Category Archives: Quarantine

Rainy Day

We’ve had some snow here, finally, though no snow day. And today I think all the snow is going to get washed away with rain…the weather says currently we are having a frozen mix but it just looks like rain to me so I think my app is a little off.

The weekend ahead is like all of the weekends, nothing really going on after my Saturday morning CAD (Improvisation) Class. I’ve been enjoying teaching two classes a week to a small amount of students, though I need a few more to really make it fun for everybody. Time will tell though, I’m sure.

This week was difficult as far as being exhausted and headache-y. The fall semester started up for both of my colleges so I had a full schedule, lots of computer time, plus getting up around 5:30 am to get to my before school classes in person three days a week. I am going to three different elementary schools in my district each week to teach one small class (ranges from 2 to 4 students). The district is good in that we are only teaching kids who are already in the same classroom, and we leave before the rest of the kids show up for the day. But it’s still a lot of being around people, compared to not being around people at all. I also started teaching a small ensemble class in person, only 4 of us total in a very large room.

The good news is that my parents and two of my sisters have gotten their first vaccination shots. I’m happy for them, but I’m a little jealous that other states are already inoculating teachers and Missouri says it’ll be a few more months. It’s odd, reading news stories about how children need to be back in school and we need to get teachers vaccinated so they can return to the classroom…they are back here in Missouri, with varying degrees of being allowed to work from home and varying degrees of how many students are back. My district is good in that they require mask wearing (no issues with the kids and that) and that they seem to be doing a good job contact tracing all illnesses. But still, it’s a risk, and the only thing I could have done to avoid the risk was to quit my job.

It’s also odd seeing people so upset about places reopening indoor dining here and there…I can’t imagine eating indoors at a restaurant. I just can’t. I haven’t eaten a meal with anybody except Louie since it got cold (we had a few outdoor get-togethers with friends earlier) and I haven’t eaten a meal indoors with anybody since my sister Leslie and her family left after visiting in early September. We knew their visit was a bit risky but they had been limiting their exposure at that point and so had we. Once Louie went back into the classroom in the fall I felt our risk as a couple was higher and now that we are both in person 4 to 5 times a week I continue to believe that any level of socializing outside of our house, barring some sort of very spaced/distanced outdoor activity would be incredibly irresponsible. It is both our responsibility not to bring COVID home from work but also not to take it there.

How do you all deal with the isolation? I spend entirely too much time online, yet I feel like that is one of my limited connections to people. I feel pretty isolated from any friends I had before, and I had already been feeling like most of those friendships were surfacey and limited anyway. Other friendships seemed to be based more on doing things which will likely return when doing things returns…I’d love to have a few more friends I could talk to, but I don’t feel like scheduling more zoom meetings, and sometimes texting feels exhausting. My work schedule this school year has been pretty exhausting, and though having the weekends free helps recover, I find myself just wanting to spend the weekend lying around reading and don’t have the energy for anything more, including social interaction of any form. Likely this is a bit of depression, but I’m hoping it’s all due to circumstances and will change with the change of weather, if nothing else.

I’ve been enjoying reading a ton of mystery novels lately. I like to find a long series and read the whole thing, so I get to experience one character finding dead body after dead body and helping the (often bumbling) detective solve the case. I particularly enjoy novels set in another country, usually England (currently reading a second series on the Isle of Mann, which is now on my list of places to visit someday.) I find reading is a nice break from hearing violin over the internet and it’s a quiet activity to do lying down.

I often wake up in the middle of the night stressed out about my work schedule and the future. The days are long, but absolutely possible, but I think it’s just getting up so early that gets me, and I (especially in the middle of the night) worry. I just worry, about the future of my career, the future of our country, and of our planet.

But I guess we will all continue pushing through, and keeping on. I think I’m just tired and need a change of scenery but that’s unlikely until after the school year finishes, so I’ll manage. I always remind myself many people have lived through worse, and while that’s true, it is pretty stressful living through a pandemic, dealing with the stress and worries of the coup and civil unrest (I find I cry a lot more often after January 6, it was some sort of breaking point for me), and trying to make it all work and hold it together all the time to be strong for the students. It’s a lot! I know other people have different or similar concerns, but we are all going through a lot right now.

