“We kinda just held a going-away party. ... We had a `Cheers’ moment,” said New York barback Rafael Familia about the night when his bar was suddenly shuttered.pic.twitter.com/zMrpH9XykX
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“We kinda just held a going-away party. ... We had a `Cheers’ moment,” said New York barback Rafael Familia about the night when his bar was suddenly shuttered.pic.twitter.com/zMrpH9XykX
“There was sharing. There was warmth. The things I miss, all the things we don’t have now,” said Paris undertaker Franck Vasseur, recalling the last funeral he oversaw before lockdowns began.pic.twitter.com/KFBI8a0kVf
“Everything was normal, until it wasn’t. With the gift of hindsight, we know that our parade this year spread COVID,” said Devin De Wulf, who founded the Mardi Gras Krewe of Red Beans in 2008. On Feb. 24, De Wulf’s krewe danced in the streets as a crowd of 15,000 cheered them on.pic.twitter.com/hqOBLorddU
“There were many things to do before the corona. But now, nothing,” said Mariana Makramalla of Madaba, Jordan, who usually works in her family’s mosaics workshop.pic.twitter.com/4aFHjMo606
As the days, weeks and months blur together, read others’ memories of the old normal.http://apne.ws/ETUaOIk
November 7th 2016 was the last normal day.
Damn China
Lockdown here in Dallas was on a Tuesday. Went to dinner Monday night, nice steakhouse, maybe 10% full. Sunday was at high end mall, maybe 1/4 the people, and mostly families with kids running around versus usual.
It hit home for me when they announced there would no longer be any more gatherings at sports venues.
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