• Lisa Shine
  • Lisa Shine

Cork

A little blog about my adventures in Cork! Leer más
  • Day 14 - Clap for our healthcare workers

    26 de marzo de 2020, Irlanda ⋅ ☀️ 12 °C

    Has it really been two weeks already? It doesn’t feel like it! We had clear blue skies today, for the first time this year I think. More weather like this will make this time a lot more bearable. It was lovely to sit out and sunbathe for a while this afternoon.

    I spent most of the afternoon checking in with my students on Zoom. I met each of them for ten minutes, just to reassure them about the end of year assessments etc and to see how they’re getting on. Some are still in Cork and getting quite lonely, especially those on their own. Some how gone back home to the Middle East, and some of these are waiting in hotels in Dubai for a quarantine period before their government lets them back to their own country. One guy was on a mountain in the Omani desert when I contacted him, and it really brightened my day when he used his camera to show me the views!

    In the evening, I did an online live dance class, and again, it was good for my mood to be doing the jive! We don’t have many moments of just pure joy and fun these days.

    The 9pm news this evening was very sad. A further ten people have died from covid19, bringing the total in Ireland to nineteen. This news really hit me in the stomach tonight.

    At 8pm though, there was a nationwide “applause for our healthcare workers.” I was completely surprised an moved to hear so many people in our neighbourhood clapping. Peter and I went outside to add our applause too. I hope this is something that we might do regularly as a country.
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  • Day 13 - Settling into things now

    25 de marzo de 2020, Irlanda ⋅ ⛅ 6 °C

    This morning I got a bit of schoolwork done, I had a work Zoom meeting and then cooked a lovely Moroccan stew! Today’s probably the first day where the new normal is starting to feel a bit more normal, and the new routine is starting to feel a bit more familiar.

    My sunflowers seedlings are still growing away on the windowsill - hopefully soon it’ll be warm enough to put them outside. I tried ordering pots for them from an online gardening shop, but they’ve halted orders for the moment due to unprecedented online demand!

    In the evening, I downloaded The Sims 4 to my computer and that ate up a good few hours of my time. Maybe it’s not a very productive use of time but it’s nice to have a few hours to while away unproductively these days. Plus it’s a good distraction from the horrors going on in the world around us. I can barely read the news from Italy this week.
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  • Day 12 - Lockdown orchestra

    24 de marzo de 2020, Irlanda ⋅ ☁️ 11 °C

    The sun was shining today so I got outside for a few hours in the morning to do some gardening, which was lovely for my mind!

    Then, at 12pm, our long-awaited Tesco delivery arrived. The driver followed my instructions to put the shopping into the big IKEA shopping bags that I had left outside the door. It’s funny that this kind of thing has become completely normal! Unfortunately squashies sweets are out of stock. Maybe I should take this as divine intervention!

    After a few very productive hours preparing college lectures, I used most of the rest of the evening practicing my violin 2 part for the lockdown orchestra. This orchestra was set up by a British composer who hopes to put an orchestral piece together, by getting people to record individually, in their own home. I signed up to it online a few days ago and was emailed a copy of the music a short time later. It’s tricky enough in parts, but I got my recording done and sent off. I can’t wait to see the finished product!

    We’d another Zoom meeting this evening too. This time it was with Fiona, Paul, JT, Rhona, Orlaith and Garrett. We spent about two hours chatting and it was lovely to have some social interaction and to catch up with friends. I can’t wait until we can all meet up again in person for a big group dinner! The simple things in life will seem amazing in a few months time.
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  • Day 11 - I got tested

    23 de marzo de 2020, Irlanda ⋅ ⛅ 9 °C

    After a seven day wait, I have finally been tested, and what a weight off my shoulders it has been! I don’t know why it’s such a weight off my shoulders, because it doesn’t really change anything, but it’s good to get it over with, nonetheless.

    The text notifying me of my appointment came in while I was still in bed this morning. Then, about two hours before my appointment time, a woman rang me to confirm my doctors name, address and telephone number. She also wished me luck! I left the house about an hour before my appointment, to make sure I was there on time.

    In one way, it was nice to have a reason to drive somewhere, as I have only left the house once since I was asked to self-isolate exactly a week ago (to drive Peter to Tesco a few days ago). It was interesting to get out to see our changed world. There weren’t too many people out, and even on St Patrick’s Street, the main street in Cork, I didn’t really see people going within the recommended two metres of each other. Lots of people were wearing face masks though, and I even saw an elderly man wearing one while driving in his car.

