Just Good Shit: 04.12.20

Just Good Shit: 04.05.20

Image: Kiyana Salkeld / Just Good Shit

Image: Kiyana Salkeld / Just Good Shit

Hi, all. Here’s what I was up to this week when I wasn’t FaceTiming with friends, playing Animal Crossing, or eating (incredibly delicious!!!) PB&Js on white Wonder Bread…

On the blog

Writing

Also, VICE Life launched How to Stay In, to make it a little easier to find all of the coronavirus-related service journalism that teams across editorial have been putting out for the past month.

And I was on this week’s episode of Gee Thanks, Just Bought It.

Reading

This Is Not the Apocalypse You Were Looking For, Wired.
This essay is really good; I loved the last few lines.

#1260: ā€œHow to maintain boundaries within stressful family relationships during COVID-19 lockdown?ā€, Captain Awkward.

What to Do if You're Isolated With an Abuser During the Coronavirus Crisis, Teen Vogue.

Please Stop Telling People They’re Overreacting, SELF.

13 Essential Workers Describe What Their Lives Are Like Right Now, VICE.

Is That Nostalgia You’re Feeling?, The Atlantic.

Self-Quarantine Is No Time for an Instagram-Ready Kitchen, The New York Times.

You’re single. You live alone. Are you allowed to have a coronavirus buddy?, Vox.

You Don’t Have to Be on a Diet Right Now, Eater.

Being Single Really, Really Sucks Right Now, ”Hola Papi!.

No One Should Worry About Working Out Right Now, VICE.

The Healing Power of ā€˜Steven Universe’, The New York Times.

ā€œLove Letterā€ (a short story by George Saunders), The New Yorker.

The devastating detail hiding in the French grammar of Portrait of a Lady on Fire, Vox.

Paul McCallion’s Drag Race recaps on Vulture.

Maris Kreizman’s list of good books that don’t require your whole brain.

17 Canned Tuna Recipes for a Winner-Winner Pantry Dinner, Food52.

How Long Can You Wear Sweatpants Without Washing Them?, Bustle.

ā€œOh My God, I Miss Meeting Someone I Hateā€, Delirium.

Watching

My gf and I have been watching any and every permutation of Trixie Mattel and Katya’s show. Some highlights: Drag Queens Trixie Mattel and Katya React to The Circle; TM & Katya React to Sex, Explained; and TM & Katya React to Glow Up. Also loved Trixie doing Kombucha Girl’s makeup.

We’ve also become obsessed with Cooking tree, the gentlest, coziest YouTube channel. And Feel Good on Netflix is really great and def worth a watch.

NYC

Last week, Kiyana made a Google sheet of ~50 businesses in Brooklyn (mostly bars, restaurants, and coffee shops) that breaks down all the things relevant to supporting them during the pandemic: links to relief funds if they exist, if they are doing delivery or takeout right now (with lots of details about how to order), and if they are selling merch or gift cards. This stuff is changing really rapidly, but she’s trying to keep it fairly up to date. Also, if there’s a local spot you love/that you think should be on this list, feel free to email it to me and I’ll pass it along!

Whew, that was a long one! Thanks for reading, and have a good Sunday evening. šŸ’›


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Just Good Bops: April

Image: Kiyana Salkeld / Just Good Shit

Image: Kiyana Salkeld / Just Good Shit

I’ve made a monthly playlist of what I’m currently listening to every single month, without fail, since March 2013. A couple of days ago, I went to add a song to my March 2020 playlist and realized there wasn’t one. And then I realized that it was April 3rd, so I’d missed the window to create one.

I know it’s a small, inconsequential thing, especially right now, but it made me feel incredibly sad. My playlists have served as a snapshot in time, something akin to a journal. I can travel back in time and experience anew how I was feeling based on what I was listening to. That won’t be the case for this period of time.

On the other hand, I suppose it’s fitting that March 2020 is just a big, gaping hole disrupting my seven year streak. It feels hard to maintain even the most ingrained habits right now, and I’m doing my best to be extra kind and patient with myself in this moment. Productivity is an unreasonable bar to set when you’re trying to understand the enormity of living through a pandemic and also missing your life prior to quarantine.

That’s all to say, 1) I recommend making monthly playlists if you’re not the journaling type, and 2) I took extra care crafting this month’s playlist for y’all and also made sure to get my personal monthly playlist up and going as well. It made feel something close to normal, which I was grateful for during this very not-normal time.

