Isolation: How Do We Handle it?
As boundaries are being mandated in order to prevent the spread of COVID-19, these boundaries are affecting every area of our lives. Many hospitals, assisted living facilities, places of worship, libraries, restaurants, community centers are being closed to visitors and public gatherings. For many of us, these keep us from our typical ways of connecting with others and engaging with a supportive community.
What are you doing to keep yourself connected?
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Post-COVID Recovery & COVID-19 Support Group.
Yes I don't eat very much. I do have Lorna dune cookies every day. I shore some with my litt dog Abbi. She is my protester They go good with my coffee in the morning. Nancy/Shortshot. I finished my book that I started to write over a year ago. I'm proud of my self. It started to be a fishing book, a woman with her husband in a commercial fishing boat. My husband died after 67 years and my friend told me I needed closure for him, so maybe I better have a beginning for hime. Then I added about [ages pf memories when I was a little girl. So now I have a autobiography. It is being printed at AmazonIt is called "shortshot" It is on sale there for $13.99/.
Hi I think you are in the city South of me. It's the only place I know that is tat big. More power to you I don't work anymore i am 87/ amd O [ probably won't get any Stimulus money. Nancy/Shortshot
Hi I think that this site is for everyone andtheir problems. I have two kinds of Lung cancer I don't go out side without a mask. I this this site is for everyone to write their one problems on. I don't even want to tald about Covid 19.
thank YOU i AM TOO. nANCY
Hmmm...I'm an hour south of Tillamook (a little over 5,000) and 40 minutes north of Newport (10,000). As you know, the actual RESIDENT population of coastal towns is very hard to nail down due to all the absentee owners of second homes, let alone the VRD owners. Our community north of town (most of it recently annexed) is 24% VRDs, a far cry from what it was when I bought here in 1962 and there were still some of the pea fields that provided peas for the metro-area produce markets. Back in those days, those of us who owned second homes bought cabins, intending to improve them and live there some day, not as an "investment." That's one of the reasons why there's so little affordable housing in our town for all the minimum-wage workers who make it possible for the hordes of visitors to enjoy themselves. Really sad, but at least people here are generous. Where else would your doctor, out for her daily 2.5 mile walk, stop for a half hour to help you shovel topsoil from where it had been dumped along the edge of the road? The closest thing we have to a dept. store (Goodwill) is closed, so it feels a bit more away from things than usual. Because my business is doing marketing and design for sport fishing companies all over the West Coast, I've always done most of my work remotely. In addition, my husband really doesn't like to have many people come to our house, so things don't seem very different for us these days, except that my boat is sitting in the yard because every boat ramp is closed. I still have a couple of acres of old-growth spruce trees that we own behind us, so I have plenty of places to go outside...and plenty of work to do to keep me more than busy.
I hear you. Others can learn from you in this difficult time. You have been practicing prevention.
Praying that your cancer can be cured.
I will pray for that. Let us know how you are doing.
i AM NOT FAR FROM YOU. i AM 30 MINUTES NORTH OF YOU. i KNOW WHERE THE GOOD WILL STORE IS ALSO. iT IS. I os pm tje Spitj end of town.....I moved here in 1986 and I helped my husband commercial fish. I was one of five women to do this in 1971. Nancy
Shortshot80, sounds as though you live near Pleasant Valley. I'm in Roads End, on the south side of Logan Creek. This morning I saw the first two of my dahlias poking their noses through, so it won't be too long before I have lots of them blooming alongside the road, which is the only part of our place that isn't too shaded for flowers. I'm known for having a big bed of dahlias that bloom all summer and fall, with that funny little beach shack up the hill next to the big spruce trees. In spite of having spent quite a bit on it over the years with various additions and remodeling, the place is still, basically, a beach shack, one of the few older places still standing in our area. The new places are all two-story VRDs or trophy homes. We live in the slums with an elk herd and lots of deer, but no other houses nearby. Yes, not many women commercial fished that long ago...not even today!
What does VRD stand for? Not familiar with those initials?
No I live in Pacific City...... More later Nancy