Sunday, May 17, 2020

The view from here

A little less than a week ago, the premier announced that the oldest and youngest children would go back to school at the end of May, and the others two weeks later.

So Jonathan will be going back to school in about a week and a half.

I hope we're ready. I guess we're ready. There have been fewer and fewer cases, with more testing. There are fewer known cases now than there were while Jonathan was still attending school in March.

But there are still cases. There are two outbreak clusters that are growing, and other cases identified that aren't clearly linked. Still, the strategy here was never to completely eliminate the disease. The plan was to test, track, shut down schools and businesses locally in the event of an outbreak, and do this well enough that life could go back to somewhat normal.

Only seven new cases overnight. Only 110 active cases in the state. We're doing ok. We can move forward here in ways that other countries can't. Jonathan will go back to school. Maybe I'll even teach from the university instead of from my bedroom when the second semester starts at the end of July. Maybe.

Meanwhile, we eat and sleep and work. Move from screen to screen to screen. Bake bread. Cook meals. Walk.

I take photos of our walks.


Tim and Jonathan complain that they have to wait for me.  


But the world is still a nice place, and the camera helps me remember that.


Talking and walking and processing.


I think we'll be ok here. I hope. Back to school anyway.

Sunday, May 3, 2020

Coronavirus travel photos

For six weeks, whenever we have left the house we have walked east. East is a great direction. It has park and grocery store.


Today, to be totally different, we left our house and walked north. North is also a very nice direction, with parks and city view. And the Shrine of Remembrance.


I swear if I can, I'll get these boys of mine to walk west next. To the west is the park, small lake, and then if we go a whole 40 minutes, even the bay. I promise to upload my travel photos here first.

Sunday, April 26, 2020

New stuff!

I've been doing a few new things this month:

New lessons. Particularly, ballet lessons, for the first time since high school. The Australian Ballet has recorded free ballet lessons for everyone, in three different levels. I did the first intermediate lesson in my kitchen on Saturday. Guys, it was really fun. Really really fun. I need to sign up for real ballet lessons after we are back to normal. I had forgotten how great dance could be. And how strong I used to be. Today, my legs ache in a really good way.

Take your own ballet lessons here:

https://australianballet.com.au/event/studios

New hair cut. I've wanted shorter hair for a while, but haven't taken the time to go get it cut. I decided to do something crazy and just cut it short myself. Because if it looks bad, I have at least a month to grow it out! Tim helped trim the jagged edges at the very back. I think it turned out well.


New diet. With Jonathan deciding to be vegetarian, we've tried a few different meal ideas. The vegetarian lasagna was a hit. The Moroccan couscous was good but not amazing. Tomorrow we'll try lentil soup. And there's always grilled cheese.

New stuff for work. I finished a paper last week, and posted it. I started organising a webinar. I gave an online talk to a crowd mostly in New York City, and attended another at 6:15am. I feel like I'm catching back up again. From my bedroom. And it's ok. I think I'll be ok. We'll be ok.

I hope you are also ok.

Saturday, April 4, 2020

Welcome to the new reality

A few rambling thoughts on this new reality thing that you can call covid social distancing, or stay-at-home. But don't call it lockdown. That word sounds too scary, says the prime minister, and might cause people to start hoarding food again. We are merely in stage-three-social-distancing, containment phase.

Rambling thought number one: It doesn't really seem fair that I am still waking up with migraines every two weeks. The world has changed, migraines. Don't you understand? You are supposed to stay home. But the caffeine pills will hold out. I can still chase the migraines away at the cost of my sleep.

Number two, I am so very extremely lucky that my work ports almost seamlessly to online. At least, I think this is lucky? I was not assigned to teach this semester, and my research doesn't require much equipment. Finishing up papers requires only a computer, some scratch paper and pens, the internet, and a working brain. Of those four required items, the working brain part is the only bit that isn't consistently available from home, although the internet occasionally flickers under the weight of Remote Everything. But the brain is tricky. Not only did the migraines apparently not get the memo about staying home, but the brain is worried. It isn't used to this.

On the other hand, I found in the first week of panic and distress that the only thing that could soothe the brain was immersing it gently in a cold bath of mathematics. Other former interests couldn't hold it down. I couldn't put it into a novel -- too stressful. I couldn't watch movies -- too stressful. Endless scrolling through Twitter could keep the brain occupied, but not soothe. But if I ripped that brain away from Twitter, I found I could make the hours go by in quiet peace while creating convoluted mathematical figures and ironing out arguments in proofs.

