and I could request them - some of them were even digital. They all had waiting lists, but it was super easy to add my name to that waiting list.

Who even am I?

Maybe you can teach an old dog new tricks.