Showing posts with label Trump. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Trump. Show all posts

Monday, November 2, 2020

Captain's Log, Day 24: What Happens Tomorrow?

 Date: November 2, 2020

Time of post: 8:05 PM

Quarantine Day: 222

Last Song I Listened To: “Change” by Taylor Swift

Last Person I Communicated With: GroupMe groupchat

Last Thing I Ate: chips and queso

Last Thing I Read: oh, definitely some fanfic; it’s been a great coping mechanism

Current Mood: ANXIOUS AF

One Thing I’ve Accomplished Today: sent some emails I guess

One Thing I Want To Accomplish Today: dishes and cleaning, but that’s not happening today

One Reason I’m Stressed Today: Wow, I wonder…not like tomorrow if a defining moment of American history or anything…

One Reason I’m Happy Today: the Young Adult Studies Association’s conference is this week, and I’m presenting at it; Little Mix’s new album drops on Saturday!

 

Dear Apocalypsers,

It’s been a minute, hasn’t it? And a lot has happened—some things that I could talk about and some things that I can’t, but, in all ways, October was a long month.

And now it’s November.

Yikes.

November 3, 2020 was always going to be an important date. We’ve known that since 2016, but given every other indescribably shitty thing that’s happened this year—which, if you ask me, can all be tied back to T*ump at least in part if not in entirety—tomorrow is even more important that we could have imagined (if that’s possible).

Last week, Noelle asked in group chat if we wanted to Zoom on Election Night. And, for some reason, that really solidified for me what tomorrow could be. I don’t want to be hyperbolic or seem like I’m trivializing this moment, but it got me thinking, “Who would you want to be with if you knew the world was ending?” Dr. Tatonetti asked us that same thing on our first day of Apocalypse back in January—back when the concept of an apocalypse was more fiction than reality for most of us. Back then, we chose family members, friends, famous survivalists and athletes. We had reasons, both practical and sentimental, that were sometimes sensible and sometimes funny.

That feels like a lifetime ago.

Because, now, the fact of the matter is that we’re standing on a precipice, and we don’t know what America looks like after tomorrow. Maybe that’s a good thing. Maybe Biden wins and we can have genuine hope and optimism for the first time in years. (This is the only option I want to entertain.) Or maybe the unthinkable happens, and we have four more years of things getting worse—more racism and sexism and homophobia and transphobia and Islamophobia and violence and fear mongering and hundreds of thousands of more deaths from COVID-19 alone.

So who do I want to be with when I get that news?

Who do I want to be with when I breathe a sigh of relief or curl up into a ball and cry?

The friends I’ve made in grad school—these friends who are practically family now—are definitely a good option.

I remember the 2016 election. I was editor of my undergrad newspaper, The Chanticleer, at the time. It was actually my first semester as editor. We were still working on 2007 Mac desktops that crashed if you opened more than 2 tabs, so I designed the front page in advance: with Hillary Clinton winning.



I honestly didn’t think T*ump would win, but as my roommates and I sat up that Tuesday night, I vividly remember Jennie looking at me, her face white, and saying, “Katie, she can’t win. There aren’t enough points left.” And I said what I always do when I don’t want to believe something: “No.”

But she was right. And I’ll always remember that moment, because everything changed.

I’ve come a long way in the last 4 years. This is the kindest I’ll be to the year 2020, but it’s forced me to confront a lot of my innate biases. It’s forced me to be louder about social justice in public; I like to think I’ve been a pretty good ally on personal level for a while, but I realized that these are issues that need to be screamed about on every platform that I have. Because, yes, I’m a woman, and I have—and will continue to—face discrimination because of that, but I’m a white person entering academia. I have the opportunity ahead of me to support writers and creators and academics of color, to buy their work and write about it and cite their articles and tweet about them—and I can start doing that now. I should. And I can do the same with the LGBTQIA community. Some of the most talented and thoughtful and brilliant people I’ve ever met have fallen into one or both of these communities, and it’s a disgrace that they’re statistically less likely to be recognized than cisgender, heterosexual white people.

I can’t even imagine how hard the last 4 years have been for them and how I may have contributed to those hardships in small, unconscious ways.

But I’ve been trying really hard the last several months to change my behavior and to be more aware, to speak up when I have a political opinion, to be more careful and thoughtful about my purchases and where my money is going. And I’m ready to see that change on a national level.