This playlist very well could have just been multiples of ā€œPeople, I’ve been sadā€ by Christine and the Queens. It’s not, which feels like a personal victory, but I still recommend watching them perform it live for COLORS. Look at all that personal space! A social distancing queen. šŸŽ§

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How to start and keep a journal during a pandemic (or any time of major upheaval)

journal.JPG

Since the coronavirus started spreading through the U.S., I’ve seen a lot of people telling others that now is a good time to start and keep a journal. Which… sure, yes, if you want to!

When I was working on Dot Journaling, I read a ton of academic writing about diaries throughout history, and one of the things I learned is that people are drawn to keeping diaries during times of major change. (Also, fun [???] fact: when I went to Bookshop to search for Dot Journaling earlier today, I noticed a section called ā€œPerspective on Pandemicsā€ on the home page, and the first book listed was the diary of my arch nemesis, Samuel Pepys.) Journaling is also a good coping mechanism and way to process feelings. And when things are changing super quickly, formerly solid concepts like ā€œdays of the weekā€ seem utterly preposterous, and your brain feels overloaded and foggy, it’s safe to say that you’re probably not going to remember things as well as you might want to.  

That said, it’s hard to do much of anything right now, and journaling shouldn’t be another chore or source of stress during a highly stressful, chore-filled time. So with that in mind, I thought I’d share some low-key ideas for keeping a journal during a pandemic (or any bad time), if you’re so inclined.

Use whatever journal you have and will actually use.

Now is not the time to search for the perfect notebook; it’s the time to make do with what you have and will actually use—a notebook you bought but never used, a legal pad, a spiral notebook, Google Docs, an app, whatever. Make things as easy on yourself as possible right now. 

Simply save all of your to-do lists. 

A to-do list is usually a very good snapshot of what matters to you at a given time, and that’s definitely been true for me during our current situation. If you keep a separate work notebook and home notebook, it might not be a bad idea to combine them and just keep one (as so many of our work lives and home lives collapse into each other). And if you keep a single undated running task list, you might want to think about making new lists each day or week so you can add a date for context. 

Also think about adding things like Zoom calls with friends or nice things you’re planning to do at home to your to-do list; even if these don’t feel like tasks, they are still things you did and very much paint a picture of what your life is like right now. 

If a to-do list doesn’t seem like it ā€œcountsā€ as a journal/diary, consider that this is actually very much what diaries looked like until the late nineteenth century. It was only fairly recently that the more ā€œIā€ centric, ā€œhere are all my thoughts and feelingsā€ diaries became the predominant way we conceptualize diaries. Historical diaries actually looked a lot like dot journals, format-wise. (Also consider the fact that ā€œdiaryā€ is the word Brits use for what most of us in the U.S. would call an agenda or planner.) 

Save all of your receipts in one place or write down your purchases. 

Your to-do lists cover how you’re spending your time; it’s also a good idea to note how you’re spending your money. You could either add purchases as they happen to your to-do list each day, or keep a running list for the month on a separate page. 

Keep a recipe diary.

I got this idea from my friend Emily, an NYT Cooking editor; she said she got it from Jenny Rosenstrach, who has been keeping a recipe journal for 20+ years. By the way, it’s not too late to do this — Emily’s starts on 3/12, but she told me she put it together a few days ago ā€œbased on photos in my camera roll basically.ā€ (BTW, here’s how to search your camera roll by date.)

Just write down what a day in your life looks like right now. 

You can either do this in real time or do it later, writing out what an average day’s routine looks like right now. Make note of what time you’re getting up; what you do first, second, third, etc. each morning; and all the new chores that are a part of your daily life. You could also do this once a week or every few weeks to track how things are changing.

Remember that journaling doesn’t need to involve writing a lot of feelings in full sentences.

When I’m recapping my day in my journal, I use dashes to jot down quick notes instead of writing in full sentences. (I also keep the dash format if I want to do full sentences.) Doing it this way is way lower lift and basically removes the mental hurdle of ā€œUgh, I have to sit down and write.ā€  

If you just want to brain dump/cope, consider doing morning pages.

Here’s a guide I wrote about morning pages few years ago

If you want a lower-lift/less frequent option, you could email yourself or add to a Google Doc once a week. 