Unfortunately, because my work ports almost completely seamlessly online, I haven't been able to immerse myself in mathematics for more than a few hours at a time. All the meetings I had Before have been ported nearly seamlessly online. I have six research students this semester who I meet with one-on-one for an hour or so each, plus a group meeting, plus a seminar. And now my administrative meetings are picking up again. Promotion Committee, moved online. Referee report due. You can write reports in a crisis, no? Application for a workshop in 18 months, composed with Optimism that sometimes seems misplaced: Optimism that in 18 months, there will be no travel bans, and there will once again be Funding. Mentoring meeting, online. Response required from me on behalf of the women in maths group, emailed. And so it goes.

I miss my office. I have huge physical whiteboards in my office with eight colours of markers, and my students and I usually fill them all each meeting. Now we're trying to do the same thing with a screen. Luckily the university has been generous with support. Even the brand new graduate student, who moved here from Brazil just two weeks before this mess started, has been given a tablet computer on loan, so we can decorate whiteboards made of glass and light and internet with peace and calm and mathematics.


Honestly? I dread the student meetings. I see them approaching on the calendar and I dread them. These students, they are mine. I need them to be okay. Who else will help them immerse their brains in the cool and soothing bath of mathematics, if not me? I am afraid for them, in this crisis. They are single. Some live with roommates, some with family. But some are completely alone, even in a new country. And others have health challenges that didn't get the memo, like my migraines, to stay away, stay home. I see them one-on-one only once each week, and I worry that I won't have the right things to say. I dread that. But then we meet up, and I ask them about their project, and we draw lines on the screen in coloured lighted pixels, miracles and mathematics, and the hour goes quickly. They are resilient, these grown up people who call me supervisor. I don't know if I can ever take on students again, though. The worry is heavy and real. And my brain is only just managing.

What of my own family, cocooned here with me? Tim has been working remotely for decades now. He has a posh setup in the third bedroom: sit-stand desk, ergonomic chair, window looking out across the park. He is a superhero: Remote Worker Man, with the power to conduct work via light and glass and internet from any time zone around the world. I've taken the bedroom, spare monitor, card table. And Jonathan? He has taken the kitchen and living room, and another spare monitor for connecting the tablet we bought him for high school. (Yes, there were two spare monitors in this house before anyone had heard of corona virus, due in no small part to Tim's superpower.) Jonathan has made his own schedule, his own routine, which, funny enough, includes downloading and working through old mathematics exams. He has found his own peace in mathematics in a crisis. But he commented the other day that he probably sees us less now that we're all at home, because we sequester ourselves in our rooms with Work, ported seamlessly online, and miss the morning and afternoon commutes, the relaxed evenings. I think we need to be more careful about eating meals together, taking walks together. Exercising together. We are a Unit. We need each other.

There are more random thoughts to be had, floating through this caffeinated brain of mine, but this post is long already. And the prime minister warns that there are at least six months of cocooning ahead of us. That means there will be plenty of time for more random thoughts.

I leave you with a picture from yesterday's morning run: Yellow tree, harbinger of autumn.

Tuesday, March 24, 2020

Day 0

Yesterday was our last day at work/school for an indefinite amount of time.

Goodbye for now, ordinary day. Some photos to remember you by.

Sunrise.

Walk to the train station part 1.

Walk to the train station, part 2.

Walk to the train station, part 3.

Train station.

On the platform.

On the train.

Watching the city fly by.

Hopping off.

Shuttle bus.

Arrival on campus.

Jonathan off to his school.

And I turn right towards my building.

Along the Rainforest Walk.

Monash University art, GCF and maths buildings.

Enter from the geology rock garden.

My lovely office, with its math books...

... walls of whiteboards...

Big window.
I will miss you, ordinary day, usual space.

But today, I'd rather be here at home.

Sunday, March 22, 2020

Day -1

It's official: Schools will be closing in Victoria on Tuesday. This comes as the number of new cases keep increasing: 28 Thursday, 51 Friday, 67 Saturday. And the third confirmed case likely due to community spreading.

That means Jonathan's last day is tomorrow.

That means my last day is tomorrow.

