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SINGAPORE - It has been one year since the circuit breaker started on April 7, 2020.
What a difference 12 months makes. We look at 12 ways the circuit breaker and the Covid-19 era have changed our lifestyle - from how we work and play to how we shop and dine.
1. Dressed for comfort
It started as a joke - being able to roll right out of bed and work in your pyjamas.
But as working remotely from home became the norm, dressing patterns shifted accordingly too.
Loungewear has taken root as the de facto uniform. Global retailers and local independent brands alike began launching comfort lines; even brands that once carved a niche in tight-fitting party gear switched to churning out cosy sweats for a world now couched at home.
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For centuries, humankind set calendars according to the changing of the seasons, each month marked by cyclical weather patterns that dictated an agrarian life. Today, however, freed from the necessity to grow our own food, humanity has devised a new method of tracking time: the Divine Cosmic Order of Monthly Challenges. From Dry January to No-Shave November, the modern calendar is conveniently divided into 12 periods of 30(ish) days meant for self-reflection and improvement. These monthly challenges offer folks an opportunity – as well as a community and support system – to approach lifestyle choices that they may have been pondering for a while but otherwise lacked the confidence or resolve to tackle in earnest.
CLARKSVILLE, Tenn. – The Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office raised $13,850 for St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital and four local charities with their No-Shave November and December contest.
Deputies were able to participate by making a $40 donation to St. Jude in November, and a $40 donation to a local charity in December. MCSO presents FUEL with a check MCSO presents Safe House with check MCSO presents SAFE with check MCSO presents Manna Cafe with a check
In November, deputies raised $9,420 for St. Jude. In December, deputies raised $1,180 each for Soldier and Families Embraced (S.A.F.E) and FuelKids; $1,060 for Urban Ministries Safe House; and $1,010 for Manna Café Ministries.