You could use a format similar to my weekly newsletter — what you read, cooked/ate, listened to, bought, watched, etc. And if you want to flesh out your email with more personal thoughts or notable moments from the week, you could do that too. 

Just put together one big March recap.

If you’re feeling like it’s too late to start keeping a journal, you could do one big entry for all of March. I actually did this the other night, using my Google calendar, planner/to-do lists, texts, and camera roll. I was able to date all the events that felt significant (for example, February 27 is the day my girlfriend listened to an episode of ā€œThe Dailyā€ that really scared her and so we started sanitizing our hands a ton when we were out in public) and a put together a pretty accurate record of how we (and our friends, and our workplaces) were thinking about the coronavirus and changing our behavior day-to-day throughout March.   

Be a teeny tiny bit less vague than you might naturally be. 

As someone who has kept diaries for 20 years, I can tell you that you won’t remember important context as well as you might think you will in a couple decades, even for things that feel super significant as they are happening. This isn’t a huge thing to worry about, but if you’re journaling with Future You or Future Historians in mind, I recommend it. You don’t necessarily have to write ā€œToday I read an article in the New York Times, a newspaper, which I accessed through the app (application) on my iPhoneā€... but you might want to do small things — like, say, add, ā€œ(neighbor)ā€ or ā€œ(restaurant)ā€ next to a person’s or business’s name.

Or don’t, if doing this is too much work and would stress you out!!! 

Remember that a journal or diary can look like anything.

Photos, texts, receipts, calendar invites, memes, tweets, articles, playlists, emails…these are all excellent records of what is happening in your life right now. You don’t have to start tagging stuff or make a huge effort to collect everything in a single place right now, but it’s not a bad idea to be a little more mindful of retention right now. Things that are dated and searchable, like your personal email or calendar, will be there in a few years, but think about what won’t be super easy to pull up later (like work emails or texts) and find a low-key way to save/find them. 

Know that nothing is too mundane or small to be recorded.

It’s easy to operate from the mindset that journaling is a Serious Endeavor, especially during a pandemic. I think that belief is mostly rooted in the parts of history — and the lives — that we’ve been taught to believe matter. 

But the things we do every day — the people we talk to, the things we eat and buy, the clothes we wear, the art and entertainment we consume, the traditions and rituals and routines and trends we create and take part in — aren’t background noise. They are, in large part, what life in a given culture at a specific time is. And no one can know, in the moment, what is going to be ā€œinterestingā€ in 10 or 20 or 30 years, or even what we’ll personally wish, a week from now, that we had recorded when we had the chance.

So if you think that the way you’re spending your days right now — FaceTiming, creating or acquiring masks, getting creative with beans, watching TikToks — doesn’t ā€œcountā€ or matter enough to be remembered, I would encourage you to let go of some of the biases that might be influencing your thinking. ā€œNormalā€ people’s experiences are extremely relevant to our understanding of history. But also, you don’t have to keep a diary for big picture reasons. You can just…do it for yourself, because you feel like it.

I’ll leave you with something Charlotte Forten GrimkĆ©, a black teacher and anti-slavery activist, wrote in her diary in May of 1854: 

ā€œA wish to record the passing events of my life, which, even if quite unimportant to others, naturally possess a great interest to myself, and of which it will be pleasant to have some remembrance, has induced me to commence this journal. I feel that keeping a diary will be pleasant and profitable employment of my leisure hours, and will afford me much pleasure in after years, by recalling to my mind the memories of other days, thoughts of much-loved friends from whom I may be separated, with whom I now pass many happy hours, in taking delightful walks, and holding ā€˜sweet converse’; the interesting books that I read; and the different people, places and things that I am permitted to see.ā€ āœØ

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Just Good Shit: 03.29.20

Just Good Shit: 03.22.20

Image: Kiyana Salkeld / Just Good Shit

Image: Kiyana Salkeld / Just Good Shit

Hi, friends. Here’s what I was up to this week…

Writing

I also edited What to Do if You're Drinking Way More During Self-Isolation and was on WNYC’s All of It talking about WFH with roommates.

Reading

The Saddening, The Outline.

Here’s How to Get Your Loved Ones to Take Social Distancing Seriously, SELF.
Copy and paste scripts to send, courtesy of my friend Sally.

