The wife and I are ending the second week of our own stints of working 
remotely. In her case, the office was asked to stay home on Monday the 9th 
to test the company's remote capabilities. By Wednesday, they were under 
orders to not come in at all. In my case, the campus closed down on Tuesday 
the 10th and we've been teaching via Zoom ever since. There were rumors we 
were going to truncate the semester, but at last report, we'll finish it 
out, just not in person. (I spent the first week going to campus and 
sitting in an empty classroom, but they've pretty much locked everything 
down by this time. I can't even get into my office.)

Fortunately, almost all of my lectures were done, and it's been mostly 
student presentations ever since.

My birthday was Wednesday the 18th and we had dinner plans which were 
scrubbed, but on Monday, we were able to find the one restaurant in the 
Embarcadero that was still serving (until 7:00) in advance of the shelter 
in place order. We did go out yesterday clandestinely and got pastrami 
sandwiches and pie from two different restaurants that were (like every 
place) doing takeout only. I've been to our usual grocery stores this 
week--just to get out--and supplies have ranged from "picked clean" to 
"business as usual." (I expect the latter will prevail now that the first 
wave of panic buying has subsided.) The only good thing has been that 
traffic has been nonexistent. (Roy Wood Jr. tweeted that everything right 
now is like Dec. 26-31. I think it's more like a permanent early Sunday 
morning.)

Assuming we don't get a lockdown order (which is probably inevitably 
coming), it hasn't been too awful. I'm certainly not going to run out of 
DVRed stuff to watch or books to read, and I fortunately have a downstairs 
to escape to. My biggest regret so far is that my show closed down after 
opening night. To be honest, I wasn't crazy about doing it, but it just 
feels like unfinished business.

Hope everyone else has as easy a time of it as we have so far (famous last 
words ...)

--Dave Sikula

On Thursday, March 19, 2020 at 6:53:43 PM UTC-7, PGage wrote:
>
> I have been designated “essential personnel”, living and working in 
> counties which are (or will be at 1 min after midnight tonight) ordered to 
> shelter in place. I am also in (or adjacent to, depending on the criteria) 
> the vulnerable population for COVID-19. Its been stressful and surreal, and 
> protocols and work flow change day by day, sometimes hour by hour. For now 
> I go to work (25 or 40 miles each way, depending on the day of the week), 
> go straight to my office, close the door and have no contact with any other 
> human for 8-12 hours (again depending on the day). Staff meetings, in the 
> same building occur online. All my patients are seen either in online video 
> or telephone sessions. Up side: traffic on the commute is much improved, 
> and I can look at Twitter during meetings. Down side: absence of non-verbal 
> cues and human contact with patients, and constant background anxiety over 
> how much exposure we are getting to the virus, and how much we might be 
> endangering our families. 
>
> Oh, and as I write this I see Gov Gav has issued a stay at home order for 
> the entire state.
>
> Yes, I wash my hands many (many) times a day, and yes I am gelling my 
> hands even more often. There is some discussion of letting us work from 
> home, but that will require software and hardware compliant with security 
> and confidentiality requirements. 
>
> We are not freaking or panicking, but trying to find some kind of 
> sustainable floor that we can operate from for next couple of months or 
> more. Like everyone, dealing with the losses in our everyday life 
> (cancelled graduations, concerts, ball games, endangered weddings). I’m. It 
> complaining; I know as odd and stressful as things are for folk in my 
> situation, we are the fortunate ones, as so many others, often those who 
> can least afford it, are losing income or jobs completely.
>
> I am assuming things are similar throughout the country, though I did see 
> the Gov of Oklahoma encouraging his people to hang out at the county fair. 
> Whatever, we are all in this one together, for sure. Find things that give 
> you peace and pleasure, find people you can count on and share with. Let’s 
> try to be a little nicer to each other where it counts.
>
> Be careful out there.
> -- 
> Sent from Gmail Mobile
>

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