Things the pandemic might destroy forever

A sushi restaurant near us closed and a new one opened about a month ago. I went there last week for take-out and it was packed, with diners and people picking up. I think there might be some upheaval for awhile, but when it settles down there will be plenty of eating options.

They might be gone for awhile, but they’ll be back. Either by vaccine or acceptance, COVID will at some point not be the big deal it is now, and people like touching each other. We are human. It’s how we are, and handshakes are so ingrained in some cultures they won’ die that easy.

I think handshakes were beginning to fade anyway. They seem like a relic of the past to me, kind of like ties. Handshakes will probably be a lot less popular with younger generations than they were pre-COVID and 20 years ago,

I agree with what others here are saying about handshakes. I think elbow bumps or fist bumps, while novel now, will become more widely accepted and may replace handshakes as the first level of greeting.

Everyone seems to have forgotten that we went through this exact thing a hundred years ago. And the world didn’t change forever. People still shook hands. And they eventually stopped wearing masks. And that was without a vaccine.

Again, I think handshakes were already beginning to fade though. People are better educated about disease transfer for one thing.

Things do change. COVID might just be a big thing that helps to partially kill off handshakes.

I plan to continue mask wearing both at work and in public for the foreseeable future.

I have a whole wardrobe of business wear that I haven’t mostly wore since March. I hope I can destroy it forever. I can tell you my clothing budget has disappeared.

But letting them stab you thousands and thousands of times? No problem!

I really miss sharing a pipe or joint with a friend. I agree that it probably won’t come back, sharing like that is really kinda squicky. The budestias at my dispensary have told me that pre-rolled sales are way high now.

I drove by a Golden Corral buffet a few days ago and saw that it was open. Looked it up online and its now cafeteria style. I really like a few of their offerings, but watching people and kids in the buffet line grossed me out so much that we haven’t been there for years. We might go back soon if it stays cafeteria style.

Movie theaters.

What with Netflix and other streaming services already hitting them hard a bunch have closed, at least for now.

I love going to the theater and even bought myself a yearly pass to Regal Cinemas. As long as I saw two movies a month it paid for itself. Any more after that were free. Since they closed I haven’t been able to go even though I have already paid for the months I haven’t been able to go. Thankfully Regal put the program on hold so I think I only lost two months worth of paying and they say when they open up again I’ll get credit to continue the program. But I fear that chain theaters may go away and there will just be a few art house types or those reclining chair and dinner service theaters will be the only ones to open back up.

There’s also the Demolition Man high five.

As of last week (when I was last at Costco), the free samples were already back. I think the attendant kept them in a plexiglass box and handed them to you rather than just having a tray and fewer sample stands but at least you could once again get a free sample of crumbled goat cheese or turkey sausage.

Some of the changes mentioned aren’t Covid-specific, but more of a general heightened sense of awareness.

I can’t be the only human who didn’t reeeeeally think through the “blowing out the candles” ritual until recently. Especially given how little fine motor control little kids have.

Now all I can picture is the “Mythbusters” segment where they back-lit Adam sneezing to show how far the spray traveled.

Thank God, civilization is returning!

I wouldn’t declare them dead just yet: https://www.cdc.gov/media/releases/2020/s1030-safe-responsible-ship-passenger-operations.html

It’s a huge industry and I can’t see it disappearing. Maybe that’s wishful thinking on my part since I love to cruise, but efforts are ongoing to gets the ships back to sea.

A couple we are friends with were cruising nearly continuously pre-COVID. They’d return from a cruise, do laundry, take care of the mail, relax for a couple weeks, then leave on their next cruise.

They expect to go back to cruising soon.

Remind me, please. Was the Black Death BEFORE or AFTER the germ theory of disease transmission was widely accepted?

BEFORE
Black death (bubonic plaque): 1347.
Pasteur published his germ theory which proved that bacteria caused diseases in 1861.

Heh…

Amongst the few friends I have chosen to keep distanced company with, the first two sentences ring true. One friend is only an occasional smoker, and will ask for the end 1/3, I tell him every time “it’s all yours now.”

Before the Shanghai Shivers, I’d keep that practice with acquaintances, though I do miss the social, communal aspect of passing one around the closest of friends.