    When I got to the testing centre at Páirc Uí Chaoimh, a man at the main entrance on the road checked my appointment time and handed me an information leaflet. I then parked in the stadium grounds and we were instructed to move our car along in the queue every so often. We weren’t allowed to put our car window down at all, so all instructions were given through the closed window.

    When my turn came, I started feeling a bit nervous. Part of this was because I had started thinking about the chance of contracting the virus at the test centre (which I hope is low)! But part of my nervousness also stemmed from the very unfamiliar setting that I found myself in. It felt like I’d been dropped on an alien planet, seeing all these human-shaped beings dressed in full protective clothing. I’ve been in unfamiliar settings before, but this was off the scale and it was difficult for my mind to process. I’ve never felt anything like it before!

    A man checked my name on the list, then I drove on to a woman who put a sheet of paper containing my details under the wiper of my windscreen. After this, I was beckoned forward, and I drove past a few testing stations to the first empty one. Each station had two people at it, and all of them seemed to be women, from what I could see.

    When I stopped at the test station, I was asked to open my window a tiny bit. I couldn’t figure out how to open the car’s electronic window to just a small opening, but after a few seconds of me madly putting it up and down, I finally had it open slightly! The woman passed a face mask in through the window and asked me to put it on. Then, she passed some hand sanitiser through, which I used on my hands. Between each interaction, I had to shut my window again. The third time she spoke to me was to pass a tissue and a little kit to me. The kit contained a face mask for at home and a black bin liner to put the discarded face mask and tissue from the test in. I was asked to close the window and blow my nose. When I opened the window again, the second woman had appeared and she asked me to look ahead while she swabbed. The throat swab was mildly unpleasant. The nose swab was awful!! She stuck the swab up as far as it would go into my nose. I felt a sharp pain, then I could hear a squelching sound deep in my head. I honestly thought that she was doing it wrong and that she was somehow digging the swab into my brain! I winced and could help myself letting out a little moan. It was over as soon as it started though, and I put the window back up. My eye was watering and my nose was running, but there was nothing that the women could do for me as I had to stay closed behind the car window. It’s weird having to resist the normal human interactions that would happen in a given situation. I could tell that these were kind women, even behind their protective outfits. It felt kind of like we were all fighting the instinct to interact normally. It certainly felt strange to be treated as someone dangerous, that could pass on the infection, but that’s how everyone at the centre has to treat you. They’re all on the alert in case you open your window too much. I did manage to say a quick “thank you for your work” before my window closed, but that was the only informal moment in the whole, very serious interaction. I could see the car in front of me finishing up and, just before I pulled off, I gave a thumbs up to the woman that I had been dealing with. She gave me a thumbs up back and, with that, I drove out the end of the tunnel, stopped the car at the side of the road, and took a minute to gather myself.

    The whole testing process took a bit of energy out of me, probably due to the nerves and to having to process such a new situation. My nose hurt slightly for the rest of the day too. I still managed to be productive though. I got some schoolwork done, I submitted a big online shop for tomorrow and I even managed to get out in the sunshine for a little while to do some gardening. In the evening I ordered a much longed for takeaway. I got the delivery man to leave it on our doorstep and I told him, over the phone, to collect his tip that was taped to the door.

    I hope the weather’s nice again tomorrow. It definitely helps to lift the mood!
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  • Day 9 - It’s the weekend

    21 de marzo de 2020, Irlanda ⋅ ☁️ 6 °C

    It’s Saturday, but all of the days are blending together so much that you’d hardly know. Stephen Fry had a very poetic way of describing our situation on the television last night, which I really liked. He said that the main thing to change for us now has been time and how we fit ourselves into our time. Where we once had a large fishing net of time, with lines and knots and lots of markers, now we have an empty expanse.

    I stayed in bed longer today to mark the weekend. Then I got up and sat in my new favourite spot by the window (and beside my sunflower seedlings) for a few hours. In this time, I read a magazine, I read a little book that I had been given as an engagement present, and I did an IQ test that I got at Christmas!

    After lunch, I took all my food out of the presses, threw out anything out of date and put everything neatly back. The extra space created will serve well when our upcoming online shopping arrives! I felt very satisfied with my food cupboard clearout. These few weeks are really starting to have a positive impact on my clutter, my relationship with “stuff” and on my level of organisation.

    Feeling very accomplished, I sat down for our usually viewing of the six o clock news, ate some dinner that Peter had cooked and put on a film.