I don’t have much to say, for once. Just that I’m scared but I’m stubbornly optimistic; I’m a sick to my stomach but I’m gritting my teeth; and I have so much love and respect for the people on the front lines of this fight, from nurses and doctors to Democratic campaign managers in battleground (or historically red) states.

And to everyone T*ump and his people have hurt this year and the previous 3, I’m sorry. You deserve better. And I’ll keep saying that as long as I have the breath to do so.

So I’ll leave you with this goosebump-inducing political ad that dropped earlier this week featuring, for the first time ever, one of Taylor Swift’s songs.

 


And, now more than ever, may the odds be ever in our favor,

Katie

Sunday, July 26, 2020

Captain's Log, Day 20: "Are We Out of the Woods Yet?" (A: No)


Date: July 26, 2020
Time of post: 2:00 AM
Quarantine Day: 123
Last Song I Listened To: “epiphany" by Taylor Swift
Last Person I Communicated With: sent a message in one of my grad school group chats!
Last Thing I Ate: New York cheesecake with chocolate gelato
Last Thing I Read: my notes for the paper I’m working on
Current Mood: pretty good, minus the permanent undercurrent of anxiety and frustration
One Thing I’ve Accomplished Today: got motivated to work on a potential paper!
One Thing I Want To Accomplish Today: write more blog posts (I have 2 in mind)
One Reason I’m Stressed Today: already thinking about having to head back to Manhattan
One Reason I’m Happy Today: Mom’s birthday was yesterday, and we celebrated!

Dear Apocalypsers,

It’s been awhile! I bet you’re wondering about the state of the world. Here’s a quick rundown on some of the biggest (and most ridiculous) things that have happened since my last post:





Me with Duck just a few days after I got
back to Alabama!
I’m sure I’m missing things. I was so overwhelmed the last time I wrote, but I pushed through. I spent a lot of time educating myself and thinking about my own actions, and I can breathe a little bit easier now—literally. There were some days in early-to-mid-June where my anxiety was so high my chest hurt. I still firmly believe that there are terrible and unacceptable things happening in the world right now and that it’s our responsibility as human beings to never shut up about them, but I’ve adjusted to the stress, I guess.



He's 88lbs of cuddle.
I think it helps that I came home to spend some time with my family. Yes, there are more COVID cases in Alabama than in Kansas, but being with my family has really eased my anxiety. It’s nice to have daily human contact again. I don’t have to actively remind myself to stop clenching my jaw nearly as often as when I was alone all the time. And, as we all know, I have some big control issues, so—even though I can’t actually do anything—I like being near my family in case they need me. I can go to the store for my parents and limit their possible exposure to the virus as much as possible, so I feel like I have some semblance of control.

So, I just wanted to pop in with some updates for when I inevitably reread this blog in 40 years. We’ve been quarantining for more of 2020 than we weren’t, and, because the U.S. is being so lackadaisical with its regulations, I imagine we’ll be quarantining for a while still.

So, to quote my girl Taylor Swift—and to segue us into the next post that I’m already planning—“Are we outof the woods yet?”



No.

No we’re not.


And may the odds be ever in our favor,

Katie

Sunday, April 12, 2020

Captain's Log, Day 9: I Lament What Should Have Been


Date: April 12, 2020
Time of post 11:45 PM
Quarantine Day: 28
Last Song I Listened To: “Long Live” by Taylor Swift
Last Person I Communicated With: literally on the phone with my mom as I write this
Last Thing I Ate: chicken alfredo & wine
Last Thing I Read: The Way of Thorn and Thunder by Daniel Heath Justice
Current Mood: content but always mildly frustrated
One Thing I’ve Accomplished Today: did an FB live read-aloud with Lexi!
One Thing I Want To Accomplish Today: read some more of Justice
One Reason I’m Stressed Today: I’ve been putting off doing dishes (and laundry) for days
One Reason I’m Happy Today: had a Zoom “Digi-Easter” with some of the other grad students, and got to do the read along with Lexi

I actually started working on the PowerPoint for the Taylor Swift paper that
I was supposed to present at PCA this week. I was (am!) really excited about it!
Dear Apocalyspsers,

Happy Easter! (Though I have a hard and fast stance that it’s not Easter unless you sing “Up from the Grave HeArose,” so I hope you sang that today; otherwise, it’s not really Easter.) And, maybe because it’s Easter, I’ve been thinking a lot about what could have been this semester. Like, Jesus could have stayed in the tomb. He could have never let Himself die on the cross for us. We could have been doomed for an eternity in hell.

