Might As Well Blog
Lately I'm reminded of a joke I heard many years ago. During the “mad cow” epidemic, two cows were grazing together in a farmer's field. The first cow says to the other, “This mad cow epidemic has me worried. Last month it was the state next to us. Then two weeks ago it was in the county next to us. Now I hear it's at a farm about ten miles away.” The second cow looks over and says, “What do we have to worry about? We're ducks!!”
Anyway, I feel like the first cow.
Better than being the second cow though.
It was a week ago that I stopped in
at our local Meijer grocery store just to get a bag of potato chips.
My jaw dropped when I saw at every check-out huge lines of shoppers,
some wearing face masks and their carts filled with as much as they
could hold. I turned right around and walked out.
Only this week did my wife and I
return to Meijer. Not nearly as many shoppers this time but the
store was not nearly as well stocked as usual. Of course, everyone
who's shopped lately knows the usual hard-to-get items—toilet
paper, bottled water and disinfectants. But browsing around, there
were some other items in short supply. Soft cream cheese was one. I
noticed frozen pizzas seemed to be a popular item as they were in
short supply, maybe because they're easy to prepare for those used to
eating out frequently since restaurants and bars are now closed.
Since it was St. .Patrick's Day, I
looked down the beer aisle for Irish ale and noticed a gap in the
bottles that were stocked on the refrigerated shelves. Probably a
run on the Irish imports, I figured. Nope. Ironically, it was
Corona beer. Not a one there under the Corona sign.
We checked out with our cart,
Wendy endorsing her check for electronic funds transfer with a pen
the checkout clerk gave her. Thinking she should sanitize the pen
afterwards, my wife asked, “Do you have any hand sanitizer?”
“Are you joking?” the clerk
responded. They didn't even have hand sanitizer for the clerks
handling all those groceries.
Schools and our local library
have been closed for a week. When I tried to return a DVD to the
library last week, just to put it in the dropbox for returns, I was
confronted with padlocks and this sign advising me to hold onto all checked-out materials until the library re-opens:
But then today I get this e-mail.
“FIRST OVERDUE NOTICE. As of
the date shown our files show that the following items charged to
your account are overdue. Please return these items as soon as
possible.” Ironically, not
everyone at the library is on the same page.
My son is working as is his wife
so we watched all three grandboys yesterday, trying to entertain them
in this time of gloom and despair. No turning on the TV news with
its depressing reports of illnesses and casualties across our world.
YouTube's OK. Nintendo games, fine. Wendy even gives up her smart
phone and Kindle portable tablet so the boys have that to play with
too. Keeps everyone happy until . . .
. . . six-year-old Luke brings
the Kindle to me and says, “This is dead.”
C'mon, Luke. Bad choice of
words. How about saying, “This needs to be re-charged but it
should be healthy and back to normal shortly.”
12 Comments:
Hello again.. I am also blogging more than I used to.Being at home self distancing..is hard and I am trying to get used to the new NORMAL life we are leading. Hoping you and the whole family stay well during this time. YES we will get over it.. it is a matter of HOW LONG it will take now. Stay well.. <3
CAROLDEE--Good to hear from you. I agree that staying home is hard. They say you can still go out for a walk so that helps. But you still have to keep a social distance. Yesterday I started to cross the street to avoid someone coming my way when they started crossing the street themselves. So I had to do an about-face and head back the other way.
I hear you loud and clear...Might As Well Blog... is so right. The shenanigans about the library sounds about right. Most times the-left-hand-doesn't-know-what-the-right-hand-is-doing.
Luke probably just wants the Kindle back working no matter how you (we grown-ups) want to say it. I know 10 yr. old Jace has to be seated near an outlet because it won't be long before he's informing me...MiMi my iPad needs to charge.
Wishing you all the best!
DELLGIRL--Our goal with Luke is to get him to do something that doesn't involve TV's, Kindles or other screens. And that is proving very hard to do.
It is madness here in this country, too. Supermarket shelves are empty of canned goods, flours, meat, toilet paper, paper rolls...you name it...gaps everywhere.
Idiots everywhere!!
I always keep to myself so self-isolation is not foreign to me. With the idiotic behaviour and greed shown by so many, it is no wonder I am a hermit!!
Take care, Dave. :)
LEE--We're in a slightly bigger city so we can't self isolate too much but it is so quiet on the streets here today. I took a walk and where you usually see cars driving and people walking, all I heard was a school bell clanging as it caught the breeze. Quite eerie actually.
Dave"s Dad here, Dave what you call eerie, was the norm, in the 30s and 1940 yrs., less cars, sounds were so pure, Hey! I like it
DAD--Trying to figure where I said it was eerie. It is though when you're walking around a usually busy bustling school yard and it feels like a scene from one of those sci fi movies where all the people are gone.
In your comment to Lee
DAD--Ohhhhhhh. I forgot about that. I searched "eerie" on my blog site and it didn't find anything. But it must not search the comments.
things are rather tense here as well. Steve has just put me in official quarantine. At least I got the endoscopy. Went to Costco a couple of weeks ago-we were able to get 1 pack of TP. We really were in need! No water to be found. Thank goodness we only buy the "healthy" bread. No one wants it so we were able to get that. But no eggs!
CARINE--I thought Arizona was doing better. Michigan has the third highest cases of infection here among all states in the U.S. It's hard to sit home all day, every day, but you do what you have to do. It is interesting to see what stores are running short of. I took one of the last two boxes of Glad quart-sized freezer bags today.
Stay well!
Post a Comment
<< Home