About Coronavirus

I posted this message in response to a friend who is among the more vulnerable to coronavirus, and modified it slightly to post it on my own Facebook page:

I’ve been hearing some try to minimize the precautions we’ve seen thus far against the coronavirus. Some have even ridiculed it all.

I would ask you to consider that some of these precautions are not so YOU won’t get the coronavirus, which you figure you’ll handle just fine. It’s so you don’t act as a vector for COVID-19 and SPREAD it to someone who is more vulnerable than you. Keep in mind that the best information we have now says YOU ARE CONTAGIOUS before you start showing symptoms YOURSELF.

Sorry for your inconvenience, but this is more than just “all about you.”

And, by the way — why weren’t we all washing our hands and employing reasonable social practices minimizing the spread of things like this — AND THE FLU, which has been killing tens of thousands EVERY YEAR — ALL ALONG?!?

Some of the news coverage has been shallow and sensationalist. But if you listen to it, some fairly shocking facts emerge. You are several more time more likely to die of coronavirus than the flu if you’re over 60, especially if you have “compicating medical conditions.” Like heart disease. Or respiratory disease. Or diabetes. Or high blood pressure. A LOT of people over 60 have high blood pressure.

And I just learned something new yesterday. The pneumonia that older people are getting as a complication of coronavirus? It’s not bacterial pneumonia, as initially thought. It’s ARDS – acute respiratory disease syndrome. The Wikipedia pages states that OF THOSE WHO SURVIVE (my emphasis), a decreased quality of life is relatively common.

And ARDS is what killed so many, so quickly, during the Spanish flu of 1918. The mortality rate of ARDS is 36-52%.

This is NOT the flu. It’s both more communicable and several times more deadly. It’s worth taking it seriously.

Daylight Saving Time returneth

Note: while I will be observing Daylight Saving Time, I refuse to spring forward. I prefer to sneak up on my clock and change the time when it least suspects it.

Sometimes I change it before I go to bed, the evening before. I’m a rebel that way.

Fun with numbers

OK, by now I’m sure you’ve heard that today is 02/02/2020, which is a palindromic date. But I’ll bet no one else has mentioned that in this Leap Day year, this is day 33, with 333 days left.

You’re welcome.

Valentine’s Day (and Lupercalia) planning

‪In 2020, the February full moon is on Sunday, February 9, so if you have a date for February 14, they’re probably not a werewolf.‬

‪Not a lunar werewolf, anyway.‬

‪(If YOU’RE the werewolf, you’ve already taken this into account on your calendar.)‬

Timing

If your hometown college basketball team wants to break a two game losing streak, a game against the reigning national champions from last season, who already beat them earlier THIS season, seems as good a time as any, right?

There’s nothing more precious than time

Remember this, if you can. There is nothing more precious than time. You probably feel you have a measureless supply of it, but you have not. Wasted hours destroy your life just as surely at the beginning as at the end, only in the end it becomes more obvious.

— Herman Wouk, The Cain Mutiny