How Do I Deal With My Pandemic Guilt?, ”Hola Papi!.

Americans Coping With the Coronavirus Are Clogging Toilets, The New York Times.
C’mon, guys.

What Obligation Do We Owe Our Shitty Fathers As They Age?, MEL Magazine.

Tips For Playing Animal Crossing: New Horizons, Lifehacker.

Eating

This week, I made broccoli farro salad (a good WFH lunch, especially with a little tuna added) and spaghetti carbonara. Also, this list of America's Test Kitchen recipes for our current moment is a good resource!

Things to do

My friend Alanna made a Google Doc with tips for anyone who wants to get into knitting right now.

My coworker Amy Rose recommends Season 3, Episode 3 of Documentary Now (on Netflix), and I concur. Also, watching old seasons of Drag Race is bringing me so much joy right now.

These free activity pages from Adam JK are cute.

And if you are thinking of making masks for healthcare workers or yourself, this is worth a read.

Have a good Sunday. ✨


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These Instagram Live dance workouts are really helping me keep it together right now

I’ve been feeling periodically despondent over the past week, and am making an effort to cultivate joy as much as possible. I’ve also been vaguely aware of the fact that a workout would probably be a good idea right about now. My girlfriend recently came across Instagram Live dance classes/parties hosted by choreographer Ryan Heffington; they turned out the exact quarantine activity I was looking for.

Heffington is the owner of the LA fitness studio The Sweat Spot, which is closed for the foreseeable future. (At the end of each session, he puts out a call for Venmo and PayPal donations for Sweat Spot instructors who are now out of jobs.) The classes are super exuberant and fun — basically just moving your body to a great playlist (think: Robyn, Carly Rae Jepsen, ABBA) for 40 minutes.

I’m not a fan of complicated dance workouts or super intense workouts, so I was relieved by how doable these classes are, both in terms of the steps and the pace. The warmup involves some downward dogs and planks that I thought were harder than the actual workout, but the main part of the class is very easy/fairly unstructured/really low pressure. The hardest choreography you’ll encounter is a grapevine, and everything is so loose and chill that it’s hard to feel stressed if you’re not doing it quite right. The whole vibe is very ā€œdo what you can with what you’ve got.ā€

The classes only exist on IG Live right now, so you have to tune it at the scheduled time to dance along. (The next one will be Tuesday at 10 a.m. PT.) It works best to follow along on your phone, but if you want to do it on your computer, this Chrome plugin is helpful.

If you’re in need of a free/at-home/easy-access way to move your body and feel a tiny bit better, I think it’s worth following Ryan’s account/getting in on the next class. The workout itself is really uplifting, and there’s something extra special about knowing that 2,000+ people are dancing along with you. āš”ļø

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How to feed yourself when your appetite is non-existent

Image: Manki Kim via Unsplash

Image: Manki Kim via Unsplash

I’ve seen a few tweets in the past week that said something to the effect of, ā€œWow, I thought I was a stress eater but now I am simply no longer hungry????ā€ and each time, I was like, WELCOME. This happened to me a few years ago and it was legitimately shocking — before that, I sort of thought that forgetting to eat or not having an appetite was an urban legend, at least as it applied to me personally. Turns out, it’s not!

If you, too, have suddenly found that food has lost its appeal, or that you are forgetting to eat whole meals, or that certain foods make your stomach turn, you’re definitely not the only one. Here are some tips that helped me, and that might help you, too:

  1. Set reminders to eat.
    Without a commute or coworkers — or when super distracted by the news or a personal trauma — it’s really easy for morning to bleed into afternoon and 4 p.m. to become 9 p.m. without my really realizing it, so I’ve been relying on phone alarms in the past couple weeks to help me maintain a routine. The biggest struggle is lunch, but I’m doing my best; a noon reminder is actually quite helpful.

  2. Try to eat or drink something at meal times.
    It’s very easy to look at what you’d been planning to make for dinner, realize you have zero desire to eat it, and sort of shrug and give up and shuffle back to bed. But it’s a good idea to not totally give up, and instead think about what you can eat or drink in that moment. Maybe it’s just a banana, or some Graham crackers, or a cup of milk; that’s fine. It’s literally better than nothing!