    I’m still feeling a little bit of chest congestion, but am very much improving. I can’t wait to be back to normal. While it was raining today, the weather forecast says it’ll be sunny and 14 degrees early next week. I hope I have enough energy to get out into the garden then!
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  • Day 8 - Still waiting for a test

    20 de marzo de 2020, Irlanda ⋅ ⛅ 7 °C

    My chest infection symptoms are improving, thankfully, but I’m anxious just to get my test over with at this stage. Mostly because then I’ll be able to go outside again for walks and runs etc. Anyone waiting for a test has to self-isolate until they get the all-clear.

    Today was the last day of my steroid prescription from the doctor. I think they’ve helped my chest tightness a huge amount. I was awake from about 4.30am to 6am last night though. It’s difficult to know if that was because of my chest tightness, or because of a subconscious, or actually maybe a conscious worry about our whole scenario. We’re surrounded by so many horrific news stories, it’s an effort to stay calm all day. There are blips where news intrudes, even though we’re trying to just stick to the six o clock news on RTÉ. I think WhatsApp is the main offender, in terms of unwanted interruptions during the day!

    This morning, anyway, was very productive. I’d two online video lessons, and almost half of one of my classes are now out of the country, having headed home in the past few days. One student was even dialling in from a “5 star hotel in Dubai,” as she was very keen to tell us all!

    In the afternoon, I did a few productive jobs. I printed some leaflets to distribute in our community (after suggesting the idea in an existing neighbourhood WhatsApp group), I phoned my great-aunt Nuala in Cork, who seems to be doing very well, and I did some cleaning.

    In the evening, we’d a very enjoyable family games night on Zoom. Most people’s usernames were pandemic-themed. I’m glad we all have a sense of humour still! Then, before I went to bed, I spotted our friend Simone, who is a paramedic, demonstrating Covid19 testing on The Late Late Show. I’m feeling very proud again!
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  • Day 7 - More things to think about

    19 de marzo de 2020, Irlanda ⋅ ⛅ 7 °C

    Wow, the days are really starting to blend into one. I can barely remember what I did this morning now, let alone yesterday!

    Today was one of my more productive work days. I’ve been balancing very productive work days with less productive ones in between, mostly to keep motivation up and to not get burned out. This morning I got loads of work done with some Leaving Cert Biology topics. Then, at 12.45pm, I had to meet two students individually online to see how they’re getting on. Both seem happy and glad to chat!

    At 1.30pm we had a staff meeting and most of the other staff are changing their online teaching strategy to something similar to mine. I’ve been going with a less is more approach, where I meet students once a week as a group online, and the day before, the students have had time to watch my online lecture and do some homework on it. The other teachers have found that they were attempting too many Zoom meetings and that it wasn’t really working. I showed them some of the approaches I had been going with so far that had been working well for me. My manager also told us that four, out of the eleven students in our Engineering class, have returned home to Oman and Kuwait. Oman seemingly have a firewall that prevents Zoom video meetings, so we’ll see how this goes! Finally we discussed our end of year exams. We’re all in uncharted territory here but it sounds like we’ll go with some sort of model where the students will be graded based on assignments at home, as well as taking their end of semester 1 exams etc into account.

    After all these video calls, I did a few household jobs, then had a nice shower before sitting down for our usual gathering around the TV to watch the 6 o clock news. 191 new cases today - a massive jump from 69 yesterday!

    Today also Leaving Cert language oral exams have been cancelled and everyone’s getting 100% in their oral exam. Excellent news for many I’m sure, although I hear that Muckross are getting lots of emails from parents complaining already!

    7.30pm brought a Zoom Pete/weights session with Fiona and Orlaith. I led the warmup and motivated them, as I’m not well enough to train properly yet. I think all three of us enjoyed the social contact!

    Finally, at 9pm, myself and Peter made a necessary journey out to Tesco to get milk etc. I stayed in the car, while Peter went in, due to me waiting for a Covid test. Surprisingly, this has been one of the moments that has made me feel most proud so far. As I looked at Tesco from my car in the car park, I could see people hand sanitising at the door. I could see everyone queuing 2m apart from each other, and I could see lots of people sitting in cars in the car park while they, like us, sent just one person in to do the shopping. A big team effort was going on behind the big windows of Tesco, and actually, for the first real time, I feel like the team is actually the whole of Ireland.
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  • Day 6 - All a bit calm again

    18 de marzo de 2020, Irlanda ⋅ ☁️ 9 °C

    Last night was the first night since Saturday that I wasn’t woken by shortness of breath during the night, and it was lovely to wake up and realise that I had made it all the way to the morning! My lungs even felt much clearer when I woke up too. It’s funny how things that you take for granted normally can make you so happy in other circumstances. Being able to take an (almost) normal breath is bliss, and such a help to my mindset that had taken a hit over the past few days!

