CALIFORNIA
FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, JULY 10, 2020, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“POST-LOCKDOWN REALITIES BEGIN TO EMERGE”
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, JULY 10, 2020, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“POST-LOCKDOWN REALITIES BEGIN TO EMERGE”
Patio seating is more popular than
ever at restaurants that reopened when governments relaxed precautions against
the spread of COVID-19, one feature of the during- and post-pandemic world.
Senior hours at some grocery and big box stores are no longer strictly enforced,
with sprinklings of youngsters now appearing among the silver-haired.
Beaches are crowded, and the supposedly
required social distancing there fast became another non-enforced rule. Masks remain
almost ubiquitous on the sand and will be at least for many months, but the
question of wearing them or not remains political dynamite.
Most white-collar workers sent home to work at
kitchen tables or in their bedrooms are still there, many companies saying they
can work from home as long as they like. Traffic on California freeways is far lighter
than B.P. (before pandemic), but up from levels at the height of the lockdown.
Gyms, allowed to reopen in most
counties in early June, may be where change is most obvious. Some rules there have
also been among the silliest.
While reservations have been
commonplace for centuries at fine restaurants, and even at some that are not so
fine, they are new to gyms, but now required by some locations in the large 24
Hour Fitness chain.
Gyms are getting cleaned more often
and more thoroughly than most have been since they were built. Weight machines
are wiped with germicides at regular intervals. It’s forbidden to stay in some gyms
longer than an hour. Basketball and handball courts in many facilities are now
homes for treadmills, elliptical machines and other workout staples. In some
gyms, these are about 10 feet apart; others create spacing by allowing members
to use only one of every two or three machines.
One seemingly absurd policy governed at
many gyms until Gov. Gavin Newsom ended it on June 18 with a wide-ranging order
for masking: Users for awhile had to be masked when entering and walking
around, but not while exercising, when most persons breathe hardest and spew
the most potential contagions.
Many gym rats wonder why these
facilities were ever shuttered, as their changes could have been made very quickly.
Meanwhile, academic studies show that in all age groups, people who exercise
have stronger immune responses and resist disease better than comparable folks
who don’t.
Said one 78-year-old regular at a 24
Hour Fitness in Los Angeles, “I never understood why they closed the gyms. This
place is why I’ve lived so long.” He substituted home weight-lifting and long walks
for gym activity, but says it never had the same benefits.
Gyms are also symbolic of the lockdown’s
economic toll. The iconic Gold’s Gym chain filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in
early May. 24 Hour Fitness, in expansion mode B.P., soon followed, firing many
employees on impersonal phone calls. 24 Hour also eliminated dozens of gyms across
California, reopening only the most profitable.
Amid this turmoil, many longtime gym
users remain hesitant to return. Many have doubts about ventilation systems, as
federal health officials warn that recirculated air can carry contaminated spit
and sweat globules too small to see or feel. Others, like Gold’s Gym devotee
and ex-Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, said they wouldn’t return unless masks were
required at all times. They should be now.
In business, group video calls on
services like Facebook, Zoom and Google Meet were relatively rare B.P., but swiftly
became lifelines for stay-at-home workers. These sessions remain common even as
lockdowns fade away. They’re also vital tools for grandparents and their
grandkids, whose personal contacts are hindered as many grandparents continue
self-quarantining even while life reopens for others.
While some psychotherapists decry the
lack of personal contact in virtual meetings, others say the new services opened
their practices beyond previous geographic limits. “Now I’m seeing patients in
other states, even other countries,” said one San Francisco psychologist. “It’s
true I can’t see their body language as well as I’d like, but the talk therapy
is very useful. It’s much better than nothing, what we feared when the lockdown
started.”
All of which makes this already a
changed world, with more shifts to come. Some will be improvements, some not.
The only certainty: Life will never go back to the old normal.
-30-
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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