  3. Look for shelf-stable items and frozen stuff.
    The big problem I had after losing my appetite was that I’d buy groceries like normal…and then the fresh stuff would go bad because I had no interest in fruit or vegetables or even meat. Given that fresh foods aren’t terribly easy to come by right now, you might already be doing this. But if not, remember that frozen broccoli, fish, bread, waffles, potatoes, and burritos exist. It’s always good to have the option for a decent full meal available should your appetite change suddenly.

Here are some fairly gentle meals to consider:

  • Toast! Toast with butter and cinnamon sugar + cozy tea is my favorite.

  • English muffins with PB (this once sustained me for…a while)

  • Simple quesadillas (tortillas + shredded cheese + sour cream and salsa on top)

  • Frozen pierogis with a little butter and sour cream

  • Frozen dumplings

  • Baked potatoes with butter and sour cream (add Annie’s canned chili on top for something more filling)

  • Annie’s macaroni & cheese

  • Old-fashioned (or instant) oatmeal with peanut butter and blueberries (thawed from frozen)

  • Spanish rice + black beans or pinto beans

  • Lemon butter pasta

  • Chickpea pasta

  • Soylent (I like the original flavor, personally)

Finally, remember that when you’re Dealing With Some Shit, it’s OK to eat the same things over and over and not really change up your diet much. Obviously a balanced diet is ideal in the long run, but during a high-stress time, your definition of ā€œhealthyā€ is simply going to change. If you simply can’t stand the thought of eating kale or salmon right now, that’s…fine. Eat whatever feels nourishing-ish and gives you the energy to get through your day, and trust that your appetite will return again eventually. ✨

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Just Good Shit: 03.15.20

Image: Kiyana Salkeld / Just Good Shit

Image: Kiyana Salkeld / Just Good Shit

It’s Sunday, and I’m writing my normal Sunday post, but things are not normal right now, and they aren’t going to be normal for a while. I know how hard it can be to admit or accept that, but...this is where we live now. We have no idea how long we’ll be here or what exactly it will look like.

What it will look like, of course, depends to some degree on how willing we are to admit that something we’ve left normal life behind. After several days of strictly only leaving the apartment to take my dog out, it’s been incredibly upsetting to see people posting Instagram stories about their weekend like nothing has changed, or claiming they are ā€œsocial distancingā€ā€¦with 10 other people, inside someone’s apartment or at a restaurant.

I don’t know how explain to you that you should care about other people…but I also don’t know how to explain to you that you should care about yourself. We’re all vulnerable. It can be incredibly difficult and overwhelming to admit that, but it’s also simply true, whether we admit it or not.

Admitting this wasn’t fun or easy for me. It’s not fun or easy for anyone! It all fucking sucks!! But…this is where we live now, until we don’t anymore.

Here’s what else I’ve got for you this week.

On the blog

Writing

I also edited If Your Aging Parents Are Ignoring Coronavirus Risks, You're Not Alone, and was on CNN on Saturday morning to talk about working from home.

Reading

Note: If you’re already sheltering in place/social distancing and feeling fairly anxious, you might not want to read a lot of the articles below — they will mostly be restating what you already know, and are pretty anxiety-inducing when consumed all at once. (You should read the one about managing your anxiety, though!) That said, these are probably good articles to share with friends and family who think you’re overreacting, or who are going about business as usual.

If you’re not social distancing but really, really could be, or are still wondering if you *really* have to cancel your birthday party or your trip to Vegas, I strongly urge you to read the links below. (And to stay home starting, like, now.)

Your Social Life Is Going on Hiatus, The Cut.

The Extraordinary Decisions Facing Italian Doctors, The Atlantic.

Why outbreaks like coronavirus spread exponentially, and how to ā€œflatten the curveā€, The Atlantic.

The U.S. Isn’t Ready for What’s About to Happen, The Atlantic.

Young and Unafraid of the Coronavirus Pandemic? Good for You. Now Stop Killing People, Newsweek.

ā€˜Mild’ May Not Mean What You Think It Means, The Cut.

ā€œCases classified as ā€˜mild’ by doctors in China include those that develop into pneumonia, and ā€˜severe’ means needing machine-assisted breathing.ā€

Please Just Stay Home!, The Cut.
ā€œWhy am I stressing, in this moment, about wanting a chocolate chip cookie? I’ll have one eventually. And then, at that time, I’ll have it.ā€

A coronavirus cautionary tale from Italy: Don’t do what we did, Boston Globe.