Year in Review

It’s been a year, for sure. I don’t know that tonight will change anything, but 2020 will be behind us, and we will be that much closer to January 20.

I was looking back through my blog this past year, and I was really struck by how much life changed in March. Everything just stopped and hasn’t started back, and might not for months and months more. It’s really weird, and awful, and stressful, and we are all experiencing it in our own different ways.

There have been some bad things that happened this year, and good things. I want to reflect on the loss first, and then the good things.

We’ve all experienced loss this year in one form or another. I had a few personal losses: my friend and colleague Tracy; a friend of my family and one of my best friend’s dad’s growing up Mr. Pitts.; my friend Roz’s dad who I never met but felt like I had; Louie’s late wife’s stepdad who I had met several times, Bill; my mom’s good friend Ramona. How much of this was COVID, how much would have happened anyway…how much is just from growing older and more people you know die? At least two of those were directly from COVID, that much I know. It’s not too hard to wear a mask. It’s harder to avoid seeing friends and family, but it’s better to avoid them for a year than forever. My thoughts are with closer friends and family members of everybody I mentioned and I hope they are all finding peace.

There are and were many other losses: losing a trip to Paris, to Colorado, missing seeing Hilary Hahn play live for the first time, losing an opportunity to perform Sarasate’s Carmen Fantasy, and Brahms Piano Quintet, missing seeing friends for a whole year, having students graduate and move away without seeing them in person, missing seeing my students in person for nearly a year, missing hearing live violin other than my own playing, missing having my birthday with friends, Thanksgiving, Halloween, Christmas, New Year’s Eve, etc. (Some of those things might have been able to happen but since everybody has their own idea of what’s “safe” in the pandemic, what is truly the safest is just to do things within your own household, since Louie has been teaching in person all fall. )

There are losses I’ll never know, of things that might have happened. And I may be lamenting my performance career, though who knows, but for better or for worse, teaching has brought me through this pandemic, and missing all my performances showed me that I don’t miss that many of my performances.

These losses are mostly surface losses, but worth mentioning in a personal blog. We all lost so much, and some lost so much more. I feel so lucky to have made it through this pandemic as well as I have, and I hope my luck continues.

Which leads us into the good and interesting parts of the year:

I got to see my sister Leslie and her family several times over the summer, before things seemed entirely too risky to even leave the city. Our cat Miles got returned to us, because of his microchip. We managed to pull together a camping trip to Yellowstone in late summer. In March right before everything went bad we visited my friends April and Charlie in Atlanta and got to see their new house. My dad visited briefly in February en route to Yellowstone and points west.

I learned how to make and can jams and pickles. I did a series of livestream concerts, both alone and with my friend Michael and our band. I put in a garden and harvested ridiculous amounts of zucchini and delicata squash. We did a lot of hikes nearby and walks around Forest Park. I read a ton of books and watched a lot of TV shows, many of which were good.

I had a business logo made and added Creative Ability Development classes to my schedule. I successfully moved all my students online during the pandemic and took online pedagogy classes. I started a new school job teaching beginning violin. 

My family started having a weekly zoom meeting and have kept it up all year long, communicating and bonding more than ever during this difficult time.

Before the pandemic we went to many concerts and jazz shows and hope to do that again someday. I took some time off practicing and spend a lot of time reflecting on how I want my career to look post-pandemic. I sent Christmas boxes to my family members, and all but one have arrived. I got better at cooking and tried dozens of new recipes. I planned and executed various fun holiday menus for the two of us, and kept eating healthy and interesting meals. I kept up a regular exercise routine.

I lived through a pandemic so far, and continue living through an attempted coup by the losing presidential candidate. I am hopeful that things will get better, and that the pandemic will come to an end worldwide in 2021.

I learned that I enjoy having weekends free from work, and that I didn’t miss playing weddings and some other gigs. I did miss playing Christmas jobs, and I’m not sure if I missed playing regular concerts or if I miss the adrenaline rush. I definitely like the lower stress work I do now, but that might be because I have enough outside stress.