But we weren’t.

There are a lot of things from my Methodist upbringing that I don’t agree with anymore (most recently, the Church's stance of not taking a stance on same-sex marriage and LGBTQ+ clergy); there’s a lot about organized religion, in general, that doesn’t sit right with me anymore. But the one thing that I’ll never be able to shake is Jesus’ message of hope and love. I’ve seen it. I’ve experienced that hope and love in ways that have me utterly convinced there’s something bigger than us out there, and that’s part of what’s getting me through this quarantine.


There are so many things that could have and should have happened for me this semester. 

My Instagram story from when I
submitted my PCA abstract.
My Instagram story from the day
my PCA abstract was accepted.








I was supposed to present at two conferences that have been cancelled.











I was supposed to walk across the stage on May 15th and look at my parents in the crowd and wave and smile and tell them how grateful I am for them. I was supposed to introduce them to my friends, who they’ve been sending cards to for two years now solely because I won’t stop talking about them. Now, I don’t know if those two incredibly important parts of my life will ever meet.
Noelle, Mikayla, Molly, and I had a panel accepted to the
national ChLA conference. It was supposed to be our last
adventure together. Earlier this week, they officially
cancelled the conference.


I was supposed to spend March through May celebrating with my best friends: nights out after successful defenses, a Shrek-themed Prom, SAGE Events (dodgeball and movie nights were already on the agenda), speakers like U.S. Poet Laureate Joy Harjo and Children’s Lit scholar Kristin Bluemel, and just spontaneous movie nights and game nights and trips to Lawrence. Those things are all rescheduled or scrapped entirely.


And, usually, I have a pretty good relationship with disappointment. I’ve learned not to expect perfect endings, but too always hope for one. I think that’s why I get so much joy out of life—because every good thing is a little bit of a surprise. I don’t know what that says about my psyche, but I definitely like it better than always having my heartbroken. This semester, though, I think I let myself expect the best. (Because who honestly thinks something as catastrophic as a global pandemic will happen and cancel graduation?) So I’m having a hard time putting a positive spin on this—though there have been plenty of nice things happening. I asked my cohort for pictures of us since we started grad school, and, boy did they come through. Within minutes, I had dozens of pictures and videos of us, and I think you’d be hard-pressed to find a cohort that gets along better than us. I was instantly reminded of all the amazing times we’ve shared and all the fun we’ve had. I may have teared up a little. I love them so much, and my heart hurts that I won’t get more days like that with them. It was nice to relive those moments, but it’s not Prom. It’s not graduation. And, for that, I’m a little bitter.
Logically, I know I’m doing my part. I’m staying in. I’m social distancing. I’m grocery shopping once every 2 weeks and only going to one store when I do.

But some people aren’t.

And that—that makes me furious.

Some people are so ignorant and full of themselves. The Kansas lawmakers who challenged Governor Kelley’s order to not have church gatherings of more than 10 people. (Thank God the Supreme Court killed that.) The State of Alabama for keeping state parks open so my Type 1 Diabetic brother still has to go to work. Trump for being so obnoxious and incompetent. This reminds me so much of the day I came home from second grade sobbing because other kids wouldn’t listen to the rules. I’ve never been a fan or corporal punishment, and I feel like I’m being punished with quarantine.

Knowing now that this was the last time
we'd all go out to Aggieville together
makes this picture extra special and
extra sad (2-8-2020)
But I still can’t bring myself to fall into a pit of total despair. As much as I want to be angry, I want to have hope more. I guess I just know my personality. I’m living alone, my parents 900 miles away and my friends unable to physically with me. If I emotionally crumple, I’m not coming out of it.
So I’ll hope. I’ll hope for a treatment and a vaccine and for people to stay inside for the love of all that’s good. I’ll hope that the CDC gets a handle on all the outbreak epicenters and that rural hospitals are able to treat current cases. I’ll hope that, somehow, someday, some way, karma works out in my favor, that I’ll get my “one more moment” with the people who, like me, had so much taken away. I’ll hope that Trump gets his ass voted out of office in November and sued for every awful, inhumane thing he’s done.

