The Great Surrender: How We Gave Up And Let COVID Win by Chuck Wendig.
It's good to see someone lay this out, so I don't feel quite as alone with my bewilderment. I started requiring boosters in my practice, and steering new clients toward mid-February rather than seeing them now. I'm not shutting down my practice (yet), but between cancellations for not being boosted and cancellations for having symptoms, it got pretty quiet already.
There's also You're not doomed to get Omicron by Erin Kissane, who is writing a "Calm Covid" newsletter. She says, "This surge is probably a sprint, not the kind of marathon that's worn us all to shreds." I hope so, because I definitely feel those shreds flapping when I look at the astonishing Multnomah County case curve, which goes straight up, completely dwarfing other surges by a factor of four.
I feel like I’m seeing and hearing how bad the pandemic is presently, how the systems are straining, how teachers and healthcare workers are quitting in droves and are pushed to their limits, how friends and family are seeing workplaces and schools hamstrung by all this shit, and then, at the same time… I’m seeing nobody do anything about it. Like, not a fucking thing. In fact, less is being done.
We’ve given up.
We’ve surrendered.
This is the Great Surrender.
It's good to see someone lay this out, so I don't feel quite as alone with my bewilderment. I started requiring boosters in my practice, and steering new clients toward mid-February rather than seeing them now. I'm not shutting down my practice (yet), but between cancellations for not being boosted and cancellations for having symptoms, it got pretty quiet already.
There's also You're not doomed to get Omicron by Erin Kissane, who is writing a "Calm Covid" newsletter. She says, "This surge is probably a sprint, not the kind of marathon that's worn us all to shreds." I hope so, because I definitely feel those shreds flapping when I look at the astonishing Multnomah County case curve, which goes straight up, completely dwarfing other surges by a factor of four.