I don’t want to pretend to guess or know what 2021 will have in store, but here are some hopes and plans I have:

I’m greatly looking forward to our new president, and new leadership on dealing with COVID and the vaccine. We need competence in government, and I am so eternally grateful to other Biden voters for saving our country from the brink, and hopefully bringing us back into the world and getting through to the end of this pandemic.

I hope to continue to feel positive about teaching and grow my CAD/improv teaching. I’m loving that aspect of my job right now. I also want to continue to feel like my schedule isn’t too out of control and that I can continue to have weekends more free with the exception of things that are fun and enjoyable to do.

I hope to start being able to attend concerts and shows again by the end of 2021 at least. I hope to be able to start visiting family again this year and I hope to be able to resurrect some friendships or cultivate new ones.

I hope to continue to be healthy and happy (enough) and I hope that 2021 is a better year and will end on a more positive note than this year.

Happy New Year to you! May 2021 bring better things.

Thanksgiving Break

I still have the rest of today, but it has been a wonderful and refreshing Thanksgiving Break.

One week ago today I had an online recital for my students and they were awesome. I was so proud of them for continuing to rise to the occasion.

Then I took off private teaching all week, which was a fantastic decision. I had a few things to do work-wise but I got to have my afternoons and evenings free AND I got a break from hearing violin over the computer. It was absolutely the best thing for me.

I did a few new to me things over the week, one of which was taking a short online workshop on “self-care for creative types.” It was amazing. I had forgotten to think about what I actually enjoyed doing as I have been so focused on “getting through the pandemic” and “keeping my students happy and challenged”. So I spent Tuesday after the workshop doing some brainstorming and starting to work through a book I’d bought a few years ago but never used called “Your Best Year Yet!”.

IMG_7062

Wednesday was lovely as I was able to sleep in a bit, exercise at my leisure, and spend some time cooking. For Thanksgiving I ended up making a cranberry-rhubarb sauce (which was delicious, absolutely delicious) with some rhubarb I had in the freezer, and Smitten Kitchen’s Corn Pudding, which was good but drier than I like (Louie absolutely adored it.) I picked up bread and rolls at Union Loafers and Louie picked up our dinner for the next day from Treehouse, a vegan restaurant we really like. (We decided not to eat a real turkey this Thanksgiving.) That night we went to the Garden Glow at the Botanical Gardens—it’s a light event they do every Thanksgiving through the New Year, and I’d thought of trying to go many years but we never did. This time the weather suddenly looked okay and I snapped up the last few tickets for the night. The crowds were capped at 25 percent of the original capacity, and it felt fine walking around with people wearing their masks and lots of space.

IMG_7075IMG_7083

Thursday morning I made an egg and potato casserole to go with one of the breads and then we met up with some of Louie’s colleagues (when you work at a college, you end up being invited to do things on Thanksgiving day!) and we took a nice long (masked) walk in Forest Park.

IMG_7116

After that we popped over to his mom’s house and visited on their porch for a bit and had some tea, before heading home to relax. We had some appetizers his mom had given up (prosecco, caviar and blinis!) and then after a few hours, started heating up our Thanksgiving dinner. Dinner was a delicious and we were pretty stuffed afterwards. We watched TV for a bit, and then managed some dessert as well.

IMG_7126IMG_7131

Friday we went to Rockwoods Reservation and hiked the Lime Kiln Trail to another trail and then across the road to the Rock Quarry Trail for a little over 5 miles. It was the most crowded we had ever seen it there and that didn’t surprised me as it was a gorgeous day outside! Louie had some work to do after that so we went home. I got all of my holiday decorations out and started putting up the tree. The cats really loved having a tree inside to climb, and I guess I am just fine with that.  At night we had Thanksgiving Take 2 and it was just as good as Take 1.

Saturday was an entire day spent at home, and it was glorious. I was able to again sleep in a bit, exercise, and finish decorating the tree—I ran out of hooks before I was done, so I’ll finish the rest in a few days after I get some more hooks. My trick with cats is to not put up my most breakable ornaments, and otherwise to shrug and laugh. The tree seems sturdy enough for them to climb up without it falling over. We put it in a slightly more central location than previous years since I won’t have any students coming and going, which meant I ended up being short on ornaments—I was used to having one side against the wall! I also went ahead and worked on Christmas cards and got those mostly done. I’m still collecting addresses and don’t plan to send them for another week or two.  We had Thanksgiving for the third time for dinner and managed to finally finish off a few of the dishes. There’s still corn pudding, salad, and cranberry sauces left, but otherwise we did a good job.

