Today, for the second time in just over a year I'm traveling from a country--Spain-- where I've watched people do what they're asked: wear a mask, distance, and this time, get the vaccine, to flatten the curve. When I arrived in Spain in early July they were in their fifth wave, as they call it, cases rising and hospitals filling. Only 30% of the people were vaccinated because they had just started. Now, the last day of September, almost 80% of the population is fully vaxxed. The cases have plummeted. Some regions are fully opening up, although still requiring masks. On the train to Madrid yesterday, everyone wore a mask. No complaints. This picture basically says, "for you and for me" always wear a mask. To me it represents such a cultural difference from the US, where I'm from. It simply says "we're in this together" and people understand that. They might complain about restrictions, but the follow them because they understand that society is a collective endeavor. Today, I'm heading back to the US and dreading it. Back to the country where people think individual freedom includes the right to infect others. Where people are still pouring into emergency rooms with covid and asking for the vaccine. Where people still think covid doesn't exist.
October 6, 2021
I have both good news and bad news. It all depends on how you view the happenings of the past week. A young man (teenage high school student) who was hired to work with us as a waiter quit. He claims that he had to go get tested for COVID 19 because he had been exposed. The good news? The rest of us get more work hours. I can use more work hours. I need the money for bills. The bad news? The rest of us get more work hours. We all get less time to do whatever we do when we are not working at the restaurant. We also get left wondering if he exposed us.
February 7, 2021