Christmas Eve 2019 was such fun! I’d traveled across center city Philadelphia and attended an aqua aerobics class @ the Logan Hotel on the Parkway. I met my friend Liz there and we traveled back through town together. I don’t ’t recall whether we ate lunch together as we often did on Tuesdays and Thursdays after class; probably not, as it was Christmas Eve & lots to accomplish. We parted @ city Hall and she took a subway south to get to her home. I walked back to check out a cloak for my daughter and purchase leggings from a Christmas Village vendor outside of city Hall. A young black woman tapped me in my shoulder & I turned to see her. We laughed: we were wearing the same furry coat. “You’re my sister from another mother,” I said. We laughed and parted. I rounded city hall and cut through the former John Wanamaker store & took this photo. The store was a fixture in Philadelphia. John Wanamaker started the department store. He was a devout Christian-I have a hymnal he wrote and a mug from its last days as Wanamakers. He installed a large organ and sometimes there are concerts. In the center of the first floor is a giant sculpture of a bronze eagle. “meet me @ the eagle” were directions for meeting up in the days before cellphones, days when you needed a fix point and some estimate of a timeto meet. The mayor, Ed Rendell had signed my shopping bag “ a day that will live in infamy” with the date as I was one of the last to exit it as Wanamakers. He had a special affection for Wanamakers -he and wife Midge got their first credit cards there when they were students @ Penn in the 60’s. It closed & became a Lord and Taylor, then a Macy’s. It was the store my mother would take us to on an annual visit to the city sometime close to Christmas. We’d make a pilgrimage into town from Bucks County, driving to Olney and riding on the subway, a real novelty for my brother and I. We’d see the store windows of Snellenbergs, Lits, Strawbridges and Gimbels department stores. We’d stuff nickels into the automat and retrieve a slice of lemon meringue pie from a little window of available pies. We’d meet my dad @ the eagle when he left work in town & visit the toy department and Santa @ Wanamakers, riding a little train around the ceiling of the 8 th floor before riding the subway and then driving home. This was an annual ritual. How is this different? The stores we visited are gone, Macy continues to operate Wanamakers building but there is no way that I was assembling indoors or meeting anyone. The Aqua classes resumed but were shut down. I never attempted to return. I knew @ some basic level that I would be crushed to resume and lose my freedom a gain. I’ve quarantined since 3/21/29 Would the black woman feel free to tap me on my shoulder this year after all the racial strife? I’m a 75 yo white-haired White woman The streets are full of unrest. When Congress finally hammered out a deal to provide some support for people Trump nixed it and played golf several times over the Christmas holiday. Christmas Eve was a joyous time to be out and about in the city, meeting and interacting with strangers, in and out of crowds and stores, casualty using public transportation. Most shopping was done online with packages delivered to your home. I don’t know if Macy’s will survive. Lord and Taylor is closing by year’s. end. Their store is on city avenue/@ the western suburban edge of the city. I’ve been in for 9 months. I’m trying to use the internet to shop. I sent my Philadelphia daughter’s gift to CA accidentally, Good Luck Macy’s -and me
December 28, 2020
It feels like people think the coronavirus pandemic is over. People are taking off their masks more or being less strict, people are socializing, people went out for St. Patty's day and acted like things were normal. It is so strange to see while at the same time we continue to consider that any patient with a cough and general malaise might have coronavirus. I know that more and more people have at least 1 vaccine, but it is still less than 15% of the population in our state. I think people are really ready to move forward. This week I was in a store and they had homemade masks for sale for $1. They were discounted from $10, which has been the going rate I have seen for a while. I bought two because the cloth masks I have are all getting a bit worn and it is nice to have one around in the car. The woman I bought it from said "hopefully these are the last masks you will ever buy!" I told her I thought they would come in handy in the future. I know that the masks are part performance because many of them are badly fitted or clearly inadequate (synthetic neck gaiters, I am looking at you). But they also may be protective or at least lessen our risk of transmission. I feel like I will continue to wear masks when I am in contact with patients with URIs, and probably throughout flu season in the future. I had the flu once in 2010, I believe that it was the H1N1 variant because that was circulating at the university I was attending, and my room mate and many friends at the time had similar symptoms. I was so sick for 5 days, I missed a week of school and felt terrible. I have also caught multiple colds from interacting with patients when I go to work in clinic. I don't need to go through that every year! When I traveled in Asia in 2009 I bought a cloth face mask because it had a cute print on it. I didn't ever use it and I don't know what I did with it, but in 2020 I regretted that lost track of it. I saw many people in Korea and China wearing masks when they were out in public, especially when I was there in the winter. It seems like it is a respectful way to protect those around you or protect yourself. At times in China I wore N95 masks when I was out because the air quality was terrible and I would cough and sneeze as soon as I left the house. I think that masks will come in handy many times in the future. The way we interact with the world brings these infectious diseases into contact with more and more people all the time. Additionally, climate change and pollution make it likely that we will benefit from wearing these in the future when the air quality is bad.
March 21, 2021