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Since Wednesday, I’ve been struggling with a virus. Just when I think I’ve kicked it, it comes back. The worst part of this all is I’ve lost my voice. I have experienced aches and pains that leave me unable to focus, fever, sniffling and sneezing and coughs that make my throat feel like it’s being stabbed and then washed in rubbing alcohol, but the thing that kills me is my voice is gone. Some days it’s been just horse, somedays it has been a squeak, or gone completely.  In any case, this is torture for an extrovert.

I never realized how much you use your voice before. To make a call, to make an appointment with the doctor, to have meetings, to collaborate with colleagues, to fellowship with friends, to order a meal, to communicate any preferences at all – I really need a voice.

Details are the first thing to go. It’s too much work to communicate anything with much subtlety.  You turn to employing a sharp whistle to get people’s attention.  Comedic timing is sadly right out of the question, something I discovered I want to use a lot in group settings but now cannot.  You start noticing your expressions become exaggerated, and you feel like The Little Mermaid on land suddenly.

Things are going on in your head but you have no way to articulate it, leaving you feeling invisible.

It’s actually ironic that I’m reading a book called “Fierce Conversations” right now, all about mastering skills to create meaningful conversations. But conversation is a different beast now, all “listen” and no “talk”.  Getting to know people in this state has been a fascinating challenge. Listen, listen, listen – ask for more elaboration on a topic, dig deeper, do more than bounce the ball of conversation back and forth, ala status quo.  Make the questions count (since in my case it’s such a pain to express them).

I can’t wait for my voice to return, but it’s made me certainly consider how much listening versus talking I do, and also how lucky I am to have the things I take for granted – to hear, to be heard, to see, to move (and in so moving, dance!), to taste and touch and smell. All these things which add so richly to my life, yet I hardly think about until something is broken.

I guess it’s good for the soul to be temporarily reminded how much it hurts when good things are gone, so that we appreciate them when they are there.

 

To be clear, I’m more concerned about my bricked iPhone than the likelihood of having to deal with N1H1, considering that regular flu is way worse (36,000 people die every year from regular flu season in the U.S.A.). This is not so much a pandemic as a pan(dem)ic.

But any flu in Seattle specifically might be harsh as Vitamin D deficiency has recently been linked to an increase in colds and flu’s. Good to know; Seattle folk are not exactly known for their quality time with sunshine. 1.) We don’t have it. 2.) I’m not sure we’d want it – we’re all inside on our computers. The chicken and the egg question comes to mind: does Seattle breed geeks or do geeks gravitate toward Seattle? Maybe both. On this note, I might go for a walk this afternoon and give up on the phone recovery for a bit.

Ouch

Speaking of walking, I actually saw a man walking down the street wearing a surgical mask today. Why are people panicking so much? Is it the Twitter paranoia seeping into real life?

At least at the end of the day, this madness will help to prep us for the eventual zombie outbreak. ;-)

I guess my own personal Bike-o-Rama August started on August 1st, but I didn’t know it then. That Friday, I took my Little bike riding. I’m trying to emphasize non-consumer-focused activities, and bike riding is one of our favourites together. We biked from Sandpoint past Matthew’s Beach and back. It was then I decided that the rest of August would be dedicated to seeing how much I could make my bike my main form of transportation. I’ve taken the bike to work before, but starting Monday, I would be seriously commuting by bike.

Saturday, I rode from my place to the University District to get some lights and a gear problem looked at. I rode to Gasworks park to meet my friends Erica and Eva, and a bike festival was going on in the park. Not seriously, I took that as a good omen of my newly determined hardcore hobby. Turns out, Eva just got a bike too, and needed a bike buddy! Perfect. After a bit, Erica went to go sailboating (as people are want to do in these parts) and Eva and I fetched her bike from Phinney Ridge and headed downtown to meet up with other friends for The Dark Knight at The Big Picture. After that, I rode from Belltown to Justin’s place in lower Queen Anne, and even ran into (not literally) Andy along the way. Biking is great! All was well. I was feeling really prepped for Monday’s commute.

So, along rolls Monday. My ride into work is swell. I scoff at a hipster on a fixie along my way (internally, anyhow). I feel like a hardcore bike commuter. I got up Pine Street! Booyah!

(Warning: graphic description of DOOM)

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