    With this new, positive mindset, I was up by 9am and working on my chemistry classes. I recorded two lectures and sent out a few emails. I then took a break at lunchtime to watch the last few episodes of “Love is Blind.” The last episode, with the weddings, is completely mad, and even Peter joined me to watch the couples decide, on the alter, whether they wanted to get married or not! Ah, light entertainment is so wonderful these days!

    In the afternoon, I booked weekly Tesco deliveries, to make sure that we’ll be able to get food delivered over the next few weeks, especially as the number of confirmed Covid cases inevitably rises.

    In the evening, to continue the calm, I put on lyric FM, read a magazine and then me and Peter sat around for a while reminiscing about previous ski holidays! Although Peter was not happy with the jazz music being played on lyric!

    Finally, later in the evening, I’d a catch up Zoom meeting with Mum, Fiona and Anna. These video meet ups are lovely. Peter had one with his family earlier too. We should probably have been doing them before all of this really! Before bed, we’d a chance to watch an episode of The Handmaid’s Tale, and then, quite tired, and not fully better, I headed off for what would hopefully be another good night’s rest.
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  • Day 5 - St Patrick's Day

    17 de marzo de 2020, Irlanda ⋅ 🌧 11 °C

    Lá Fhéile Pádraig Daoibh! ☘️ It was Peter’s idea to wear our Ireland jerseys today, which I happily got on board with! Any excuse for a bit of light relief from the scary situation that we’re surrounded by.

    There wasn’t too much to report from the first half of today anyway. I slept the least out of any night so far since my chest congestion started on Saturday. I feel like I was tossing and turning all night, sometimes trying to clear my chest, but most of the time just trying to get back to sleep. It all became clear in the morning though, when I read that the steroid tablets I’ve been prescribed for my chest can cause insomnia, and that they should be taken in the morning. Eight tablets at 10pm last night so probably wasn’t the smartest thing, in hindsight!

    My phone also decided to pack it in during one of my bouts of wakefulness. Cue me spending over eight hours today from 8am trying to reboot the phone without losing all my saved photos etc. After hours of going from phone, to laptop, to verification code in some email address that I don’t have the password for etc, I finally got the phone going, although it’s been reset to 2017 unfortunately!

    During this time, my stress was unknowingly mounting. No working phone meant that I was uncontactable by the covid19 testers, and I really didn’t want to miss that. The rising stress did make me shout at Peter once, before calming down again. However, on the bright side, the stressful shouting seemed to kickstart him into all sorts of action and he was a busy bee for the following hour or so doing all sorts of household chores!

    Damo arrived in from Donegal this afternoon too. I’m going to try an avoid meeting him at all around the house, as much as possible, but we’ve made a plan together for how to keep our house as clean and safe. Peter, Damo and I all seem to have the same chesty cough at this stage, but we’re still going to follow the guidelines. Damo’s actually staying off work for the rest of the week as a result of my symptoms and imminent test. I’m delighted to hear that he won’t be heading out and potentially bringing the virus into the house!

    At 9pm, Taoiseach Leo Varadkar gave one of the best political speeches I’ve ever heard. His message was stark, but it made us feel calm, rather than panicked. He got the balance perfectly right. He also covered all angles and had lots of lovely, little messages throughout. At one point he thanked teachers and lecturers for keeping the education of our students going and, while me and Peter were whooping in response, Damo was laughing and saying “oh, hmm, this is awkward!” He wasn’t specifically thanked, even though he works in pharma, making lifesaving drugs! He also didn’t specifically thank accountants - I can’t wait to text Fiona about this! Haha!

    I feel great going to bed now - much improved, both physically and mentally! I’d a good old laugh with Peter, when I got giddy just disinfecting the tables before going to bed. It suddenly was hilarious to go crazy trying to disinfect all sorts of random things! I’m really starting to realise the huge importance of being able to laugh, at least once a day, throughout this.

    Now here’s to my first good night’s sleep since Saturday hopefully!
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  • Day 4 - I’m getting tested

    16 de marzo de 2020, Irlanda ⋅ 🌧 9 °C

    Today got off to a good start, I thought! It was the first day of online lessons for our students, so I joined in to watch my managers 9am introductory lesson, to see how it all went. I watched it from bed - thank goodness for the “mute camera” function!

