The Mother Lode: In the COVID-19 era, is it too soon to laugh?
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Is it OK to find humor in the COVID-19 pandemic?
“What the hell else can we do at this point but laugh?” my friend told me.
But what if you lost a loved one to COVID-19? And then there are long-term side effects, suffering from long-haul COVID, “multiorgan effects,” or PTSD, which can be caused by distance learning trust me. Not so funny. People in India are not laughing these days.
I’ve struggled with this for the past year when writing about COVID. I look back at articles I wrote in February and March 2020 and want to climb under the covers and eat Haagen-Dazs white chocolate raspberry truffle ice cream by the gallon while watching “Outlander” again.
The Mother Lode: In the COVID-19 era, is it too soon to laugh?
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The Mother Lode: In the COVID-19 era, is it too soon to laugh?
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Obituary: Virginia Lee Peters (4/28/21)
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TORONTO Summer camps across Canada are gearing up to welcome back campers this summer with modifications to prevent COVID-19 transmission, while preparing contingency measures in case provinces once again impose restrictions on camps. New Brunswick-based camp consultant Stéphane Richard, who serves as the president of the Canadians Camps Association, says camps are pulling out all the stops to make sure they can safely open this summer. Camps across the country… have started getting ready again for the operation of this upcoming summer as early as last fall, said Richard in a phone interview with CTVNews.ca. To ensure camps are a COVID-safe environment, camp operators have had to make numerous adjustments to their programming. Among the modifications being made include treating each cabin as a household bubble, where campers remain physically distanced from other cabin bubbles. Activities where mask-wearing and distancing isn t possible, such as swimming or meals,