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2021 managed to clear the very low bar set by 2020 (Hey, the only new scar I have this year is a physical one...). We may not quite be back to normal yet - cancelled parties this week have sadly proven that - but we've collectively come a long way and this was the year life began to resume.
I've enjoyed regular meet-ups with friends again, trips to the seaside, a birthday picnic and meal out, the return of parkrun, two big family events/celebrations, my sister/nieces' visit to Sheffield, a trio of major running events, my first holiday away in two years, and a much freer Christmas than last year.
All the best to you all, however you're seeing in the New Year, and may you have a fantastic 2022!
I've enjoyed regular meet-ups with friends again, trips to the seaside, a birthday picnic and meal out, the return of parkrun, two big family events/celebrations, my sister/nieces' visit to Sheffield, a trio of major running events, my first holiday away in two years, and a much freer Christmas than last year.
All the best to you all, however you're seeing in the New Year, and may you have a fantastic 2022!
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Date: 2022-01-03 11:48 am (UTC)I doubt I'll be able to find it again, but I remember an article on a university website I read about a year ago, which suggested the reason people hate and don't always go along with Covid restrictions is basically because they're so inefficient - i.e. - you have to restrict so many lives in so many ways to avoid just one potential death, that people don't see the direct connection with their own actions and, on some level, don't feel it's worth it. It's the same with climate change, which will cause / is causing millions of deaths worldwide; there are lots of little things we could all do more of to reduce the impact; but we struggle to relate our own individual efforts to the overall picture.