    After this, I got up, did a few jobs around the house, and at one point even thought to myself “I actually feel great!” I made my lecture for later on in the week and at 12pm I logged on to my first live “Zoom” meeting with my engineering class. The class went really well and the students seem to have really engaged with the material that I’ve posted online for them. They had lots of questions for me!

    After this online class, I phoned my GP to try to get my usual prescription sent out to me, and the secretary told me that the doctor would phone me back. About an hour later, I received a call from the doctor, as expected. What was slightly unexpected, however, was how seriously the doctor took my description of the chest and cough symptoms I’ve been having. From today, anyone who displays any respiratory symptoms is meant to get tested. So, what was initially a simple call about my prescription, turned into my doctor ordering a covid19 tester to come to my house, while asking me to self-isolate and for Peter to self-quarantine!

    This news kind of turned my day on its head a bit. I did managed to host another good online class with my science group at 3pm, but after that my focus was on getting up to the pharmacy to collect my prescription for steroids and inhaler for my chest, before the shop closed for St Patrick’s Day tomorrow.

    Of course, just when I thought things couldn’t get any more mad, the electricity went. This resulted in the pharmacy not being able to process my prescription, despite Peter very kindly going to the door of the darkened Lloyd’s pharmacy in Hollyhill to talk to the pharmacist there. Cue a bit of panic! As we’d no electricity at home for internet or for our laptops (which both need to be plugged in to work!), I had to phone Anna to search for the fax number of a Cork pharmacy online. Thankfully also, the weary doctor’s secretary stayed on phone duty a little bit after hours for me to call her back and give her the new fax number for the prescription. A quick trip down the empty roads, with Peter again going into the shop for me, meant that I was soon back home with my medication in hand.

    There was still no electricity however, so I lit some candles and, as I sat there in the dark waiting for the Covid19 testers to come to my door, I thought “what on earth has happened for it to come to this?!” There are so many surreal moments every day now!

    That evening both me and Peter were in need of some light relief, so the guitar was taken out and I’d a good old laugh singing harmonies along to some of Peter’s self-penned tunes. A quick catch up then with Mum on Zoom, and I was off to bed for some much-needed rest. Who knows what tomorrow will bring!
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  • Day 3 at home

    15 de marzo de 2020, Irlanda ⋅ ⛅ 9 °C

    Day three didn’t get off to a great start, as I woke at about 2.30am with quite bad chest congestion and spent at least half an hour awake trying to cough to clear my chest.

    Thankfully I eventually fell asleep, but woke again at about 8am with more chest congestion. Steam inhalation from a bowl of hot water, my inhaler and more coughing did the job again, but I stayed in bed until about 11am to recuperate a bit after a disrupted night’s sleep.

    When I got up, I spent the morning working on resources for one of the Leaving Cert Biology chapters. I was very productive. By about lunchtime, however, I was not feeling in a good place mentally. Fiona has just told me the news of her work colleague that has suspected Covid19, after her boyfriend’s co-worker contracted it. I have also been spending much of every day so far reading Facebook, Instagram, boards.ie, twitter and lots of WhatsApp groups. There is so much sad and scary news out there, especially about what’s happening in Italy. This is in addition to all the rumours that are wildly circulating, and I think it’s all just come in on top of me a bit.

    By 4pm, I was back in bed for a nap, and when Peter came in to check on me, the floodgates opened and I had a good cry! It was only yesterday that we were laughing at the RTE weather woman who was tweeting about breaking down and crying, and saying that she was going to stay off social media. Today, it’s me. I never really believed it before when they said that this kind of scenario could have a negative impact on people’s mental health, but here I am and it’s only day three!

    I’ve decided to drastically reduce how much time I spend reading things online, and I’m going to try to get my daily update from the six o clock news on television only, as much as possible. Me and Peter are also going to try to talk about nice things, and not just the virus, as much as we can too. It also doesn’t help that I seem to have a mild chest infection, while Peter has a cough also. I’d probably be better able to deal with things if I wasn’t feeling sick myself!

    Anyway, it turned out that a nap was just what I needed. Following this, we also headed out for a walk in the sunshine, up to the SuperValu and home again. To maintain social distancing, Peter went into the shop while I waited outside. It was amazing how many people walked close to me though, even though I was standing in the far corner of the car park! We also saw one particularly big group of teenagers all hanging out together on our way home. Why would their parents let them do that?

    This evening, I made homemade chips for me and Peter to have with our dinner. I cut up the potatoes in our living room, while the Dancing with the Stars final (which was actually meant to be on next week) played out on the TV, in an almost completely empty television studio!

