Posted on 12/21/2020 8:34:39 AM PST by Kaslin
Here, life has felt incredibly normal. It's also revealed how abnormal the lifestyle I followed in Virginia really was.
OCALA, Fla. — Last Sunday I plopped a steaming hashbrown casserole and a bowl of freshly sliced oranges down on one of a row of endless folding tables covered in those flimsy plastic tablecloths you get at the dollar store. The casseroles were outnumbered only by the pans of homemade cinnamon rolls, and the fruit section was meager: it was a good Southern Baptist potluck.
Church ladies buzzed around, removing tin foil from tin pans and putting serving spoons in each dish, while others flipped pancakes on a portable griddle. Rows of chairs and tables were set up under the oak trees and the typical Florida December weather made me regret wearing a sweater. I loaded my plate with food and it wasn’t until I sat down that I had an epiphany: I had missed potlucks. Thanks to coronavirus, I guess buffet-style anything has become terribly unstylish in some places.
Until recently, I’ve been at school in Loudoun County, Virginia, where Gov. Ralph Northam has been busy inflicting harsher shutdown orders. Masks are required almost everywhere up there, and big gatherings are out of the question. Multiple friends had to cancel their wedding receptions this month due to the new restrictions.
I got so used to wearing a mask that every time I watched a movie it seemed odd for the actors to be bare-faced. Leaving a store, sometimes I’d make it all the way to the car before even realizing I still had my mask on.
It wasn’t until I came home to Florida — where COVID-19 restrictions are much freer and usually left to local government — that I noticed how different life was. On my flight home, I reached from my seat by the window to hand my snack wrapper to the flight attendant. The older gentleman next to me took it from my hand to pass it along. It caught me off guard: this stranger was willing to touch something that I had eaten from? He wasn’t afraid of my germs?
Thoughtful gestures that had always been normal suddenly seemed surprising — which made me realize how many of those everyday connections we’ve lost this year. Since I’ve spent some time in Florida, life has felt incredibly normal. It’s also revealed how abnormal the lifestyle I followed in Virginia really was.
For one, I didn’t realize how much I was missing by not seeing people’s faces. I don’t object to people wearing masks if they feel safer; it’s their personal health decision. But when I arrived at the airport to see my family for the first time since August (mid-semester breaks were another COVID casualty), I could actually see their faces.
I went to a café to study the other day and walked past a young pregnant mother with her toddler in tow. None of us were masked, and the toddler and I got to smile and wave at each other as we passed.
Even things that used to annoy me reminded me of what I had missed. I had to slow down for a school zone the other day because kids were actually in school. I never knew I could feel so much joy at slowing down to 20 miles per hour. There were elementary school kids running around the playground for recess.
The downtown scene here is even further proof that people are living their normal lives, unobstructed by fear. My family went out to dinner the other night at a patio bar overlooking our downtown square, all lit up for Christmas. Families took Christmas photos in front of the lighted trees, and others caught rides in horse-drawn carriages circling the block. The patio was packed with guests from a wedding that had just taken place; it was a huge party, unlike the sweet but limited ceremonies my friends were forced to have in Virginia.
While the chain coffee shops like Starbucks and Dunkin’ are closed to indoor patrons, my favorite local coffeeshop is open and more popular than ever. (And why buy overpriced, mediocre chain coffee anyway?) Looking around, I only see one customer wearing a mask, and only one of the baristas.
There’s a sign taped to the door that says, “The city council feels it is at their best interset to infringe upon your personal constitutional right and feel they can manage your life better than you. We will not do this…we will not force you to wear a mask!”
“All are welcome and we appreciate your supporting local,” the sign adds. I went Saturday morning with my family and we had to wait for a table; we ran into an old friend while we were there. That same day, we went to the downtown farmers’ market. Vendors offered free samples and sold fresh produce, a live musician sang “Folsom Prison Blues,” and no one told me to wear a mask.
I’ve flown in and out of the Orlando airport all my life, and I’ve never seen it half as crowded as it was this month. I can only guess that people are coming down to Florida because it’s open here. People are taking precautions, sure, but they’re also continuing to live their lives.
We’re having friends over and going to church. We’re going out for dinner and drinks, and supporting local farmers and artisans. We’re celebrating marriages and smiling at strangers. And we’re eating a lot of hashbrown casserole.
Things are pretty good in AZ too.
I live in Washington State on salt water, and I see obliviots fishing all by themselves wearing masks.
I’ll take my governor over yours any day.
I totally agree that your Governor is way more preferable than the Criminal running my state into the ground. You still didn’t answer my question as it is important to understand that follow through is a vital component of Leadership- Saying what we want to hear is not enough- Action Status Report. Please.
Hope this helps
“...when riding your bicycle alone on a country road are pretty good indicators of who they are.”
Usually, but when walking to pick up my car in 10°F wind chill, I found the cloth mask offered pretty good protection from the cold. Would not have worn otherwise.
Bears repeating
De Santis 2024
Thanks for the link. I just finished reading it. So, the FDOH now gets the “full” report from the Labs, but won’t say who else will be able to receive it. HOw about the ordering physician who then discusses the results with the one being tested, just like any other test result. No mention in the Epoch Times story that the FDA guidelines permit up to 40 cycles, which ends up with the extremely high rates of false positives. This is just an allusion of Full Disclosure to the Public, as the FDOH refused to answer the reporter’s question who will have access to this new information outside of Govt.
Sunshine...with much cloud cover. Why would that be? If everything is on the Up and Up, there is no excuse for the obfuscation except to continue this Bogus Plandemic for much darker purposes.
The Florida Department of Health (FDOH) is mandating that all laboratories involved in COVID-19 testing report the cycle threshold value of every test performed.
In a memo (pdf) dated Dec. 3, the department said, “All positive, negative and indeterminate COVID-19 laboratory results must be reported to FDOH via electronic laboratory reporting or by fax immediately. This includes all COVID-19 test types—polymerase chain reaction (PCR), or the RNA, antigen and antibody results.
Furthermore, the FDOH is requiring that “cycle threshold (CT) values and their reference ranges, as applicable, must be reported.”
The cycle threshold value is determined by the number of cycles it takes for a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) test machine to detect a fragment of the CCP (Chinese Communist Party) virus, which causes the disease COVID-19.
It informs an infected person of how much virus is in their system: a lower cycle threshold value indicates a higher viral load, meaning the individual is more infectious, while a person with a higher threshold value has a less viral load and is less likely to be infectious.
Since the beginning of the pandemic, laboratories have only been required to report a positive or negative PCR test result without the cycle threshold value, unless requested.
But most do not know that they can request information about the threshold value.
Knowing the cycle threshold value not only gauges how contagious a person is but can also help guide policy decisions and patient management.
The Florida Department of Health did not reply to emails from The Epoch Times for a comment about how the cycle threshold information will be used and if it will be publicly displayed....
Democrats want to end all of your individual constitutional rights .. not only force the healthy, with no symptoms to wear a medically useless mask that does not stop any virus.
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