I'll meet Jonathan in the afternoon with an extra large bag, and we'll empty his locker. And carry everything home on the train, because we still don't have a car, even in a pandemic.

"It's irresponsible to be taking the train these days," said a colleague last week, whom we used to see regularly on our commute. Just one of several irresponsible behaviours we have perpetuated since January. 

It's ok. The trains and buses are pretty empty these days, and smell of disinfectant when we hop on them in the morning.

"Do you smell that?" I asked Jonathan on Friday morning. "It smells like cleaning."

"It smells like coronavirus," he replied.

I'll wear a mask. I'll wash my hands when I arrive. Jonathan will wash his hands. I won't meet anyone in my building. I'll shut myself in my office until Jonathan is ready to go. Meetings by Zoom.

The current estimates are that we will be shut down for six months.

We're ok. Not great, but ok. We didn't panic-buy food. We don't have a one-year supply. But we have a couple of months of supplies. And the Prime Minister reminded us on Thursday that Australia grows food for 75 million people, with a population of only 25 million. There is no reason for the food supply to be disrupted. We'll be ok. Still, we'll slowly -- not in panic -- buy an extra bag of flour, an extra jar of oil, as we can. A little more each time we go. We'll be ok.

We get to shelter-in-place adjacent to a 100 acre park. For at least a little while, we can walk its paths if we stay away from others. If we are completely confined, we can watch the seasons change from our windows.

You see how ok we will be?

Why, then, do I feel like weeping?

Friday, March 13, 2020

Not this year: or Covid-19

Every year since we moved here I think I may have written a post about the Grand Prix, which is held in a park within walking distance of our house. One weekend per year, we are bombarded by noise. Oh the noise noise noise noise! There is the whining of the cars as they zoom around the track. Then the boom of the fighter jets flying low over the crowds. The buzzing of the antique planes. Tickets for Sunday's race are well out of our price range, but back in 2016, just to say we did it, Jonathan and I paid for general admission tickets for the Saturday qualifying race:
http://clownandpoker.blogspot.com/2016/03/australian-grand-prix.html

This year, the Grand Prix opened as usual on Thursday afternoon. But by Friday morning, they were told by the Victorian Health Minister that crowds would be banned from attending. And the people on one of the teams tested positive. So the race was cancelled. Just like that.

***

Tim has spent two weeks of every March for years and years and years watching March Madness basketball in the US with a friend. He had tickets to fly out at the end of this week. And then things started looking sketchy and unhealthy in the US. Tim called on Monday to inquire: what would be the penalty for cancelling his airline tickets? A $300 fee. So he decided to wait and see. He called again on Wednesday. No fee. Tickets cancelled. So no March Madness for Tim this year.

But wait! By Thursday, we found out there would be no March Madness for anyone this year! Madness!

***

The situation is changing so rapidly, we don't know what to think. Someone on Twitter posted that watching a pandemic spread is like watching a car wreck in slow motion. Classes were delayed a week at Monash, and then moved to online-only for the first week of the semester. But currently students are still scheduled to come back on Monday for face-to-face instruction. That's going to put thousands of people back on the buses with me and Jonathan. I'm worried.

***

I'm not the only one worried. My Head of School (like a department chair in the US) skipped a couple of important meetings to try to get our department ready for university closures.

***

Easter events, sporting events, all cancelled.

Jonathan and I have been sharing articles about exponential growth, and the effects of quarantine and social isolation on the death rate. There are clear practices that keep the infections down to a level that hospitals can handle.

Why haven't they cancelled school yet?

***

We were paying very close attention to the horror coming out of China a few weeks ago, when I was still trying to decide if I would re-book my tickets to Germany. First just Wuhan was shut down. Then all of China shut down. Tim's Shanghai office was shut down. Work-related travel to Australasia was cancelled.

At first it was just those coming from China that were bringing the disease to Australia. Then two people from Iran tested positive. Travel from Iran shut down! Then Italy. And now nearly all the new cases have come from the US. Shut it down! Shut it down! The virus is growing rampant and unrestrained in the US. Why are we still letting them in?

Today we had our first confirmed case of community spread. It has been confirmed that the disease is no longer contained in Australia. That changes everything in this country. And possibly nothing. Back to school on Monday. Just without the buzz of the formula one cars this weekend.

***

My throat hurts.