A decade ago, I might have described these hopes as prayers.

Now, I don’t think the semantics matter as much as the intent behind them.

Wholeheartedly, may the odds be ever in our favor,

Katie

Sunday, April 5, 2020

Captain's Log, Day 6: Me and COVID-19 Have Bad Blood


One of my characters was Taylor Swift from her  "Bad Blood"
 music video
. I'm clearly no makeup artist, but this was fun,
even if think I did use all of my remaining liquid eye liner. 
Date: April 5, 2020
Time of post: 8:45 PM
Quarantine Day: 21
Last Song I Listened To: “Falling Like the Stars” by James Arthur
Last Person I Communicated With: I sent a snapchat to several people
Last Thing I Ate: salmon with sweet potatoes and brown rice
Last Thing I Read: The Way of Thorn and Thunder by Daniel Heath Justice
Current Mood: pretty angry, tbh
One Thing I’ve Accomplished Today: recorded a PowerPoint for my class
One Thing I Want To Accomplish Today: make a grocery list
One Reason I’m Stressed Today: I’ve forced myself to think about my future, and I hate that
One Reason I’m Happy Today: several of us challenged each other to do “character makeup” as a 
quarantine game




Dear Apocalypsers,

When I told my best friend that I was writing an “apocalypse diary,” her first response was, “Wow that’s perfect for you! I’m sure you have a whole entry comparing this to Harry Potter!” (What can I say? I have a certain reputation.)

Now feels like the time for the Harry Potter post.
My other makeup character was Charlotte "Lottie" La Bouff
from Disney's The Princess and the Frog (2009). Based on
the fact that I already owned a tiara and pearls and stuffed
 frog, I think it's safe to say that this look was easier for me.
Lottie and I might be long lost cousins!

My little “check-in” log says that I’m pretty angry, today. And I am. I guess I have been for a while, but it’s just been little things, and I’ve finally snapped and decided to admit that this whole COVID-19 situation is really pissing me off. Whether it’s thinking about my 60-something, Type 1 Diabetic mother with other pre-existing conditions going out to get prescriptions for her and my 60-something father on kidney dialysis or having to listen to the most recent incomprehensibly stupid and ignorant thing that Donald Trump has said (though I’m trying to limit my news consumption as much as possible) or just losing one more day of what was supposed to be one of the best semesters of my life, there’s something every day that gets under my skin. But I brush it off, determined not to let it ruin my day or my week—I mean, I’m quarantined alone, so my mental health really, really can’t afford to let resentment and anger and anxiety build up, because I don’t have anyone on hand at 2 or 3 or 4 in the morning to bounce those feelings off of or to talk me down.

This week, though, it was a damn Facebook post about Harry Potter that pushed me over the edge.

The creator of the post, Joe Thomas (whoever he is), compares the experience of graduating seniors to Harry, Ron, and Hermione in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows (2007). Thomas wrote, “What you are doing right now is helping the world stand up against a deadly enemy in order to protect countless lives. You are Harry Potter. You are Hermione Granger. You are Ron Weasley. […] You are being true to your school in the most unexpected of ways, and you will graduate with the honor of having played a key part in this fight. Your work so far and chance for further accomplishments haven’t been dashed. A world of opportunity will await you when we get past this” (Thomas). I get what I think he was trying to do. It was supposed to be another one of those messages of hope to graduating seniors who suddenly had the end of their high school or college experience taken from them. But what gets me about this post that the others of this “genre” didn’t is how Thomas so clearly views this as choice, as some big heroic act that’s poetic and beautiful in its own way.
A screenshot of Joe Thomas' Facebook post
that made me very upset.


But he’s missing Rowling’s whole freaking point.

They were children—seventeen years old dealing with the weight and hope of an entire world on their shoulders. Children who were never told the whole story, who figured out far too much on their own, who had to deal with death and threats on their life and a corrupt government, who were chosen for this ridiculous task before they even had a choice. The older I get, the more Deathly Hallows makes me cry, because it never should have been them. They shouldn’t have had to give up everything. They were kids.

Yes, these seniors are more like Harry, Ron, and Hermione than Thomas’ measly, wannabe deep Facebook post even begins to let on.

