With much of the US (and the rest of the world) either “social distancing” or “sheltering
in place,” all you extroverts and work-outside-your home folks must
be going crazy. While my day-to-day life hasn’t changed that much (I
admit I miss the library), I can certainly sympathize with the frustrations of
having your schedule turned upside down, and having to fill hours of the day
productively rather than stewing and worrying uselessly. Yes, of course, you
can binge watch TV or movies, or read, but here are a few more simple pleasures and everyday adventures for while you’re sheltering at home:
Bake something. Blow the dust off your bread machine (do
people still have those? I do!), mix up a batch of your family’s favorite
cookies, or use up the over-ripe bananas in banana bread. I find baking very calming,
not to mention yummy.
Take a walk in nature. Obviously, you should only do this if
you can do it safely, but there really is something so uplifting about getting
some fresh air and sunlight. (Plus, you probably need the exercise—see first
suggestion.)
Take an online art class. Laure Ferlita’s online watercolor classes are fun, accessible, and reasonably priced. She just launched a new one
last week, Spring Wreath. (No affiliation except friendship!)
Doodle with Mo Willems, Kennedy Center Education
Artist-in-Residence. Primarily aimed at kids, but still fun for adults! As he
says, “You might be isolated, but you’re not alone. You are an art maker. Let’s
make some art together.”
Watch and listen to the Berlin Philharmonic in their digital concert hall, free for 30 days, if you register by March 31. So soothing.
Participate in the Modern Mrs. Darcy Stay At Home Book Tour.
The first event was today, but there’s one every day this week, and if you
can’t join live, there will be replays available. Learn about it here.
Fill your mind with positive, encouraging, and uplifting
things, like:
This interview with author Rebecca Solnit. Her book A Paradise Built in Hell, “describes how in the aftermath of natural and
man-made disasters…human beings tend to respond by banding together, not
tearing apart.”
No doubt this is a hard and scary time. Let’s get through it
together. Share the things that are helping you in the comments below!
“We are not going to change the whole world, but we can
change ourselves and feel free as birds. We can be serene even in the midst of
calamities and, by our serenity, make others more tranquil. Serenity is
contagious. If we smile at someone, he or she will smile back. And a smile
costs nothing. We should plague everyone with joy. If we are to die in a
minute, why not die happily, laughing?”
Here in the U.S., things are getting weird. Fights are
breaking out over toilet paper, businesses and schools are closing, and a new
term has entered our vocabulary: social distancing. The COVID-19 coronavirus is
wreaking havoc all over the world.
And my library just closed. Now it’s getting serious.
I don’t mean to make light of this situation—it’s the
strangest, scariest thing that’s happened in my life, except for 9/11. I’m not
especially worried about catching the virus—I work from home and don’t spend
much time with people other than my family and close friends—but I do worry
about my husband and son, who work with the public, and my older family
members, some of whom have health issues. I’m also deeply concerned about what
will happen to the economy after this is all over.
Following the news has made me anxious and depressed at
times. But I remind myself that living is risky. Virus or no, any one of us
could be struck down at any time—we just don’t think about it that often. Our
attention turns to the fragility of our way of life, and life itself, when
something like this happens.
We always have a choice, however. We can let the coronavirus bring out the
worst in us, or the best. This is our chance to work together to reduce the
spread of the virus and help each other along the way. As usual, our attitudes
are key: can we remain positive in the face of fear and uncertainty? Can we
pause and notice the simple pleasures we’re usually too busy to see and savor?
Can we use this time to become more thoughtful and real?
While we’re walking this hard road, here are some things we
should remember:
Follow instructions from authorities regarding social
distancing—if we have the virus but don’t realize it, we can spread it.
Don’t hoard. Buy only what we need and leave the rest for
others.
If possible, help those in our community who may be
dangerously isolated, especially the elderly.
Remember that this won’t last forever.
Try to stay in the moment and avoid “awful-izing” about the
future.
We can also remember those who are being hurt economically
by this shut down: small businesses, authors’ whose book tours have been
postponed or cancelled, artists and crafts people who make a portion of their
income through teaching or shows, performers who may not be paid when their
productions go dark, servers who miss out on tips, parents who can’t afford
childcare for kids who are unexpectedly out of school. Keep your eyes and ears
open for ways to help if you can.
And take care of our physical and mental health by finding
positive ways to release fear and tension. I stress cleaned my closet and
dresser this weekend, a job that has needed doing for months. I’m eyeing my
office next—it would benefit from a deep clean. And I think working out would
be a better way to cope with stress than eating barbecue flavor potato chips,
which I don’t really like that much anyway but they’re salty and crunchy
and…well, you get it.
When the weather and situation permits, step outside for a
breath of fresh air. Wash our hands more than usual (and apply hand cream
after!). If we find it’s getting to be too much for us, set limits on checking
updates and avoid inflammatory articles. And every time we read something
scary, look for a positive story—such as “Coronavirus sparks an epidemic of people helping people in Seattle.”
While we wait for world to settle down, here are some links
you might find helpful:
Gretchen Rubin of The Happiness Project has some
excellent suggestions about how to stay as happy and calm as we can be
in this situation here.
Modern Mrs. Darcy (whose own book tour has been cancelled)
is hosting a Stay at Home Book Tour. Sign up for this free series of events, which will take place over the week
beginning March 23.
I sincerely hope you’re all healthy and safe. If you feel
like sharing, let me know in the comments (or hit reply if you’re receiving
this via email) how you’re coping with coronavirus fears.
I don’t know why, but I love Leap Day (February 29). Maybe
it’s because it’s like being given the gift of an extra day, and who doesn’t
wish for one of those now and then? Maybe because Leap Day is a once-every-four-years pause. The usual 28 days of February are done, and March hasn’t started yet.
This year’s Leap Day sort of snuck up on me while I wasn’t
paying attention. I’d like to make it memorable, instead of a typical Saturday
of chores and whatnot, so today I’ll have to get my backside in gear so that
today’s work doesn’t bleed into tomorrow, as has been known to happen. Or I’ll
have to let go of something—or both. Either way, I plan to celebrate Leap Day,
but not by making it into a full-blown, drive-myself-nutty holiday, complete
with its own to-do list and 10-point plan. Rather, I have two simple
suggestions for how to celebrate Leap Day:
1. Be kind to yourself. Sleep in a little, take a walk in
nature (if your weather allows this), spend time doing something that feeds
your soul. Eat some healthy and delicious food. Give someone a hug. Even when
the world feels dark and scary, most of us still have so much to appreciate and
enjoy, so many people (and animals) to love. I’m going to try to fill it with
simple pleasures—things like starting a jigsaw puzzle, reading (of course), and
enjoying our current cooler weather.
2. Be kind to others. Smile, hold a door open, allow another
driver to merge into your lane, thank someone, post an uplifting thought on
social media. A little kindness sends ripples out into the world—imagine what
it would feel like if everyone were kind just for this one day. Maybe at
least some of them would continue to be kind the next day, and the next. (Click
here to see 10 ways to spread kindness.)
If we use the pause of Leap Day to recalibrate kindness, to
ourselves and to others, we’ll all be a lot happier.