Well, the good thing about the New Age of Telecommuting is that we no longer have to risk our lives driving on snowy, icy roads to punch in at a clock at work at 9 a.m. The bad news is that you’re chained to your laptop at home.
It really isn’t that bad a trade-off, though.
My “office” is in the basement. I share it with the
wife’s “office” and the ever-busy laundry room. After eight hours at the
laptop, monitoring email crises and doing various projects with Excel and two
or three reporting software, my feet are cold and damp, my clothes smell musty,
and my ears ache from listening to my overly extroverted wife’s several “touch-bases”
and zoom calls with her sales teams. The girls self-manage their school day
from their rooms, and when they’re done watch TV, get their homework done, and
play together on their cell phones or just listen to music.
Is it ideal? No, especially for the little ones. They
need socialization desperately, and I fear for their lack of receiving it. I
really do. I can tell it’s not healthy for them. But again, thanks in part to
the boomers and panic porn purveyors and those who never let a crisis go to
waste, this is life in 2021.
For nearly 48 hours we were pounded with the worst
blizzard since 2016. My house seems to have got three feet of fairly heavy
sloppy snow. We shoveled Monday at 12:30, Monday at 6:30, and Tuesday at 4. I
went out onto the horizontal garage roof and shoveled four inches of heavy
sloppy icy snow both at 10 pm on Monday and 8 am on Tuesday. As a result, my
back aches in at least three spots (recall my back issues from earlier in the
week), my neck is stiff (how did I do that?) and my left forearm is throbbing
from shoveling right-handed. Thank God for the girls, helping their dad shovel
for the first time. Yeah, I had to shovel out $10 a piece for their aid, but
they assisted me without complaint.
Normally I go in to the office Mondays, Tuesdays, and
Thursdays. I am writing this at 5:30 am on Wednesday, having been up since 4
am. I am not going to go in today. For one, the roads are still a bit snow
covered, and I can see my car received yet another inch or so overnight. For
another, my body just physically needs to heal. I’m tired and exhausted.
About the only person who’s in heaven over all these
events is our dog, Charlie. This thing humans call snow is absolutely
fascinating to him. He races out on the shoveled deck and leaps into the
unshoveled backyard, plunging in and out of the snow like a porpoise trailing a
sea liner, up and down, all across the white expanse behind our house. Once the
wife lost sight of him behind shrubbery and started screaming for him, thinking
he was buried under snow and couldn’t get free. But we wave his favorite blue
towel by the door and he comes galloping in, tail wagging at supersonic speeds,
for a rub down.
Fortunately we gassed up the cars and did some major
grocery shopping – along with the entire state – on Sunday, so we’re well
stocked. I’m making headway through my various books and still work on my novel
outline in between email crises. Oh, and on a whim Sunday I picked up an Astronomy magazine at the grocery store,
probably still having Tabby’s Star echoing somewhere in the uncharted regions
of my cerebrum. Each night I read a couple of articles and find myself
fascinated.
The hopping continues … as does life in this weird
limbo existence we live …
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