    I decided to head to bed a little earlier tonight, but not before putting in an online order with Tesco. There’s rumours that the country will be locking down completely tomorrow, so we don’t want to have to go out to the shops if we can help it. The earliest bookable delivery slot with Tesco was nine days from now. Who knows what will be happening by then?!
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  • Day 2 in isolation

    14 de marzo de 2020, Irlanda ⋅ ☁️ 9 °C

    It’s Saturday, so no work today. However, to facilitate an ordered mind for working from home on Monday, I’ve decided to deep clean the house.

    I hoovered and cleaned the floors in every room, wiped all surfaces with antibacterial spray, cleaned all bathrooms and rearranged some furniture. I’m feeling very happy and relaxed now that the place is in such good order, and our workspace is neat!

    I gave Peter a list of things to do, as he was keen to help out, but the list didn’t end up exactly as I remember writing it (see photo below)!

    At about 4pm, I managed to get out, between rain showers, for a thirty minute run. I jogged up to our local pharmacy, to buy a thermometer, and then jogged back again (we’ve been checking our body temperatures every day but I broke our previous thermometer by washing it in hot water)! The roads were very quiet, the paths were very quiet and there were very few people up around our local shops. People do seem to be staying at home.

    Peter has a bit of a cough, but no temperature, so we think and hope it’s probably just a regular cold. We’ll keep an eye on it with our new thermometer!

    This evening, I found newspapers that mum bought two weeks ago (28th Feb) when she came down to visit. Their headlines cover the first coronavirus case found on the island of Ireland. That seems like an absolute world away now. Tonight on the news, they described thirty nine new cases in Ireland and one new death.
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  • Day 1 of working from home

    13 de marzo de 2020, Irlanda ⋅ ⛅ 7 °C

    All schools and colleges are closed from today, so me and Peter started our first day of working from home.

    At first I didn’t know where to start, and my mind felt a bit muddled, but after setting up our work area to give us both enough space, I think we both had a productive day!

    I started the day by making one more trip down to Tesco to pick up some Milton to sterilise our thermometer. Then I recorded a lecture, had an online meeting with my colleagues, tidied the house and uploaded learning material for my students.

    Peter is feeling a bit chesty and has a mild cough, but he doesn’t have a temperature, so hopefully it’s just a mild cold. It’s nervous times, wondering about every little cough or ache in your body. Here’s hoping that we can all stay well and make the most of these few weeks. As long as we’re not sick, I think we could have a nicer, more relaxed lifestyle for the next while.

    Below is the front page of the Irish Times - I bought it as yesterday felt like quite a historic day!
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  • All schools and colleges closed!

    12 de marzo de 2020, Irlanda ⋅ 🌬 8 °C

    I went in to teach today, as normal, but by early morning there was an update online that Leo Varadkar would be making an important announcement at 11am. I kept a web browser open on my computer during my lesson and, sure enough, at 11am Leo Varadkar appeared outside his hotel in America (where he’s visiting Trump for St. Patrick’s Day) to say “I need to talk to you about coronavirus and covid19.”

    On hearing the news that all schools and colleges would close from tomorrow, I gave my class a break and headed down to my manager’s office. I was the first to break the news to her, but her boss in Dublin was already ringing the phone when I entered the room. We’ve prepared for online teaching, but there’s still a sense of nervousness about the building as the news filters out.

    I know the shops will be chaotic this evening, so Peter and I head to Tesco at 1pm to stock up for the next two weeks at least. The shop is very busy and things like toilet roll are flying off the shelf as soon as they’re put out! We got another packet, but I think we’ve enough at this stage!!

    In the afternoon, I was back in college for my last class of the day. After sending home an obviously sick student who had travelled here from South Korea’s two weeks ago, class proceeded as normal. By the end of class at 5.30pm though, the building was eerily quiet and the maintenance staff were trying to empty the place as quickly as they could.

    I went straight from my college to collect Peter from UCC. People were streaming out of buildings with computers and books, and there were cars everywhere loading up with stuff. We headed home with all our bits and pieces, ready to begin a new type of normal. I don’t know how this is going to work out, but we’re ready. I think we’ll start tomorrow morning by organising our space to make it comfortable for us both to work in. Interesting times ahead!
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  • Rumours of college closure

    11 de marzo de 2020, Irlanda ⋅ 🌧 9 °C

    Today I met Megan and baby Maura for the first time since November. I honestly don’t know where the time goes to?! We went to a lovely cafe called The Workshop. It is out in the middle of nowhere near the airport and the soup and sandwiches were delicious....as were the caramel squares that we got to take away!

