Category Archives: Covid19

Sixth time is the Charmin!

After 6 and a half weeks of searching, I found TP!

Sure, I was there at 7:30AM, after first striking out at three other stores. But, success!

Thanks, Wal*Mart!

[PS: I still hate you]

I Mean

From Bryan Regan, on FB (plenty more pics of plenty more crazies at the link):

Where exactly do you think you are ... ?

Dipshits marching around the NC capitol, complaining about tyranny and 5G and their rights.

If any of their delusions about tyranny were right, they'd all be dead or in jail by now. Taking the kids out for a stroll around the downtown and a gorgeous spring day, complaining about the hoax and the tyranny that keeps them locked up while wearing facemasks, kindof sends mixed messages.

PulseOx

Pneumonia is an infection of the lungs in which the air sacs fill with fluid or pus. Normally, patients develop chest discomfort, pain with breathing and other breathing problems. But when Covid pneumonia first strikes, patients don’t feel short of breath, even as their oxygen levels fall. And by the time they do, they have alarmingly low oxygen levels and moderate-to-severe pneumonia (as seen on chest X-rays). Normal oxygen saturation for most persons at sea level is 94 percent to 100 percent; Covid pneumonia patients I saw had oxygen saturations as low as 50 percent.

To my amazement, most patients I saw said they had been sick for a week or so with fever, cough, upset stomach and fatigue, but they only became short of breath the day they came to the hospital. Their pneumonia had clearly been going on for days, but by the time they felt they had to go to the hospital, they were often already in critical condition.

...

There is a way we could identify more patients who have Covid pneumonia sooner and treat them more effectively — and it would not require waiting for a coronavirus test at a hospital or doctor’s office. It requires detecting silent hypoxia early through a common medical device that can be purchased without a prescription at most pharmacies: a pulse oximeter.

Why yes, I did just order one from Amazon!

RIP Matthew Seligman

... of the Soft Boys - another COVID19 victim.

Robyn Hitchcock writes:

I’m writing this as Matthew Seligman slips out of this life and into wherever souls go next. Everybody goes, but none of us were expecting Matthew to leave us so abruptly, forever. It is strange and very sad to be talking of him in the past tense. I first met Matthew in 1976 in Cambridge, just before the beginning of the Soft Boys. He had nice dark hair and was very charming, with a slight break in his voice. A joyous and funky bass player, he made Underwater Moonlight an exuberant LP to record and listen to. His manic bass run at the end of "Insanely Jealous" and his stately propeller dive into the last chorus of the title track, as well as the insistent groove he brought to "Kingdom of Love" are some of the finest bass playing I have ever witnessed.
Matthew truly believed in the Soft Boys and the record. It was early 1980 and the second Cold War was intensifying. I fondly remember stomping over to the pub after a session and him saying through the dismal spring wind, "We may all be about to be blown up, but at least we'll have made a classic album."
The band didn't survive too long into the bleak 1980s, but Matthew found a home as a bass player in many great musical shells. The Thompson Twins, David Bowie, Morrissey and Chrissie Hynde were all lucky beneficiaries of his intuitive and circular grooves.
As well as bass playing, he specialized in one-liners. “Pop music is about over-stating the obvious” and “What you’ve proved to the music industry is that you can’t sell records” are two of my favourites.
I’m profoundly grateful to have played music with him - you could really see his face light up like a full moon when he listened back to a take he enjoyed. Onstage he would lope and lurch and pace when the music moved him. Matthew is, was, and always will be one of the greats. My heart goes out to his partner, Mami; his children Daisy and Lily, and all who were close to him and his lunar intensity.
Robyn H, Nashville, April 17 2020

Ta Da

A month of sickness songs. There are enough out there that I probably could do another one. I won't.

Damn, this sitting at home is getting to be a drag.