IMG_7145IMG_7148

And that brings us to now. I ended up waking up quite early, so I’ve already done quite a few things…I actually have realized it’s nice to be awake as the sun comes up since it sets so early (4:41 today, for instance). I thought having a teaching job where I had to get up so early would be a terrible thing, and while it’s awfully hard some mornings, it has been kind of fun. I’m trying to focus on the good things, and on some of the ideas that were brought up in the Best Year Yet book and the Self-Care workshop and between that and you know, a vacation, I’m feeling much more like myself than I had in awhile: more focused, relaxed, and enjoying life. This pandemic is still hard, and I believe some of the worst is yet to come, but we will (hopefully) weather the storm…

IMG_7151

Back to work tomorrow for just over 3 weeks…

Recital day

I have this app on my phone called “Timehop” which shows me stuff I took pictures of or posted to instragram or whatnot 1 year ago, 2 years ago, etc. Today I saw a picture from one year ago of a studio recital. It wasn’t actually 1 year ago to the day, so the picture must have been something else, but just under one year ago was our last student recital together, in person (I usually do one the Sunday before Thanksgiving.) I miss seeing those guys in person…I haven’t been one of those teachers who is like “I miss my students so much” because I’m not that sort of teacher. But it has gotten ridiculous, and we are looking at several more months of online at least, and it’s tiring, because IT DIDN’T HAVE TO BE THIS WAY.

In any case, I’m excited for the recital today on zoom. Most of the students are playing live, and a few have recorded videos ahead of time to be less stressful. I told them they had a choice. Life is stressful enough these days for those who find playing on a recital overly stressful. Hopefully the next recital…or at least the one after that, can be in person.

I’m tired of hearing violin over the internet though. I’m looking forward to seeing them all again in person, and hearing how they actually soon.

I’m tired of a lot of things…but I’m really glad to have a week off (mostly) ahead of me. I’m looking forward to catching up on a bunch of videos of this and that I need to watch, reading some more books, doing some cooking, taking some walks and hikes, and decorating a bit for Christmas. I don’t know if I’ll put up a Christmas tree this year, but I’ll definitely decorate some. I don’t know if I want to go all out with just two of us here, but I will put up some nutcrackers and a few other things to make it festive.

We got a meal box from Purple Carrot this week. It’s a vegan meal delivery service, similar to Blue Apron except the meals don’t contain any animal products. I made two of the recipes and Louie made one. I thought my two were easier to make than most of the Blue Apron meals, and especially enjoyed the one I made last night. It was Sesame Ginger Noodles with Stir-Fried Greens and Toasted Peanuts, and I forgot to take a picture. I would make it again, though I might add some tofu if I did it on my own. Louie thought the burgers he made were a little more involved, and we wished they had had a few more carrots, but they were also tasty. We decided we would order again and perhaps alternate with Blue Apron (we usually do about one box a month.)

IMG_7018

Those are roasted carrots, and they were delicious, but there were very few of them. I’m greedy with my roasted veggies and always want a bunch.

In any case, if you like eating plant-based meals, I would recommend Purple Carrot. I don’t have any free meals to offer you right now, but I might in the future. (I do have referrals for Blue Apron and Imperfect Foods, so just leave a comment or email me if you are interested or if you have any more questions!)

I was supposed to get my hair done on Monday, but my hairdresser had to cancel due to a COVID exposure. Now I’m worried I shouldn’t have been going anyway, and should wait a few more months…I had felt it was okay since it was just her and me and we wear masks the whole time, but I am there for almost two hours if I do a cut and color and she definitely sees more people each day than I do. Or maybe I should just do one at a time, but that seems annoying because you end up wasting more time that way. This is my vanity speaking, of course, but I spend all day looking at myself on the computer! I will wait and decide what to do. Another few weeks won’t matter in the greater scheme of things, and I know that pandemic gray is a source of pride for some women.