    After lunch, it was straight home to be interviewed on Skype by a researcher from Trinity who is doing his thesis on the topic of the value that PhD qualified teachers can bring to schools. I spent an hour and a half being interviewed, but it was an interesting chat and it covered a subject that’s close to my heart, obviously!

    After this it was down to training at the Mardyke with St Finbarrs. The head coach said that the current advice from the AAI is to proceed with training and our session tonight was 5 x 1km reps. I managed three of the reps as I’m still on the comeback trail since being sick.

    Peter and I were meant to go to Tesco after my training but I was tired and he was working, so we didn’t. By the time I was going to bed though, I was already regretting our decision not to go, as an email had come through from my manager to say that the closure of our college is imminent! Feels like things are ramping up now!
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  • Long run at the Marina with Mum

    1 de marzo de 2020, Irlanda ⋅ ⛅ 8 °C

    The weather was nice this morning, so we decided to do what I often do on a Sunday, which was to head to the Marina. I did a seventy minute run, and just about got to seventy minutes as I’ve lost a lot of fitness since being sick! Mum walked the same Marina loop as me and we met up at the market in Blackrock afterwards.
    I’ve never stopped at the market after my run before, but it’s something I will routinely do in future after today. We each got a fruit juice and a scone - delicious and good for refuelling!
    At home for the afternoon, we read newspapers and generally chilled out. It was nice not really having anything specific to do!
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  • Crawford Art Gallery

    26 de febrero de 2020, Irlanda ⋅ ☁️ 7 °C

    I’d the afternoon off so decided to walk into town to the Crawford Art Gallery. I’d heard it described as a “haven in the middle of the city” before, but I didn’t expect to enjoy it as much as I did.

    They are currently exhibiting work from the finalists in the Portrait Artist and Young Portrait Artist of the Year competition. It was so interesting, especially the descriptions below each painting which described why the artist chose the subject that they did. There are some seriously talented children out there too!

    This place really is a lovely, quiet spot. Once you’re inside the building, you could be anywhere in the world. I must keep an eye out for future exhibitions!
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  • Pancake Tuesday

    25 de febrero de 2020, Irlanda ⋅ 🌧 2 °C

    It’s Pancake Tuesday! I made healthy pancakes again this year - porridge oats, eggs and yoghurt. Yum!

    I also did lots of sorting out of stuff around the house and went to my strength and conditioning class for the second time since my chest infection. It’s good to be on the fitness comeback trail!

    Unfortunately, word is coming through this evening that the Ireland vs Italy rugby match, in two weeks time, might be cancelled as a result of the coronavirus. I hope this doesn’t happen, as we have tickets!
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  • Exam board

    24 de febrero de 2020, Irlanda ⋅ 🌙 4 °C

    Not feeling too sore today after the Kinsale 10 mile yesterday, which is surprising. Although I did try a 30 minute run,and the heart rate was higher than usual, so I cut it short to 3km instead. It ended up being about twenty five minutes in total, out to the Blarney junction and back again.

    In the afternoon we had our exam board meeting for the end of semester one exams. We discussed results, predicted grades and the chances of each student getting their desired course for next year. I’m happy with how my chemistry classes got on, but disappointed at how many students are most likely going to miss out on great opportunities for next year. UCC have given us guaranteed places for things like nursing and medicine, but the students involved aren’t achieving the required minimum grades. I think that, somehow, some of the students don’t appreciate what’s at stake here, in terms of their career and life in general. Otherwise, they’d be putting in the necessary work.

    This evening, I had Irish class and we chatted about hobbies and free time. “Is liom dul ag rith!” Seachtain na Gaeilge is coming up so I must check out some activities for that.

    Right now though it’s off to bed to read a bit more of this great book which, coincidentally, is written by a guy that James Cottle went to college with. He informed me of this fact while I was reading the book on my sun lounger in La Santa!
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  • Midterm shopping

    19 de febrero de 2020, Irlanda ⋅ 🌧 9 °C

    I found a lovely little shop on Princes Street today that sells games, interesting books, art supplies, science sets and all sorts of other gifts. I actually bought Mia’s birthday present here, and it was a good feeling to have spent my money in such a nice, local shop!

