Looking back a year...What did we, individually, get right?
_ precautions
_ preparations
-Assumptions
I got most "right," but TBH, I think this was mostly a self-imposed over-blown event.
I work in an ER - last year I was doing a fellowship. Our leadership quickly had mask rationing, though we didn't get hit by Covid locally until several months in. That means I had several used, but not exposed, N-95 masks at home. I was also able to run out and grab supplies before/after my shifts, allowing my wife and kids to do the home quarantine thing.
I saw the TP shortage coming about a week early, and managed to stock up. Hand sanitizer caught me short, but we're more of a soap & water family, so no big deal. Doug Ritter had a link on ETS at some point in April (May?) with a link to hand sanitizer, so I ordered a bunch for my family. We're still grinding through that.
Work from home wasn't an issue. My wife was already doing telehealth as a pilot for her job when Covid kicked off. However, she ended up getting fired and on unemployment, which paid relatively close to what she was making. At the same time, I was pulled out of fellowship and called up by the military, which ironically paid better. By summer we had new job offers in hand, so the fiscal impact was minimal.
School from home wasn't a big deal. As I said, wife was already home. Small town, we knew our son's teacher on a personal level, and my daughter is head of the class in a lot of topics (no joke, she use to go do classes with the first grade class while in kindergarten). So about 2 hours a morning, they buckled down and ground through the online shennanigans. School this academic year was back in full swing.
Masks were silly. We didn't have any at home. I was able to grab the last P-100 industrial mask at our local Ace Hardware, but never wore it at work. We were able to get cloth masks when they started to come around relatively easily, which I attribute more to industries cranking up to meet demand, more than any sort of prep on our part.
Assumptions - overall, I really called the "rolling Covid" that we saw - a city would get hit, hard, then about 4-6 weeks later it would die down. I had hoped that America Masking Up in April/May of 2020 would nip it in the bud, but when NYC bailed like startled roaches, they really screwed up any chance of containment. I didn't expect to still be talking about this a year later, but, c'est la vie.
Overall, this was a weird year, a departure from the norm, but never any real setback.