The making was not too difficult. There are plenty of instructions on YouTube, and being the hoarder that I am, I just happened to have quilting cotton, the lining filter material, and a softer cotton for comfort on the skin side. And some elastic. (Should the virus require us to make anything out of old buttons, different length zips, beads, bits of coloured glass, scraps of ribbon and wool or anything else of that genre, I will be ready too....I really MUST do a clean out sometime soon.)
The wearing of them is where the real skill lies. President Ramaphosa shared the first challenge with the nation (and the world) when he struggled to put his mask on during a live TV screening.
He was gently teased, and, showing off true leadership skills, managed to get the country laughing together with him. The top down approach works best for me. I put the elastic around my ears, and place the mask over my eyes, and wiggle it down to cover my nose and mouth. I quite enjoy wearing my mask. It makes communicating with ones eyes all the more important, or not communicating at all quite acceptable. It is also a bit like playing the broken telephone game, where words get distorted through the layers, and you have to guess what is being said, or you can pretend to hear whatever you want to hear. It also, I find, helps me concentrate on mindful breathing. The in and out are more audible to the self, and I can feel the air going in and out, in and out, slow-it-down- in and lonnng out.
It is not all a bed of roses though. Sometimes we need to be heard properly, say, for example when I was collecting TDs meds from the pharmacy. ( I have taken to writing it all down, and shoving the piece of paper on the counter.) Or sometimes we need to sneeze, and then there is a mask-full of trouble. The nose drip is a challenge too, as is the unscratchable itch. I am sure as we get more used to wearing these masks we will conquer these challenges.
The challenges I am struggling with at the moment that can't be adjusted with elastic or practise, are things like the schooling situation. There have been so many iterations of when the schools will be opened, that nobody knows what is happening. It is time, maybe, to separate schooling from education. I am doubting TD will be able to go back to the classroom any time soon.... Diabetes T1 is high risk, as elevated Hblc levels (long term glucose control) seem to play a part in hindering recovery from COVID 19. Anything above 6.5 is considered risky. TD's latest level is considerably higher. But that doesn't mean her education must be compromised. I think I read somewhere that education is all the bits of the school curricula that you remember 10 years later - the important stuff. We will have to concentrate on that. The fact that she is missing the fun aspects of school is very sad indeed, but we choose life. Giving up concerts and dances and outings is a small price to pay.
Our first masked walk! |
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