ā€˜It Feels Like a Pause’, The Cut.
What life is like in Italy right now — a couple weeks after people didn’t take COVID-19 seriously.

The Coronavirus Customer-Service Crisis, The Atlantic.

Visiting My Sick Mom Could Put Her Life at Greater Risk. But How Many More Times Will I Get to See Her?, Time.

How Millennials Are Talking To Their Boomer Relatives About The Coronavirus, BuzzFeed News.

Stocking Up Is Impossible When You Lack Enough for Today: Food Banks Struggle as Coronavirus Crisis Intensifies, The Kitchn.

How You Should Get Food During the Pandemic, The Atlantic.

Your New Hobby is Push-Ups, The Cut.

What to Do If Your Anxiety About Coronavirus Feels Overwhelming, SELF.

Don’t Panic: Notes on a Pandemic, John Gorman on Medium.

Donating

This week, I donated to the Food Bank for New York City and Ali Fortney Center, which provides critical services to homeless LGBTQ youth, and which will remain open during the crisis. We’re also buying gift cards and merch from our favorite local restaurants to send dollars their way. If you can afford to be helpful (via cash, time, or other resources) and there’s a local organization or business that needs support, now is the time.

Have a good Sunday. šŸ’›


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Just a bunch of gentle ways to entertain yourself without leaving your home

Image: Jonathan Howard Kemp via Unsplash

Image: Jonathan Howard Kemp via Unsplash

Hi, friends. Things feel pretty scary right now, and once you’ve had your fill of the day’s (or hour’s) news, you might find yourself with a lot of time on your hands and no idea how to fill it… and that boredom and anxiety can make going out very tempting. (BTW, if you’re not self-isolating yet but really could be, read Your Social Life Is Going on Hiatus and all the links within.)

With that in mind, I put together a list of things to occupy your mind and time for the next little while. (And I’ll update it if/when I think of other ideas!) I hope something on here will be just the thing you were looking for.

To read

The best things I’ve written and edited over the years

The best things I read and wrote in 2019

Old BuzzFeed posts from my team: Terri Pous, Tom Vellner, Anna Borges, and Gyan Yankovich. (And me!)

My Goodreads profile (note: I was adding pretty haphazardly prior to 2019)

Reading list: Pride edition

Just good summer reading

My favorite Ask a Manager posts

PSA: You can check out e-books from your local library through the Libby app.

This also seems like a great time to pick up Elin Hildebrand novels!

To listen to

Here are my all-time favorite podcast episodes

More playlists to have on for background noise, including a new one for March + bonus fun bops

To watch

Jane the Virgin

Cheer

Black Mirror (Just ā€œSan Juniperoā€ and ā€œNosediveā€ for now)

Our Planet (because Netflix pulled Planet Earth recently)

Ken Burns’ Prohibition

Steven Universe: The Movie

Homecoming: A Film by BeyoncƩ

Pen15

Nailed It

Jeopardy!

Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse

I Love Lucy

Are You the One? Season 8 (It’ll repair some of the rot caused by Love Is Blind)

RuPaul’s Drag Race

Feel Good on Netflix

To do*

*As long as you already possess the necessary supplies/ingredients

Make delicious use of all your beans and pasta. (Related: Chickpea pasta, lemon butter pasta, and simple recipes to make when your life is in shambles.)

Make friendship bracelets. Also consider this list of creative hobbies to try when everything is awful and you're not okay.

Pour your anxious energy into a tiny home project that will leave you feeling accomplished.

Use YouTube tutorials to teach yourself music video choreography.

Try Yoga with Adriene or a Ryan Heffington IG Live dance class.

Do a puzzle.

Get on the Marco Polo app — it’s a fun/easy way to keep in touch.

Read How to Solve The New York Times Crossword, download the app, and try your first Monday puzzle. (Tip: Doing all the old Monday and Tuesday puzzles in the archives is a great way to get better very quickly.)

Make friendship bracelets. Also consider this list of creative hobbies to try when everything is awful and you're not okay.

Journal daily.

Create DIY/art projects/collages with whatever supplies you have! I’m probably going to dust off my Cricut at some point this weekend and make weird/silly shit with it, and/or make a zine.

Be a good neighbor.

And remember to call/FaceTime friends and family to stay connected, especially if you (or they!) live alone — it really does help! šŸ’›

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