By: Revanche

Living in the time of pandemic: COVID-19 (139)

January 30, 2023

Year 3 of COVID in the Bay Area.

Year 3, Day 307: Woof. Stayed out way too late last night. Happy Year of the Bunny or Cat depending on which zodiac you use!

I’m going with Bunny-Cat. Which makes me think of Bunnicula.

I’m on Week 1 of the new medications. Telling myself to be patient during these first three weeks isn’t actually making me be patient.

It’s annoying that while I was the frog slowly boiling in depression, I was entirely focused on surviving day to day. Now that I KNOW that it’s likely been what’s driving at least some of my inability to focus or be patient, now that I am actually on meds, I’m hyperaware of each symptom that’s been blocking my focus. Irritability! Anxiety! Snapping at JB for being late! Anger at myself for being late! Anger about my fatigue! Every! Unreasonable! Thing!

Please let my lowest effective dose be really low so that I can get to it sooner than later. I don’t know that my frayed temper can take four or five weeks of this.

Year 3, Day 308: I actually slept deeply last night but still struggled to get up. I can’t say I felt rested, generally I never do, but I felt less unrested if that makes sense. I’ll take it and hope for more.

The tendons in my fingers aren’t working right today. That’s awkward! I rather need my fingers to flex as needed. That’s sort of crucial to all the typing and dog walking, eating, and driving that has to happen today.

Letter writing was a lot harder too, with fingers that didn’t want to grip or glide a pen across paper.

Year 3, Day 309: My mentor reminded me that we have enough money that we can use some of it to buy our peace of mind. I’ve had to sit with that reminder a bit to see what form of help we can buy that would be a net benefit.

Some things, like hiring cleaners, are more stressful than they are helpful because PiC is extremely particular about taking care of our things and the last set of cleaners didn’t use ladders or stepstools, they climbed right on our furniture and floating vanities to clean above them. That worried me, I didn’t want them slipping and falling off or the floating vanity to crack off the wall. At installation we were told the beams attaching it to the could hold a certain amount of weight but the vanity weight plus a person might be too much.

I’ll start with ordering food delivery. It’s not the best bang for our buck but on Friday, we won’t have to figure out what to do for dinner and that’s a small cache of brain we can reclaim. PiC and I both think about dinner, that’s probably not efficient, but we’re sharing the pain and that’s something.

Bigger picture, we may have to take that full time daycare hit sooner than planned. Last year, I thought maybe we’d start around the summer. Now, I’m thinking… maybe much sooner. These part time weeks are wearing on me this year.

Year 3, Day 310: Every time I hear a pharma ad run through the side effects and say something about not taking this while breastfeeding, I feel this whooosh of relief that I’m not going to ever breastfeed again.

The prices at our new local Mediterranean restaurant have gone up 20%. Yeeps! I ordered anyway. We’ll have some for dinner tonight and I’ll freeze some for next week.

Tuesdays and Thursdays are hectic. I’m cramming a whole day of work into a few hours before self defense. We try to arrive half an hour early so we can get parking and to give JB another 15-25 minutes of cardio. The kids play serious games of tag and gymnastics before class starts. Makes me feel like we’re getting extra bang for our buck. We already save 30% by prepaying for the year but when would I ever turn down a little extra bonus?

I hit the Gap and Old Navy clearance sales for our Lakota families. If everything ships, I’ll have acquired 44 tops, 10 pairs of pants, 10 pairs of sneakers and toddler boots, and 64 pairs of socks split between the Allen Youth Center and the Red Shirt School for $370.

Year 3, Day 311: Maybe the meds are helping even at sub-therapeutic levels. Maybe it’s a placebo effect. Whatever it is, even with my cold getting much worse today, and terrible sleep interrupted with nightmares, heartburn, and other indefensible reasons last night, my level of end of week despair was not nearly as high as any other Friday of the past few months. PiC did cover a lot of the work day with Smol and that helped too but I took my turns both morning and afternoon despite feeling like garbage with this cough and chills.

Today’s dinner: small pies and fancy salads!

Pies: Chicken Tikka Masala, Cajun Chicken, Beef and Stout, Apple Saffron

Salads that I wouldn’t have time to make: Seared Lemon Pepper Tuna , Tabouli Quinoa Salad with Mediterranean Chicken, Duck Breast.

Very expensive for the quantities we’re getting but I couldn’t make this without doubling the cost in time and ingredients. Triple that of frustration. Also it’s sampler style so we can taste four different pies in one go. One pie can barely happen around here, forget more than that!

8 Responses to “Living in the time of pandemic: COVID-19 (139)”

  1. anandar says:

    This reader strongly supports full time daycare asap! The pandemic made fulltime work while caretaking seem theoretically feasible, in fact it is kind of superhuman. You don’t need to do that to yourself! Good childcare is a worthwhile expense.

  2. SP says:

    Money can totally buy peace of mind. I totally agree that full time childcare is probably the biggest bang for your buck, but also… the most bucks! Cleaners climbing on counters would make me nervous, much less climbing on floating vanities!

    I’m glad the medication is helping, and that you can now see the depression fog for what it is, and see the other side of it.

    • Revanche says:

      So. Many. Bucks!! Sigh. But I have to try to be grateful that we can make it work.

      Ok, thanks for the back up, I wasn’t sure if I was being unreasonable about their climbing on the counters.

      Turns out, with the meds, things are getting worse before they get better. Much sighing.

  3. Bethany D says:

    I’m glad you have a reason to hope! I’ll be praying that even this smidge of medication will start ‘taking the edge off’ for you soon.

    100% support for your decision to buy a little sanity & rest. Your body and soul have been put through a meat grinder these last 3 years, and you have MORE than earned a respite. <3

    • Revanche says:

      Thank you! I continue to hope.

      I didn’t realize how much I’d recalibrated my mental expectations to an impossible baseline: juggle two full time commitments at the same time, all the time.

  4. +1 on full time daycare and buying already made food

    Good luck with everything!
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