Thursday, February 11, 2021

A trip to "The City"

We had an adventure this morning, a small one. At the invitation of the State of Minnesota, we hied ourselves into the big city of Minneapolis, to the Convention Center, wherein our aged body received its first COVID-19 vaccine shot. All went well except for the ten minutes or so during which we had misplaced where we parked the Jeep and the brief consternation when we read the sign that said parking validation for the 2nd Street Parking Garage wasn't needed and we read our parking ticket which said we had parked in the Plaza garage. Slight case of mixed nomenclature. Our left arm is a little sore but other than that, we think we're doing ok although we are feeling slightly stressed out.


Minneapolis, "The City," near the Convention Center
Minneapolis, "The City," near the Convention Center
Photo by J. Harrington

The other thing we learned this morning is that our ears won't support three masks. Having recently read that double masking has been found to be more effective than a single mask, we had two masks on as we traipsed through the skyway  and Convention Center hallways. Upon arrival at the checkin for the vaccination activities, we were handed another mask and politely instructed to put it on also. The first one we tried promptly broke one of the elastic connections to the mask, thereby freeing our right ear from a third binding. The second try at a third mask lasted until we completed checkin and bent forward to get out temperature taken. At that point the second third mask had an elastic to mask connection failure. We replaced that one and the third third mask did hold together until we were back in the Jeep.

It's possible, maybe even probable, that the mask failures were due, in part, to the amount of space behind our ears occupied by our hearing aids. To the best of our knowledge, no one took our picture while our left ear was bent directly out from our head by three ear straps, making us look like one side of the old Mad Magazine mascot and cover boy, Alfred E. Neuman. All in all, as with many things these days, it could have been worse. Then again, some years it could have been warmer than -17℉ on February 11 and other years vaccines against COVID-19 and its mutations didn't require a trip to the big city. It has changed since we last worked or played there.

We have been neglectful of the fact that Black History Month is continuing. Fortunately, the academy of american poets, of which we've been a long-time member, suggests in "poems to read and share"
 

"to celebrate the rich tradition of Black poetry this month and year-round, browse the following classic and contemporary poems:


Still I Rise” by Maya Angelou

Forever” by Paul Laurence Dunbar

Frederick Douglass” by Robert Hayden

Let America Be America Again” by Langston Hughes

Making History” by Marilyn Nelson

little prayer” by Danez Smith

This Body II” by Renée Watson

Declaration” by Tracy K. Smith

This Is Not a Small Voice” by Sonia Sanchez 



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