The looser the straps, the itchier your nose. That wouldn't be a problem if we hadn't eaten so much lockdown bread.
I should explain, and I will. First, let us consider a piece in the Washington Post. The writer had a novel idea — you could even say "novel coronavirus" idea, because that's the prism through which all light must pass these days.
"The key to escaping lockdown? Sleep in your guest room and pretend it's a trip."
If you don't have a guest room? Spend the night in a closet. Pretend you're locked in an elevator in an exciting vacation destination! Why stop there? Fill a beanbag with Brie and pretend you're on a hot-air balloon ride. Smear caviar all over the dog and pretend he's ... I don't know, the Queen's naughtiest corgi.
We are past all the coping and "new normal" stuff and Zoom jokes and hardy-har tales of bartering Charmin for flour. That was forever ago. This is now, this is May. Mentally, we are done. Fiscally, many are tapped.
We've spent weeks feeling like a snail crawling on a cheese grater, and we're itchy, techy, peeved, grouchy, like someone living over and over and over the day before his parole hearing.
How bad is it? In the last week I've seen at least three examples of people who were almost curt with a checkout clerk. In Minnesota terms, this means we are on the precipice of anarchy.
Well, OK, maybe not. But last week I had to go to the bank. There were three people in line outside the door, and everyone had a mask. It looked like a comedy about very polite bank robbers in Sweden, where people have a sense of civic responsibility.