And what makes me so, so very mad, is that he doesn’t acknowledge their feelings. He doesn’t make it sound like these kids are “allowed” to be angry or sad. And that makes me, so mad that I’m seething as I write this.

I’m mad that graduation was cancelled.
I’m mad that I didn’t get to have my defense in person and hug my committee.
I’m mad that I haven’t heard Anne Longmuir’s rolling Scottish lilt in a month or that I haven’t been able to pop by Anne Phillips’ office just to say hi and have her tell me she’s proud of me.
I’m so, so, so mad that I couldn’t celebrate the biggest accomplishment of my life to date with the friends who helped me get here.
I’m mad that I don’t get to see my students twice a week and hear about their lives.
I’m mad that I’ve been to Aggieville for the last time.
I’m mad that I’m missing out on speakers that have been planned for months.
I’m mad that I can’t go to PCA in 10 days and have a “last hoorah” with my friends while presenting at a national conference.
I am so, so mad that this is happening when I deserve so much better.

And I deserve to be mad. I’m heartbroken. God, I know far too much heartbreak for someone who’s never had a proper first kiss.

I can be mad about what’s been taken from me while recognizing that it’s a necessity. I know that national and global safety is, objectively, more important that any of those things I listed. But that doesn’t help my heart.
So, Mr. Thomas, if you ever read this, know that you’re right. Those high school and college seniors and those finishing their M.A.s and Ph.D.s and graduating from law school and med school and culinary school and tech school and cosmetology school are an awful lot like Harry, Ron, and Hermione—and Ginny, who’s family pulled her from school and couldn’t leave their home because they were being tracked; or Susan Bones, who left school after finding out her parents had died; or Neville Longbottom, who tried to keep the morale up by fighting back in whatever way he could; or Luna Lovegood, who lost her home but her hope in her friend—but don’t try to make them think they’re heroes. That’s a burden and a pressure that they don’t need. They’re kids. And they should be mad that this is happening to them.

We all should be.

May the odds be ever in our favor,
Katie



Works Cited/Links Embedded:

Dale, Daniel et. all. “Fact-check: Trump says some states aren't in jeopardy from the virus, denies saying it would go away by April.” CNN, 4 April 2020, https://www.cnn.com/2020/04/03/politics/facts-check-trump-coronavirus-briefing-april-3/index.html

Thomas, Joe. A Facebook post comparing high school seniors to Harry, Ron, and Hermione in J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter series. Facebook, 27 March 2020, 8:43AM, https://www.facebook.com/joeedthom?__tn__=%2CdCH-R-R&eid=ARDYUk_vWOG4gM8VFVuF1MsXw_CAvQqhNl-d6RV1VGT1sqkllt1dgdeSynXG20OKg75lf3ZvUGLEOLpH&hc_ref=ARRlPokSvY9K78EU8VjrwEm2Lpwkh3UL20JHh8kjgG3XaU1gw4o2FzgGiK1JO1i2N7E&fref=nf. Accessed 5 April 2020.


Sunday, March 22, 2020

Captain's Log, Day 1: An Introduction to COVID-19 in 2020


Date: March 22, 2020
Quarantine Day: 8
Last Song I Listened To: “Reggaeton Lento (Remix)” by Little Mix ft. CNCO
Last Person I Communicated With: Mikayla Sharpless
Last Thing I Ate: sour cream and onion potato chips / lemon-ginseng green tea
Last Thing I Read: currently reading These Witches Don’t Burn (2019) by Isabel Sterling
Current Mood: Mostly indifferent, kind of excited about this blog/diary
One Thing I’ve Accomplished Today: Recorded and posted my first PowerPoint lecture for ENGL 100
One Thing I Want To Accomplish Today: finish watching Scooby-Doo on Zombie Island (1998)
One Reason I’m Stressed Today: I have so much housework that needs done, mainly dishes, and I hate housework
One Reason I’m Happy Today: I’m oddly excited about grocery shopping tomorrow



Dear Apocalypsers,

This is my first entry—hopefully it won’t be my last.

Dramatics aside, here’s the situation: COVID-19, aka coronavirus, is running rampant in the U.S. It’s a flu-like virus that is particularly dangerous to the elderly and immunocompromised (*thinks nervously about my Type 1 Diabetes*). It causes high fevers, shortness of breath, body pain, but the scariest part is that we don’t have a vaccine for it, and it has an incubation period of 2-14 days after exposure, so you could transmit it to so many people before you even know you’re sick.

