Garden delivery
Our garden nursery delivery arrived early this morning. Ciao! Bye! I'll be in the garden until next week.
Labels:
Encouragement,
isolation,
Italy,
life,
Lombardy,
public,
small business,
springtime
Data, society, a pandemic, everything
I'm attaching links of the three best articles I've read thus far for their comprehensiveness and clarity, written by the same author. A serious read based on tons of data, taking at least 30 minutes to read through each, take your time to absorb each one.
The latest article was published on Apr 1st, and is specific to covid-19 in the USA. I really appreciated what it has to say, especially the final point: E Pluribus Unum.
https://medium.com/@tomaspueyo/coronavirus-out-of-many-one-36b886af37e9
His first covoid-19 article, written Mar 10th and updated Mar 19th, was about the virus' emergence, spread, how different countries have approached containment, how effective various strategies worked in different contexts.
https://medium.com/@tomaspueyo/coronavirus-act-today-or-people-will-die-f4d3d9cd99ca
The second article, published on Mar 19th, is about various ways that society can handle coming out from the peak and what happens afterwards, steps back to "life as normal."
https://medium.com/@tomaspueyo/coronavirus-the-hammer-and-the-dance-be9337092b56
The latest article was published on Apr 1st, and is specific to covid-19 in the USA. I really appreciated what it has to say, especially the final point: E Pluribus Unum.
https://medium.com/@tomaspueyo/coronavirus-out-of-many-one-36b886af37e9
His first covoid-19 article, written Mar 10th and updated Mar 19th, was about the virus' emergence, spread, how different countries have approached containment, how effective various strategies worked in different contexts.
https://medium.com/@tomaspueyo/coronavirus-act-today-or-people-will-die-f4d3d9cd99ca
The second article, published on Mar 19th, is about various ways that society can handle coming out from the peak and what happens afterwards, steps back to "life as normal."
https://medium.com/@tomaspueyo/coronavirus-the-hammer-and-the-dance-be9337092b56
Celebrating Springtime in my backyard
Our cherry tree did it again. Fully loaded with buds, now bursting their blossoms, radiating with bees and promises of thousands of cherries.
Labels:
Encouragement,
isolation,
Italy,
life,
Lombardy
It's going to be alright
Turn the speakers up or put on your headphones...
Location:
Lombardy, Italy
Prayers for spiritual kids
Who would have ever guessed that in 2020, schools would close for months and kids would end up studying in their own homes, led by their own parents. Most parents are struggling with this, but there are a number of silver linings. Two close to my heart are:
1. Kids don't have to worry about school shootings for the rest of the school year and have the potential to feel safe 100% of the time;
2) Kids can complete the school year with full religious freedom so they can pray and study scriptures with parents and siblings. Remember "prayer at the flagpole?" well, any day, any time!
Would you like some help presenting creative prayer ideas to your kids? Click here: https://www.prayerspacesinschools.com/prayer-spaces-at-home
1. Kids don't have to worry about school shootings for the rest of the school year and have the potential to feel safe 100% of the time;
2) Kids can complete the school year with full religious freedom so they can pray and study scriptures with parents and siblings. Remember "prayer at the flagpole?" well, any day, any time!
Photo is from the same website at the link |
Would you like some help presenting creative prayer ideas to your kids? Click here: https://www.prayerspacesinschools.com/prayer-spaces-at-home
Location:
Italy
Do Re Mi - Covid 19 version
A talented NZ lady transformed a scene from "Sound of Music," where Maria teaches the kids about COVID-19. It's sweet and very amusing!
Labels:
Coronavirus,
guide,
isolation,
life,
pandemic,
public,
quarantine,
society,
tips
Location:
Italy
Face Masks
Next time I have to go out to buy food, I will actually try this DIY mask (at this link - thanks JC!). Earlier I discussed my observation of the face mask trend in a previous blog post. I like that there is no sewing involved in this DIY, which means that:
- I can make it five times faster;
- I could more easily change colors and styles to coordinate my Spring fashion going-out-in-a-pandemic outfit; and
- I can more easily reuse the handkerchief without one day having to undo stitching when I no longer want a face mask.
I know that masks are for stopping the wearer from spreading germs, not for avoiding getting germs. This is one reason I didn't bother with a face mask for the first 5 weeks of the pandemic, and the other being that there is a massive shortage and it's 1000 times more critical that the commercially made masks are available to those who work among sick or the public, or are more at risk of not living through a case of Coronovirus.
But if wearing a mask doesn't hurt, and may help reduce germ spread, then it wouldn't be a sacrifice to wear one of my cute under-appreciated handkerchiefs for those 1 or 2 weekly excursions get food. I've already stayed at home for nearly 6 weeks and lost my paycheck for the foreseeable future. Strapping a handkerchief to my face wouldn't be a major sacrifice and is visually reassuring to the people I pass in the stores. Maybe more than my neon pink bandana tied in a triangle that recalls bandits of the wild west.
The tutorial also provides ideas for recycling bands if you don't have hairbands available. Be creative. Don't panic, have fun!
Labels:
Coronavirus,
guide,
life,
pandemic,
public,
quarantine,
society,
tips
Location:
Lombardy, Italy
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