Sorry to hear that ,I fear the UK could be just a few weeks behind France.
In his case, he can give the roll to someone else.
Facing uncertainty:
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Opinion: The unrelenting horizonlessness of the Covid world
Six months into the pandemic with no end in sight, many of us have been feeling a sense of unease that goes beyond anxiety or distress. It's a nameless feeling that somehow makes it hard to go on with even the nice things we regularly do, write Nick Couldry and Bruce Schneier.www.cnn.com
In December 2014 I Quit smoking and in 2019 I was told I had high blood pressure and cholesterol. I did the couch to 5k thing, bought a Fitbit and fixed it all.
These last few months I’ve undone most of that hard work. I’ve gradually started smoking again at weekends and I’m eating crap because.... what’s the point?
For me a lot of what is said in that article rings true, sadly![]()
In December 2014 I Quit smoking and in 2019 I was told I had high blood pressure and cholesterol. I did the couch to 5k thing, bought a Fitbit and fixed it all.
These last few months I’ve undone most of that hard work. I’ve gradually started smoking again at weekends and I’m eating crap because.... what’s the point?
For me a lot of what is said in that article rings true, sadly![]()
Well at the current official (and unofficial) pace, will we achieve the collective imunity ?
Facing uncertainty:
![]()
Opinion: The unrelenting horizonlessness of the Covid world
Six months into the pandemic with no end in sight, many of us have been feeling a sense of unease that goes beyond anxiety or distress. It's a nameless feeling that somehow makes it hard to go on with even the nice things we regularly do, write Nick Couldry and Bruce Schneier.www.cnn.com
These last few months I’ve undone most of that hard work. I’ve gradually started smoking again at weekends and I’m eating crap because.... what’s the point?
The motorboat guy is usually the one that complains about the wind.What do they call the guy who just gets a motorboat?
And even though 80% of the population is immunized, it appears to be for a period of only a few months.Wouldn't count on it.
In December 2014 I Quit smoking and in 2019 I was told I had high blood pressure and cholesterol. I did the couch to 5k thing, bought a Fitbit and fixed it all.
These last few months I’ve undone most of that hard work. I’ve gradually started smoking again at weekends and I’m eating crap because.... what’s the point?
For me a lot of what is said in that article rings true, sadly![]()
I'm having the exact opposite experience. Since I've started working from home due to the pandemic, I've been eating much better quality meals, no more stuffing junk food in 30 minutes. Also, being in peace and quiet at home instead of having to put up with daily office shenanigans, I've also finally quit smoking completely and reduced coffee. And the best part, having to avoid places with people, I spend even more time than before hiking hills on weekends, and having a lot more daily free time due to no commutes, I now take much longer walks in the woods with my 3 dogs.
I'm on my top health and fitness levels in past 20 years, thanks to remote working.
Same here, somewhat. I have spent a lot of time in field camps or on ships, and you either develop a healthy routine or turn into a wreck. When lockdown commenced here, I went back into fieldwork mode, started running again and lost 10 kg. I made my vices into rituals, so they take longer and are more enjoyable. Coffee, for example, I roast the green beans myself now. So I have one cup a day, but it is a very good one.
S
The bigger differences for me is that before when I got home from work, I no longer had the patience for exercise, I just took a short walk in the street with my dogs, and many times I just had pizza or sandwiches for dinner, after already having quick "mall meals" for lunch... If it weren't for the hikes in the hills I did on most weekends, I'd be a sphere by now
Now I have more free time for lunch (and breakfast) so I can prepare proper meals, and especially I finish work with a lot more energy and disposition, so most days I get my family and dogs in the car and take them for an hour, hour and a half walk in the nearby woods. At night we now have a proper (but lightweight) dinner. At the weekends, I pick a new trail in the hills (have loads of them in a 150 km radius), put some cold water bottles in backpacks, and off we go hiking and climbing, through hills and valleys, it's great both for health (both physical and mental) and sightseeing. We usually go early in the morning, so we can finish around 1pm and still have a nice picnic in some scenic location.
You being from New Zealand will have a huge number of absolutely fantastic locations all around you, I must admit I quite envy you in this regardI always dreamed of making the Tongariro alpine crossing, or seeing Milford Sound and Mount Taranaki...
The only thing I truly miss from before is holiday travelling... But I was always kind of a hermit before, I'm definitely not one of those "Ï hate people" types, but I always preferred the peace and quiet of nature, and favored the less crowded, quieter places, so dealing with all this wasn't really that much of a change for me, I was fortunate enough to just getting more time for the things I already enjoyed the most.. But I understand that for the more extrovert people these times must have been a lot harder.
A horror, a drama here.![]()
Mom details life of 6-year-old who died from brain-eating amoeba
At a benefit honoring Josiah McIntyre, his mom, Maria Castillo talks about her little boy who loved baseball, his siblings and the outdoors.abc13.com
Also, brain eating amoebas.
2020. Giving a bad name to "hindsight".