That’s why we’re on “social distancing/self-isolation/quarantine” right now. K-State is online for the rest of the semester. We’re working from home. They cancelled graduation. Public gatherings in Riley County are prohibited. You’re not supposed to be in groups of more than 10 people. Stores are operating on shorter hours. And everyone is buying up all the freaking toilet paper. (I really don’t know what that last point has to do with anything, but it must be the equivalent of Alabamians buying out the bread and milk when we have the threat of snow.)

COVID-19 has literally spread all over the world. The virus originated in China, but Italy has been hit particularly bad. A K-State professor was exposed to it in London. Some singers I follow have had to cancel tours across Europe because of government ordinances. It’s an actual pandemic, which is pretty scary. A lot of people go their entire lifetimes without experiencing something like this…guess I just got lucky, huh?

And, of course, our president is being an absolute useless bag of steaming orange garbage about this. The country is at mass level hysteria. But, don’t worry, our commander-in-chief said just yesterday, “At some point this is going away” (Diamond). Comforting, isn’t it? (It’s not.)


The U.S. doesn’t have enough testing supplies to test the public, and it’s bringing to light how truly classist American healthcare is. Some people are taking their privilege and basking it. One of my favorite cynical tweets about this whole situation goes, “For the average American the best way to tell if you have covid-19 is to cough in a rich person’s face and wait for their test results” (@hrmoroz).Other celebs, however, are using their fame as a platform. Yesterday, actor, model, and activist Nyle DiMarco tweeted about his own experience with COVID-19: “It is very possible I contracted coronavirus and I have access to get tested but I do not want to. The reason is because there is a shortage of covid-19 test kits in the U.S. and the sick patients need it more than I do” (@Nyle DiMarco).


But the fact of the matter is that Trump set us up for disaster long before the first person ever contracted this virus. A Washington Post Fact Checker article breaks down (or tries to break down) just what Trump has (or hasn’t) done when it comes to his pandemic response. A former Obama administration official, Beth Cameron, claims that Trump closed the White House pandemic office and that “has contributed to the federal government’s sluggish domestic response” to the coronavirus pandemic.” Meanwhile, Tim Morrison, a former Trump administration official claims that the office “was folded into another one to streamline a bloated organization.” Long story short, the article determines that, yes, the most of the positions in the “pandemic office” that Barack Obama established in 2016 do still exist, but they have been lumped into another office where domestic pandemic response is not their primary occupation (Kessler and Kelly).

As someone who has done journalism, it’s never reassuring when the article says, “as far as we can determine…” (Kessler and Kelly), because that means that easily accessible information isn’t easily accessible.

Of course, there are literal thousands of memes and jokes going around about this—which I kind of appreciate, honestly. My dad always says it’s better to laugh than cry, and, by this point in our lives, millennials are really good at laughing in the face of disaster.

In the words of Natalie Imbruglia, "That's what's going on."

I haven’t decided how I’m going to tackle each of these “diary entries” yet—I’ll probably just go where the wind takes me—but I thought it would be good to start with the current state of things…which aren’t great. But I guess they could also be worse.

Anyway, I’ll be in touch soon.

May the odds be ever in our favor,
Katie





Works Cited:
Diamond, Dan. “Short-term thinking plagues Trump’s coronavirus response.” Politico, 21 March 2020. https://www.politico.com/news/2020/03/21/short-term-thinking-trump-coronavirus-response-140883

@hrmoroz. “For the average American the best way to tell if you have covid-19 is to cough in a rich person’s face and wait for their test results.” Twitter, 20 March 2020, 10:35 a.m., https://twitter.com/hrmoroz/status/1241025578527903750

Kessler, Glenn and Meg Kelly. “Was the White House office for global pandemics eliminated?.” The Washington Post, 20 March 2020. https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2020/03/20/was-white-house-office-global-pandemics-eliminated/

@NyleDiMarco. I’ve been really sick and I am now on the mend. It is very possible I contracted coronavirus and I have access to get tested but I do not want to. The reason is because there is a shortage of covid-19 test kits in the U.S. and the sick patients need it more than I do (see more). Twitter, 21 March 2020, 3:21 p.m., https://twitter.com/NyleDiMarco/status/1241459950578069506