    Afterwards, I went to see this years Oscar-winning film ‘Parasite.’ It’s a Korean film. Very entertaining and suspenseful, but I must do some googling to read about the meaning behind some parts of it!
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  • Dundalk parkrun

    8 de febrero de 2020, Irlanda ⋅ 🌬 8 °C

    Me and Mum have now done all parkruns within about an hour’s radius of Dublin (except Poppintree for me), so one of the next closest options was Dundalk parkrun.
    It’s three laps of a reasonably flat course, set in the same place as the cross country events that have taken place in Dundalk IT recently. Still in recovery from my chest infection, and trying to be patient, I kept my heart rate below 150 and finished the run in 30:34. Mum went ahead after the first lap and finished in under 30 minutes. Because the sun was shining, we walked a lap and a half of the course before hopping in the car back to Dublin.
    That afternoon, it was off to the Ireland Wales rugby match for me, with Fiona, Paul and John Sheehan. Then we had a spontaneous catch up with Orlaith in Blackrock, before she drove me up to vote at about 9.30pm, just before the polls closed! I was very, very glad of the lift as storm Ciara was just getting underway!
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  • First day it feels like Spring!

    5 de febrero de 2020, Irlanda ⋅ ⛅ 10 °C

    It was freezing this morning, and my car was iced over when I left for work at about 8.20am. It turned out to be a lovely, Spring day though when I emerged from exam supervision after lunch, so I decided to go for a walk around Blackrock.

    I feel like I’m finally emerging from part 2 of my chest infection, but I don’t want to run just yet, so I went for an hour’s walk instead.

    When I got home, I washed my car and then, spontaneously, went mad cutting loads of stuff back in the garden and generally giving the outdoor areas around the house a tidy.

    Moment of the day, however, has to have been when I said “there’s nothing like a nice, real fire” to our neighbour whose house burnt down a few weeks ago. She was coming out to get coal and had been saying to me that she has to light a fire because her central heating is still not working since the fire damage. When I realised what I had said, I almost hastily added “....in a fireplace” but decided just to cut my losses instead!
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  • Mallow Town Parkrun

    1 de febrero de 2020, Irlanda ⋅ ☀️ 9 °C

    Headed to Mallow for their 1st birthday parkrun! The ting I liked most about this run was that the run directors briefing must have been the shortest I’ve come across yet! She said everything that other run directors say, but it only took about three minutes - brilliant.

    This is a lovely run beside the river Blackwater. It starts on paths, then goes onto a more cross country course, before returning to the paths again. It ran it in 31:57, which was as much as I was able for today while trying to keep my heart rate in the “easy” zone. Recovery from my chest infection last week is slow!

    At the end, the barcode scanner scanned my athlete barcode but not my finishing token, so I emailed them my details just to be sure. I appeared in the results but I’m not sure if that was because of my email. He was using the volunteer app on his phone - maybe that works differently?!

    After the run, it was straight home to get ready to head to Killaloe for Peter’s aunt Margies 90th birthday!
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  • General election!

    24 de enero de 2020, Irlanda ⋅ ⛅ 6 °C

    Canvassing for the upcoming general election is well underway! We must have had about forty leaflets put through our door at this stage, and about ten people have called to the house. It’s interesting, almost all of the callers have been before 5pm - I’m not sure who they’re trying to catch.

    It’s interesting how many of the leaflets mention something along the lines of “Ireland exists outside the M50.” It’s definitely a different type of massage to what I’m used to getting. I was told to vote for the guy on the leaflet below because he lives just down the road in Blarney, and that was pretty much the only reason given!

    A canvasser for Mick Barry has been the most recent person to call. I told him that my vote was in Dublin but he said that he wanted to talk to me anyway. In the course of our chat, he mentioned that he didn’t fully understand the teachers’ pay issue. Fifteen minutes later, I think he understood, which is just as well because he also told me that he’s heading out on the picket line to join the teachers tomorrow!
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  • Christmas shopping is mad here too!

    19 de diciembre de 2019, Irlanda ⋅ 🌧 6 °C

    Today was my last day in Cork before driving up to Dublin for the Christmas holidays, and I had an idea that I’d spend it in a lovely relaxed way, wandering around some imaginary Christmas markets in the Winter sun! Instead, it was lashing rain, so I ditched my plan to walk into town and ended up sitting in mad traffic for half the day as I headed off to Wilton shopping centre!
    A nice break from it all was my run out in Mahon that morning, even if I did get completely soaked! And the evening was nice - I went to yoga in Ballincollig, followed by Netflix and wrapping presents at home while Peter was out at his Christmas party. Look at the photos of this huge Christmas nativity scene that someone out in Ballincollig has outside their house!
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