Saturday, April 11, 2020

Chinese Virus Lessons Learned

So as we enter Day 2,356,999 of this isolation (sorry, I lost count after 7 days...), here are my Kung Fu Virus lessons learned rambling for today:

1. Whiskey Tolerance is a real thing.  How much is too much each night?
2. Staring out my bedroom window daily, I see every dead and yellowing leave on every plant in my landscaping and must cut it off right away.
3. Never realized I could feel so much joy having to drive across town for a doctor appointment.
4. You really have to protect your mind from a dangerous and fast-spreading pandemic: FEAR pandemic.
5. Statistics - mostly incorrect and false - can truly shape the way people perceive things.
6. Fact finding takes back seat to stats and fear.
7. Vultures will always be vultures and pick at dry bones, even in crisis (See Democrats holding up stimulus bills, see representatives using inside info for market trading)
8.  LSU 2019 WAS the greatest team ever in college football - re-watched CFP.
9. Blocking negative people on social media brings an unrealized joy.
10.  Crisis has exposed how real TDS is,  and the loony tunes of NeverTrumpers.
11. Man, I miss watching sports.
12.  Landscaping daily is a thing.
13. Gathering with friends sure is important in my life.
14. Can you imagine life without internet, WiFi, or  social media???? Horrors!!!
15. Didn’t realize how many people don’t understand basic hygiene
16.  Sweeping, dusting, cleaning counters daily doesn’t kill enough time.
17. Epstein didn’t kill himself.
18. During this virus,  telling the world “28-3” jokes is still funny.
19. “Meme-ing 101: How to Meme while in isolation”  will soon be a university-approved course.
20.  “It’s 5 o’clock somewhere” took on whole new meaning when you don’t know time it is daily.
21.  Now that wearing bandito masks in public is ok, what will bank robbers wear?
22.  Getting a clandestine hair-cut was badass.
23. Faith vs. Fear is a REAL thing.
24. Fear is powerful weapon, one so strong it shut down the entire country.
25. God is good, so good, even during this difficult time.

Saturday, April 4, 2020

A New World Normal .. or abnormal?


Is today Saturday or Friday?  Wait, let me look at my calendar.
Yeah, a new normal. Days blending together, time structure pretty much out the window.
Sitting here at my bedroom table aka my new office on most days, on Day 19 of my at-first 14-day self quarantine/then shelter at home/ now isolation prison,  staring out at my backyard tropical landscaping... and the new normal is:  what else can I do, cut, prune, add to that landscaping jungle just to get outside!!???
My good friend, Doug, said out of the blue recently: you should blog about your isolation experience.
So,  here we go!
The past 19 days, really the last 30 days, have been to paraphrase pastor Craig Groeschel, emotionally disorienting.
As this viral pandemic quietly crept into the United States, I was across the world in paradise, in what other mortals call New Zealand, with my son, Kyle, enjoying the majesty of God’s creations.  My only concerns were about booking the next excursion and finding a functioning Wi-Fi hookup.  In our nine days in Kiwi land,  only a few masks, and very little if any talk about this Wuhan Virus.
Returning on March 15, I was not prepared for the level of hysteria, misinformation, fear and economic disruption I would encounter.
The first emotional blow: upon our return,  Kyle and I needed to self-quarantine (never thought in my lifetime I’d be saying that word so much as I have in the last 19 days!).  Self-what!?  Stay home, avoid all social interaction?  What? Don’t they know how much I thrive on being around people?  Putting together group plans to play golf, go drinking, go out to eat?
Ok, so we stay home. Cool.  Get to do more Yardwork. Cook at lot. Sleep later. Binge watch Netflix, HBO, etc, every night. Play some online Texas Holdem. Surf social media.  Drink some good bourbon (hope no one sees my purchase receipts on this ..don’t judge) Yeah, this won’t be so bad, right?
Well, all the fun n games slowly (or was it quickly?  Wait, what time is it again?) shifted to a blur of boredom, a daily mental gymnastics to not let the dulling routine, the fear, the panic, the negative, the unsettling uncertainty of what would news be tomorrow about this virus, overwhelm my mind.
Before this national shutdown, Social media was already a digital doorway to enter into other people’s worlds, peek into their minds, somewhat experience their feelings (even if the voyeurism was simply endless pictures of dogs, cats, babies)
But social media quickly (or was it slowly, dang I just can’t keep track...)  morphed into a universe of negative barking at positive,  pessimism battling optimism, faith wrestling with fear.
This glaring dicotomy brought up two of my deepest core beliefs, ones I have believed and tried to walk, ever since I accepted Jesus into my life. Two core beliefs that are inextricably intertwined:
Choices and Faith vs. Fear.
A revelation many years ago for me was what God said about faith, in two personally powerful scriptures:
Now faith is confidence in what we hope for and assurance about what we do not see. Hebrews 11:1
For God has not given us a spirit of fear, but of power and of love and of a sound mind. 2 Timothy 1:7
So,  I believe everyone in all things, not some: ALL, has a decision:  do I choose fear or do I choose faith?
Choices.  In ALL decisions, we must make choices.  And from that choice, you should be prepared to accept the consequences, both good and bad. (Yeah, accountability.. what a novel idea, huh?  And one lost in recent times.)
In this isolation prison, I never doubted my faith and fully believed (and voiced such too strongly, we’ll come back to this) this virus was a fear-monger’s wet dream.
After no-idea how many days, I had to severely limit my vocal attempts to discount misinformation and my strong feelings about the over-hyped hysteria and fear.  I gave up the daily statistical wars with friends, and online debates about validity of news sources.  Tough choice, but had to because so many are so filled with fear and other delicate emotions.
The daily mental and emotional pent-up frustrations and impatience weren’t healthy, so, basically, I chose to step off my social media soapbox, and try to only offer positive, faith-filled words.

And maybe this is the good part of his new normal (abnormal?)

We step away from emotional debates, and it’s ok to let people be right when they likely are wrong.
We just laugh at insanely long lines caused by social distancing at Lowe’s to get into garden section.
We thank everyday workers - store clerks, fast-food servers, janitors - more.
We appreciate and enjoy more our friendships.
We ask strangers more often, how are they doing.
We encourage everyone more, we love more.
We are more thankful in what we have and can do, then in what’s lost and can’t do.

Finally, we truly understand God is with you at all times, on the mountain and in the valley, in the isolation, in the fear...  He is with you at ALL times.

Cheers, love, and safety to you.