Reflecting on a pandemic year
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I’ve been feeling a bit reflective recently, so thought I’d jot down the things that sprang to me as ‘learning points’ over the past year.
There will be more. The order isn’t significant. There’s a blend of work and personal. But just getting this list down has helped me organise my thoughts a bit.
- Homeschooling is different to emergency education at home.
- Being at home during an emergency and trying to work is not the same as working from home.
- Clapping nurses was nice for two weeks, then became performative.
- Chickpeas basically go with anything.
- So do potato waffles.
- Frozen cherries are better than ice in a gin.
- There is a lot to be said about the curious snacks in the Polish shop.
- Going to the cinema was more fun than I realised.
- That couple of weeks without any cars on the roads was glorious.
- The vanity around haircuts was surprising.
- “Chis” stands for covert human intelligence source.
- I miss live music more than I thought. Live-streamed music events were a tonic. Stream DISCO.
- My feet forgot what shoes were for a while. I was glad of the garden during that stage.
- Cat colleagues make the best colleagues (see pic)
- Related: when an outdoor cat becomes an indoor cat you realise just how many furballs they cough up.
- There’s no way skinny jeans will ever be happening again. I’m ok with it.
- Despite clearing out loads of junk, I still have a lot of junk.
- I didn’t get the banana bread obsession. Still don’t.
- I am a lark and an owl. I am not a [whatever is most active in the afternoons].
- I want to be drunk in a field with friends again. That is very important to me.
- I miss spontaneity.
- You can walk almost anywhere if it doesn’t matter what time you arrive. And if you have the right shoes on.
- Binge-watching is really the only skill I have honed. But I am world-class at it.
- Nobody really understands what R is.
- There is a clear need for good graphic design in emergency response.
- That pandemic planning we had done has been immeasurably important, even if the government decided at the first juncture to chuck the plan in the bin.
- Doomscrolling is real. I had to learn on several occasions to just put my phone down.
- There’s joy in simple pleasures. I’ve now got a favourite local tree.
- We need to be better at learning ‘as we go’ rather than debriefing at the end. We need to be better at debriefing at the end too.
- People can come up with very creative quiz rounds when required.
- Local communities are great in a crisis, but turf wars with neighbours intensify.
- I despise voicemail but love a WhatsApp voice note.
- The thought of social interaction makes me a bit anxious.
- Time is elastic. I have no idea what day of the week it is. Blursday?
- Figuring out that I have an onion intolerance was useful and unexpected.
- I think I might be a hugger.
- I can waste a lot of time watching people doing stupid shit on TikTok.
- Lots of people have adapted to crisis quite well, but there are pockets that have struggled. We should focus future planning efforts on helping those who need help most.
- Being able to talk about work stuff in a non-worky way is important. The sideline chats in the kitchen, the after-work drinks. They are valuable.
- There is global overuse of the word unprecedented.
- Bad emergency management decisions have been made which could have been avoided if an entire profession hadn’t been gaslit. No doubt other professions will feel similarly.