mellicious: Photo of a road framed by spring-green trees (spring trees)
I don't remember signing up for e-mails about Dior makeup (although knowing me, I probably did), but they are sending me e-mails in French and I am highly entertained by that. I did take French classes for several years - from the second half of 7th grade through 11th grade, so, what's that, 4-1/2 years? I was never a good French speaker because we didn't spend enough time on that part, but I was good at it on paper, many years ago. I haven't made any effort to keep up with it over the years so it's sort of fun to try to figure out what the e-mails are saying. Between the pictures and the bits and pieces I remember, I can mostly figure it out.

More or less unrelated to that, I've been doing Spanish language lessons on Babbel for a couple of months now. My sister, who is married to a native Spanish speaker (he grew up mostly in Mexico City) says she can't get the hang of Spanish because it's too much like French, and it confuses her. I don't know if she remembers her French more than I do or what, but that doesn't seem to bother me that much. (Really I regret now not choosing to take Spanish back in 7th grade. I think I thought French was more glamorous, or something.) Anyway, I am trying to go slow and really get it into my head rather than do it all more quickly. I think it's working but it feels very slow. I'm trying to teach some of it to Rob as I go, too.

I stayed at home almost all week out of an abundance of caution because I had a sore throat. I was supposed to go back to the screening job that I talked about last week, but meanwhile they had some sort of kerfluffle about full-time people vs. part-time people, anyway, and the upshot is that I'm probably not going to do screening any more, at least for now, and I'm going to go back to my normal workplace and help my boss work on some projects, three days a week. We're trying to do some database maintenance and stuff like that while we're shut down. It's a big place and there's only a few of us in there, so maintaining a six-foot distance is really not an issue. At this point, getting out of the house some seems like a nice idea!


mellicious: Photo of a road framed by spring-green trees (spring trees)
I spent the day today working at a hospital I'd never even been to before - but it is part of the same hospital system Rob & I both work for, and it's the closest one to where we live, so that part is nice. I was supposed to be screening people for Covid symptoms, but actually I didn't do all that much, because there were a lot of people at the desk, and everybody kept chiming in before I got anything out. ("Have you had cough-fever-bodyaches-difficulty breathing?") But I'm presumably going back next week so at least I know the drill of working there somewhat now. Rob spent the day at a different place doing the same thing. The facility where we normally work is closed, being "nonessential" and potentially hazardous as far as being a disease vector, to boot, but all of the employees at the hospital system are considered essential and we just get reassigned to do different things, as long as we don't get sick. (My understanding is that if we actually get sick, we will get paid even if we don't get sick leave, which I don't since I'm part-time. I haven't heard that officially though.)

My boss would have liked to have kept me for spreadsheet-making purposes, actually - that's a really useful job skill in a lot of places! I told her if I have any hours left - which is probably unlikely, really - I'll come in and work one day next week. We have to keep track of how much money we are losing by being closed, for one thing - I think they need it for FEMA. I believe we went through that after Hurricane Ike, too, as I recall. Probably Harvey, too, although somebody else must've done the spreadsheets for that one. (We were stuck at home with flooded creeks between us and work for a solid week, some of you guys may recall.)

I do have a scratchy throat but that's just my usual allergy crap. Every time I have the tiniest symptom I over-analyze it, I imagine everybody is doing that. But anyway, we're hanging in there so far. Running low on toilet paper, but hopefully we'll find some before it actually runs out and we have to resort to Kleenex, heaven forbid! (I do have a lot of tissues of various brands due to said allergies, so I guess that's a pretty good backup in a pinch.)

Profile

mellicious: Quote from Buffy the Vampire Slayer's 1st episode: "The earth is doomed." (Default)
mellicious

December 2024

S M T W T F S
1 2 345 6 7
8 9 1011 1213 14
151617181920 21
2223 2425 262728
2930 31    

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jun. 15th, 2025 05:55 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios