Is it
possible to have Long Covid when you haven’t actually had Covid?
I’m
sick of feeling run down, tired and mentally exhausted. There must be some
reason. Maybe it’s the ongoing affects of working through all the lockdowns in
an industry that constantly had problems with supplies, and constantly had
problems with workforce, and constantly had to deal with complaints, but
constantly had to stay open as usual. Maybe it’s the affects of working an
incredibly busy stint of time in a brand new industry, where I’m learning as I
go and therefore not relaxing at all. Maybe it’s the ongoing effects of having
an energetic two-year-old charging round the house[GP1] . Maybe it’s the accumulating
depression caused by repetitive non-Summer days in August. Maybe it’s a
combination of all that.
The
good thing is I’m not moaning about it, or going on and on about it in my blog….
I’m
going to have an early night tonight and hope to wake up in a September that
will be much, much better (both physically and meteorologically).
RC 31-8-21
Tuesday, 31 August 2021
Self-pity and self diagnosis
Monday, 30 August 2021
The joys of non-related grandparents
We
had our day with Ted and Beryl yesterday and I think I’m still digesting the
food now. Beryl was very Beryl, as Beryl as she has ever been, and served up
enough grub to feed a legion of battle-weary Vikings. There wasn’t, as I had
expected, an onslaught of pre-Christmas samples and selections, it was more of
an indoor barbecue featuring weird and wonderful ways of marinating meat that
she has discovered since becoming internet-savvy at a late age. I did eat
rather a lot of dessert, especially. So much so that I had a weird dizzy spell
at about 4pm that I am firmly blaming on the sugar intake. It was like a
one-off, warning shot diabetes episode. Crumble, as far as I am aware (having
never made it myself) is mostly made of butter and sugar. Beryl had made a rather
large one, filled with her home-made strawberry jam. So we had a crumble that
is mostly sugar, filled with a filling that is mostly sugar, and then topped
with some very sugary home-made custard. No wonder my vision went fuzzy and my
head was spinning.
I’m
trying to give myself a few days respite now by eating nothing but toast and
salad until my blood sugar levels get somewhere close to where they should be.
Mathew
had a bit of a kip late in the afternoon. He had worn himself out completely
charging around the garden and then doing gymnastics in the living room. For
some reason, since catching me watching the Olympics, he is convinced he can do
everything the British gymnastics team can do, and takes great delight in
tumbling and throwing himself around whichever room he is in, in front of
whatever audience he may have. Beryl loved every second of it and awarded him a
gold medal, by which she meant a very large bar of chocolate that happened to
have a yellow wrapper.
While
he slept off his exhaustion, we had a few games of cards, and a game of
Scrabble in which Ted got increasingly frustrated by Beryl’s habit of putting
her tiles in the exact spot Ted had been playing to play his on his next turn.
It
was all lovely, but I did have a strange, depressing moment of realisation at
about 6.45pm. I went to use the loo. I looked out of the window and saw the
trees being blown about below dark grey skies and I thought “I’m glad I’m indoors
with a jumper on”. The whole thing had the feel of a pleasant January Sunday,
and then the realisation hit me that we’re STILL IN AUGUST! That hit me between
the eyes like a painful reminder of the horrors of Summer 2021. And it was very
depressing to watch it get dark by the time we had driven home.
Sorry
to go on about the same old topic again, but it’s not just me. I had a little
walk today and I met three different people while I was out and they all
mentioned the same thing and commented on how it’s affecting them. “I guess we
can say goodbye to Summer”, “We haven’t even had a barbecue this year” and “It’s
all a bit depressing really, isn’t it?” are just a selection of quotes from our
encounters.
Anyway – onward and upward.
Time for me to grill some pork chops and lay them atop some spicey couscous,
before adorning them with a large side-salad, drizzled with lemon olive oil.
RC 30-8-21
Saturday, 28 August 2021
Another dull day
I don’t
want to go on about the weather again, but I must acknowledge that it affects
me, and today felt like an early Winter Saturday. I thought “Sod it! I’ll show
this bastard climate and defy it by having a barbecue anyway!” but it was too
windy in our garden to get the coals going!
Stupid
country.
My
only hope is that we have a September and October that are both in the 20s
Celsius and full of blazing sunshine.
We’re
seeing Ted and Beryl tomorrow. Knowing her, she’s already planning for
Christmas, so there’ll be loads of cakes and pastries and biscuits as she
starts practising early to get them right before December. Mathew is excited
about going. He loves the non-stop attention and spoiling he gets from Beryl,
and he seems to be utterly captivated by Ted. It’s strange, because Ted isn’t
exactly the most child-friendly of octogenarians, and yet Mathew can’t get
enough of him.
Working
Saturday’s is ok, but I do miss those garage times when I got to be at home on
both days at the weekend, and often the Monday too.
What
am I saying?
Talk about engineering
things to moan about in your current situation by lying to yourself about the past
– even when I had days off from the garages, I was having to check on staff and
deal with Management e-mails, so I may have been ‘at home’ but it wasn’t exactly
relaxing. Yes, I think I’ll stay where I am now, thanks.
RC 28-8-21
Friday, 27 August 2021
Non-Summer Summer Fri-ku
Constant
dull grey skies
My
mood sinks lower than mud
And I
pray for Sun
When
was it last hot?
When
did we last see blue sky?
When
did I last smile?
Holidaymakers
Trying
to enjoy Suffolk
When
it’s damp and cold
Let’s
change the subject
The
Paralympics are on
So
why should I moan?
Wheelchair
basketball
Is
one of my Top 10 Sports
And
it’s on today!
RC 27-8-21
Thursday, 26 August 2021
Don't know what to call this one
A
great quote from someone I met during my walkabout today:
“If we book to come back the same week next year, can you guarantee we’ll have
Summer weather?”
He
was perfectly serious too – as if my powers as part of the management team
extend to controlling the climate around the Centre. I told him we tend to get
brighter, warmer days in July and maybe he should think about coming then
instead.
I
wonder what kind of upbringing some British children are getting when their
parents display intelligence like that. None of my business, I guess. I just
have to concentrate on raising my own offspring in a way that gives them a
chance of a decent life.
Blimey
– went off on a bit of a weird tangent there.
Someone
in the office pointed out that it’s only two weeks until all the children in
England go back to school. That blew my mind, as the kids say, and knocked me
sideways, as my generation would prefer. I keep worrying about how well I’ll
cope with my first Summer Holidays in this job, and I’m already two-thirds of
the way through them! And I seem to have coped fine so far. Admittedly, it
probably helped having a week or so off for non-Covid Covid-related issues but
even so – I have to say it has all gone rather well, considering my
inexperience and constant confusion.
I
don’t suppose we’ll notice much difference when schools re-open anyway, as
we’re at almost full capacity all the way through to the October half-term. That,
of course, is assuming there won’t be another school-return-related wave of
infections that blows the non-lockdown way of life out of the water and plunges
us back into restrictions.
My, I
am just a sparkling ray of optimism, am I not?
RC 26-8-21
Wednesday, 25 August 2021
More film stuff
This
is how I distract myself when we’re having late-Autumn weather in August:
CHANGING
ONE LETTER IN A MOVIE TITLE TO MAKE IT A VERY DIFFERENT FILM -
One
Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Vest
The
Mood Dinosaur
Shakespeare
in Hove
Apocalypse
Sow
The
Lust of The Mohicans
The
Amazing Spider-Mat
A
Raver Runs Through it
The
Planet of the Apps
One
Dour Photo
Sliding
Coors
‘Apocalypse Sow’ is one I
would particularly like to see – a violent thriller in which a possessed, and
possibly pregnant, female pig hunts down the farmers who stole her from her
mother and then gets the blood lust and goes on a killing spree attempting to
wipe out the entire human race. I see Liam Neeson as a grizzled vet leading the
team trying to contain her.
RC 25-8-21
Tuesday, 24 August 2021
Too much brown ground
They
have ploughed a couple of the fields that I drive past on my journey into work,
so the countryside has taken on even more of a Wintry look.
I’m
trying to lift my mood by telling myself that we’re going to have an
exceptionally hot September, and an October that feels more like Summer than
Autumn. I don’t think its beyond the realms of possibility. Recent times have seen
some very mild months at the end of the year. In fact, I might even go so far
as to say (and I think I probably have at least once in the past) that our
Seasons have been shifted so far out of whack that they’re now unrecognisable
from the way they were when I was young. Bonfire Night now seems to take place
in late Summer, Christmas is far more likely to have bright days that snow, and
when we change the clocks in March, we still have 3 more months of cold weather
to face, whereas in my youth it signalled the start of Spring.
Stupid
climate.
RC 24-8-21
Monday, 23 August 2021
Films, films, films...
With
the weather having been un-Summery, and with me being forced to isolate recently,
I have managed to see a few movies that had either a) passed me by, or b) begged
me for a repeat viewing. I’m not in the mood to write long reviews of all of
them, but I don’t want to fob you off with a simple, truncated line of highlights.
So here I bring back (because I’m pretty certain I’ve done this before) RORY’S
10-WORD FILM THOUGHTS:
21
Grams – Not a
barrel of laughs, but wonderfully acted and filmed.
The
French Connection – Slightly
dated, but deserving of its status as a ‘classic’.
Aliens
– 35 years
old! Still sets the bar for action movies.
The
Peanut Butter Falcon – Beautiful.
Funny. Inspiring. Poignant. Beautiful. Ground-breaking. Did I mention ‘beautiful’?
All
Is True – The
first thing involving Ben Elton worth watching since Blackadder.
Lucky
– Instantly on
my all-time favourite list. RIP Harry Dean Stanton.
And
hyphenated words count as one word, and so do numbers, and so do acronyms, so
shut up.
RC 23-8-21
Saturday, 21 August 2021
Yet another chilly day
I watched
the final of The Hundred tonight (the English attempt to replicate the fun and
games of the Indian Premier League without directly copying it). I didn’t
really understand what was going on, but I did find myself getting drawn into
it. I guess when you’re missing the Olympics, any old sniff of sport will do.
The
weather is really dragging me down. I hate Winter, especially when it’s
happening in August! Normally, my way of dealing with the darker months works like
this: the first few months, I am still basking in the delight of the Summer I
have just been through; then for the next few months I am looking ahead to the
Summer that is on the way. But when there hasn’t been a Summer placed in the memory
banks for me to call back on, how am I supposed to survive a long, dark, cold
Winter? I’m feeling close to suicidal now, what the Hell will I be like in January?
On a
more cheerful note, I watched “21 Grams” again last night. If you haven’t seen
it, it’s about a woman who loses her husband and two daughters in a car accident,
a man who has a heart transplant and then gets shot in the chest, and a
reformed alcoholic who struggles to connect with his family after being
released from prison. Heavy going, but it’s a remarkable film.
And
don’t have a go at me about spoiling any plot points – its nearly 20 years old.
RC 21-8-21
Friday, 20 August 2021
I miss the Olympics, and isolation
Had a
day of feeling really tired today. I guess it’s my body still getting over last
week’s attack of plague and reacting to being back at work for a few days.
I bought myself a big fan for the office in June, in anticipation of a long, hot
Summer. That may be the worst purchase I’ve ever made in my life.
To be
fair – we did get a brief, much-longed-for glimpse of Summer this evening. A
patch of blue sky, roughly measuring sixteen feet by twenty five, appeared near
the horizon between 7.15 and 7.28 pm tonight.
RC 20-8-21
Wednesday, 18 August 2021
Miss Alford, and miseating
I don’t
know why I’ve remembered this, but today is the birthday of a teacher I fancied
at college. Weird thing to know in the first place, much less think about 20
years later, but there we are. I would blame the temperature, but I’m actually
feeling better now. Maybe I’ll blame the temperature outside, as it is yet
again cold enough to pass for January.
This
year has been an absolute tosser, weatherly speaking. Spring lasted about 4
days, and Summer simply hasn’t happened at all. Anyway, I mustn’t dwell on
that, or I’ll be suicidal by November.
My
taste buds seem to have been affected by last week’s illness, after all. Either
that, or my relationship with food is in a state of flux and rebirth. I’ve gone
off coffee completely, I keep getting the urge to buy licorice, and if I don’t
cut down my intake of Sour Cream and Onion Pringles I’ll have dangerously high
blood pressure by Christmas. I might blame the other people I work with. Apart
from Samantha, who is one of the retail managers, the team seems to be comprised
of snack-happy, indulgent, chocaholic grazers. There are only 3 of us who don’t
smoke. It’s a pretty unhealthy workforce and I find myself playing along and
succumbing to the temptation of bad choices. It might also be a bit of a
hangover from the supermarket garage days, when I had a ready supply of
unhealthy options and a quiet office in which I could munch them. I may have
accidentally trained my brain to associate management with gluttony.
Oh,
well. At least I’m not buying heroin, and the eating helps to ease the pain of
the climate.
RC 18-8-21
Tuesday, 17 August 2021
Damper than a runner's gusset
What
an absolutely shitty day.
I had
to check the calendar this afternoon to see if it was, as I suspected, still the
middle of August. Can you believe how cold and wet today has been? We had the
heating on in some parts of the buildings today. Don’t be feeling sorry for me
though – I’m feeling much better after my bout of non-Covid coronavirus, and
rather pleased to be back at work. Not that today has been a barrel of laughs
on the employment front either. As you can imagine, there were many
holidaymakers who were not best pleased that their long-awaited trip away to ‘The
Sunniest Site in Suffolk’ was being spent wearing coats and jumping over
puddles. I had to explain several times that we are not responsible for the
weather, but some people always need to moan at someone when things don’t go how
they want them to, I guess.
A
curious side-effect of my little chesty/throaty/achey week of woes – my voice
seems to be a lot deeper now than it was 10 days ago. I sound gravelly,
masculine and echoey. I might try and get some work as a voice-over guy for
film trailers. I’ve been in this job for 6 months now, so it’s probably time for
a change.…
RC 17-8-21
Sunday, 15 August 2021
Phlegm-less menu ahoy
Man,
I feel almost like myself again. I can walk around the house without ending up
breathless, I can inhale deeply through clear, unclogged nostrils and I can
move my head without going dizzy or getting pounding temples.
Joy.
I am
going to celebrate by cooking a large joint of roast gammon, and will be
adorning it with a side dish of my legendary, patented Chesworth Cauliflower
Cheese. I hate not having an appetite, but when your throat feels like its been
scoured with a metal loofah it’s hard to enjoy your food, so the past few days
have been awful. Porridge, soup and pasta have been the only things I can
ingest without feeling on the verge of vomiting. Today, though, I can taste
clearly, breathe while chewing, and I have the energy to stand at the cooker
peeling vegetables, so you can bet your fat arse I’ll be enjoying myself. I’ll
get some rocking tunes banging through the bluetooth speaker and I’ll be
glazing carrots in honey and coating potatoes in marmite prior to roasting.
Dishing up about 5pm, if
you’re interested.
RC 14-8-21
Saturday, 14 August 2021
Day late Friday the 13th Fri-ku
Naff
superstition
Nothing
is diff'rent today
Bad
luck is a myth
RC 14-8-21
Friday, 13 August 2021
A lesson learned; a load lifted
I
feel slightly less unwell today. Don’t get me wrong, I’m not signing up for the
London Marathon or skipping through the daisies at the park, but I can breathe
without erupting into coughs and my joints don’t ache quite as much as they did
earlier in the week.
Yesterday’s
weirdness with the e-mail thing gave me something to think about while lying in
bed feeling sorry for myself. I went through so much trauma during the day, and
in the end it was nothing to be concerned about. The ‘problem’ was only ever in
my head. I had made an assumption about Gavin’s reaction to my message, and the
ramifications of that assumption dominated my thoughts for the next six hours.
But none of it was right. I basically wasted the best part of a day
contemplating my position at work, and seriously considering changing that
position, when there was never any issue to deal with.
Sometimes
I think I must be female.
I
have to give myself a bit of credit for getting it sorted before bedtime. It
was mostly out of desperation, but ringing Gavin was the right thing to do. I
went from a combination of despair and distraught and distraction to a
combination of relieved and reassured. And then I could get some sleep, which
is probably why I feel better today.
RC 13-8-21
Thursday, 12 August 2021
A clearer picture
In
the end, after hours of internal conflict and several sweaty panic episodes, I
called Gavin on his mobile to discuss my e-mail, and his reply.
It
was fine. All is good. Everything I had tied myself up in knots over was all in
my head. He basically said, “I know it was a joke, and so was my reply. Don’t
worry about it – I like my employees to face things with a bit of humour. Get
yourself well and I’ll see you on Monday.”
Phew!
RC 12-8-21
2120 BST
Swimming in self-inflicted confusion
I
jokingly asked today if I could join the many, many thousands of people who are
continuing to work from home, even though it’s no longer legally required. It
was only sent as a joke, but I think Gavin may have taken me seriously – I got
a long e-mail from him explaining why it’s impossible for a manager to effectively
be part of the team running three holiday centres without that manager being
onsite.
Now I’m
in a real dilemma. I don’t know whether to own up about it being a joke. I’m
worried I might risk embarrassing him, or risk embarrassing myself, or risk making
it sound like I WAS serious but now I’m trying to back down after reading his
reply. He’s had a busy week dealing with half his management team isolating at
home and now he has me adding to his woes with some silly attempt at humour. Have
I blotted my copybook with him? Is he now sitting in his office berating me and
regretting appointing me in the first place? Will this affect my ability to
work with him and be taken seriously as we move forward with our working
relationship? I’m still in a period of probation, for Christ’s sake, and here I
am possibly sabotaging my own position by hitting ‘send’ before thinking things
through.
God,
why do I do these things to myself????
RC 12-8-21
Wednesday, 11 August 2021
A weird week
I’m
still off work, and still not feeling great. It’s really hard to describe, but
it feels sort of like goldfish are swimming around inside my head. And they’re
swimming through really thick sludge that is also hot. It still hurts to
breathe and my shoulders in particular are very achey. All in all, a poor show
physically from The Body of The Rory.
Philippa
wants me to go and see a doctor to check if I need antibiotics, (or she might have
said antipsychotics which might be more appropriate, if I’m honest.) I’d rather
wait a couple of days and see if it clears up nicely on its own. I’ve had a
chest infection before and as unpleasant as this thing is, its nowhere near the
horror of coughing up pints of green slime every day and hallucinating about
vampire badgers while being unable to breathe in without feeling like the cast
of Rampage is sitting on your chest. So I don’t think antibiotics are needed,
or would help. You would think Philippa would be used to the annoyance of
people unnecessarily pestering GP surgeries and not want to suggest it, but
there we are. Each to their own.
I
have to say, I am missing work, which feels really pleasant. In the past, I would
have welcomed the chance to stay home on the sofa at the request of my boss,
but with this job, it actually feels annoying to be away. I’m taking that as a
sign that I made the right decision back in December (was it December??) I am
looking forward to going back on Monday, and looking forward to being able to
blog without my fingers feeling like they belong to someone else, and without
it feeling like a monumental mental effort just to think of a couple of paragraphs
to write.
Apologies for any errors – I am feeling crappy (but not Covid-y, apparently).
RC 11-8-21
Monday, 9 August 2021
A weird thought
I
think the whole pandemic thing has made me realise how much I love eyes. They
may be my favourite body part. They are certainly the ones I find most
attractive. I’ve realised over the past year that everyone – no matter how
‘ugly’ they may be considered to be – has beautiful eyes. It’s a shame we’ve
had to take masks off, if I’m honest, because I have fallen in love with a few
people’s eyes this year only to now discover their faces are pretty horrible.
As
you may have guessed, I’m still feeling rather lousy.
RC 9-8-21
Sunday, 8 August 2021
Final Olympic Thoughts
I
know lots of people were against it, and I know Tokyo is probably going to
spend years trying to make up the money they lost by hosting the whole thing,
but I have to say I am so glad they pushed ahead with the Olympics, because the
last two weeks have been brilliant.
The
Top 3 Events I Enjoyed Watching The Most:
GOLD
– Surfing
SILVER
– Climbing (especially the combined)
BRONZE
– Mixed team triathlon
The
open water swimming was a real thrill as well.
Paris
is only three years away, which softens the impact of the post-Games blues a
bit. Plus - when it gets here - it'll be in a similar time zone to us, so no more of this ‘waking up to find out how well we did rather than being
able to watch it live’ rubbish. I think I might book the whole two weeks off
work in 2024 so I can lose myself in an indulgent orgy of viewing. If the
tickets aren’t ridiculously expensive (which, let’s be honest, they will be) I
might even venture across the Channel to watch.
The
National Anthem of Kenya sounds like the opening music for a movie based on The
Bible.
I’m
not particularly interested in where Lionel Messi ends up playing next season,
but the story this week has reminded me why I don’t like football, and consider
it to be well and truly f**ked as a sport and as a business. At the Olympics,
we see people pushing themselves to the limit for the glory of a gold medal.
Many of them make no money from their endeavours, and many of them end up out
of pocket. Meanwhile, I read that Barcelona FC – one of the most successful
club sides in the World – are more than a billion Euros in debt, and have to
reduce their wage bill by 172million just to break even next season. That
entire sport should be ripped up and restarted from scratch.
RC 8-8-21
Saturday, 7 August 2021
A coughing catastrophe
I am
caught in a Covid-caused isolation scenario. Let me say straight away – I have
tested negative for coronavirus. But I am feeing incredibly shitty and have
been for a few days now. It started with a tickly cough, but has developed over
48 hours or so into a full-blown Summer cold and possibly a minor chest
infection. I am hot, fatigued, sniffly, with a pounding headache and lungs that
feel like they’re full of feathers. I blame Catarina – one of the cleaners at
one of our sites. I popped over for a visit and she was working away despite
being in the throes of a snot tsunami. Now she is on the mend, but three of her
colleagues (and me) have all ended up with the same thing. We’ve all had PCR
tests, and all been given the all-clear, but the bosses are so worried about the
whole Covid thing that they’ve ordered us all to stay home for a week. A bit of
an over-reaction, I feel, but I can understand their reticence to have their
holiday centres staffed by people who are displaying all the symptoms of the
Delta variant, even when they’re confirmed as virus-free. I can’t imagine I’d
be pleased if I arrived at my holiday location to find half the employees
coughing their lungs up. And who am I to complain? It’s allowed me to watch
more of the Olympics, and I have to be honest and say I’m not up to working
anyway. Walking through the house to go to the toilet is leaving me breathless
and sleepy; the last thing I need is a 10-hour shift at work.
I
guess that when the science and medical people were warning us there’d be a
post-facemask explosion of other viruses because no-one has been catching them
for 18 months, they weren’t kidding. I feel utter crap.
RC 7-8-21
Wednesday, 4 August 2021
Yet more from the Olympics
The
young women in the artistic gymnastics all had that sad ‘stolen childhood’ look
in their eyes; that horrible vacant stare that hints at having suffered some terrible
trauma. I suppose that’s what comes from being bullied by trainers from the age
of 6, and constantly having your efforts judged arbitrarily.
What
has happened to Gabby Logan? She used to be my favourite British sports
presenter, but now she seems to have become a giggling unprofessional obsessed
with in-jokes and boring reminiscences. She’s like a middle-aged mum trying to
fit in with her trendy children and embarrassing them in the process.
The
climbing may be rivalling the surfing as my favourite event of the Games so far.
Ridiculously athletic, but also with a mind-bending element of intellectual
problem solving. I have this strange vision that, with the way events are being
selected these days, by the time we reach the Brisbane Olympics in 2032 we’ll
have medals up for grabs in map reading.
How
To Be A Post-Event BBC Interviewer:
Simple. You just ask these two questions – “You are Olympic Champion. How does
that sound?” and “How long has this been a dream of yours?” and then you try
and get them to cry by talking about their family back home.
I am
already dreading the Closing Ceremony, and that awful post-Games depression
period where it feels awful to wake up and not be able to watch some bizarre
sporting event like Latvia versus Chinese Taipei at badminton.
RC 4-8-21