I am debating if we are going to get to the Garden Glow this year. On the one hand, this is an event I have thought about doing every year for years and years and never made it due to work commitments. Perhaps this is the year to go! But yet, COVID. It IS mostly outdoors yet they still require masks and from what I’ve heard, people tend to follow the rules. Also they have limited tickets from usual years. But yet, still, I don’t want to get COVID and our community spread is terrible, and perhaps future years I will continue a similar schedule of mostly teaching with a few gigs here and there.

I spent a few years trying to take on as many gigs as possible, and it seems that that approach doesn’t help at all in the long term, as each gig disappears just as quickly as it appeared. Being a freelance musician has been the most stressful and thankless part of my career. I was thinking about how wonderful the people I teach are, and instead of a one thing here, one thing there, with the new person moving back getting the job I couldn’t do the one time and then suddenly all the jobs, I have a steady stream of young people (and older) wanting to learn…it’s a more consistent and less crazy-making career path. I would however, love to play chamber music with people who inspire me, or to play a Mahler Symphony again, but I’ve also been lucky enough in my life to have done those things many times.

I taught another Creative Ability Development (CAD) Class yesterday morning and had the most fun. Teaching kids to improvise and improvising myself has been my latest favorite thing (I looked forward to the class, enjoyed it throughout, and ran overtime) and I’m so glad I fell into it. My path to becoming an improviser has been (I think) unconventional and random, and I know I have a long way to go, but like a teacher I had recently said, the best way to really learn to do something is to teach it. (My class is open to anybody who can play a string instrument a little bit, so contact me for more information as well!).

I hope you have relaxing Thanksgiving Day plans. I hope you are being safe, and that you and your families are well. Oh, and check out this recording of The Winter’s Tale with me on violin ($6 to $9). It’s in the style of an Orson Welles Radio Broadcast and is really well done, and I helped create the music.

The Carrot or the Stick

The week has flown by, but it’s going well. We had a long power outage on Sunday due to a tree around the corner from us getting blown over in the wind, but after that things have gone smoothly.

Thanksgiving break is so close…I ordered Thanksgiving Dinner for us from Treehouse and got the dinner for 4. I’m going to supplement with a few extra dishes (roasted vegetables, cranberry sauce) and then we will have some Thanksgiving leftovers and save a bit more cooking. I’m excited to have a few days off from hearing Zoom Violin!

This weekend is a bit busy as I’m teaching an improvisation class AND doing a studio recital. Next week is a well deserved break!

I did some more canning on Tuesday. I made pickled cranberries for the upcoming holidays and I made a cherry almond jam recipe with frozen cherries I’d gotten over the summer. (Originally fresh). The jam is delicious—two of the jars didn’t seal so I have been having to eat it already.

IMG_7004

We are trying a meal box from Purple Carrot this week—I got it for free from a friend. Purple Carrot is a vegan meal delivery service, where they deliver the ingredients and you have to cook. We aren’t vegan (I eat seafood and dairy and eggs, but try to avoid most other meat products) but we enjoy eating vegan meals (hence the Thanksgiving meal). I made one meal last night and it was nice. Was it as good as Blue Apron? Not so far, but I actually think the meal I made was the least appetizing looking one (I chose it because it looked easiest) so we will see how the other two add up. I was a little concerned that there was very little added salt and pepper in the instructions and it didn’t use up an entire can of beans it provided and told you to save them, so I went ahead and added them. It seemed like from the directions they thought people might be limiting their calories more…I suppose people might eat vegan to be healthier, but I see it as more of an environmental and sustainable choice. I don’t think 500 calories is a good amount for a dinner for an adult, so I added some salt and used all the beans.

IMG_7016

It was called something like Tomato Gratin with Farro. It was tasty!

The news has been quite disheartening lately. It seems very few people are willing to continue making any sort of sacrifice to save lives. I am particularly frustrated at our lack of government help: it seems somewhat obvious that what we really need to do right now is pay people to stay home, and instead we are just shaming college students for not wanting to stay isolated in a dorm room.  I feel like everybody else is pretty much living life normally and complaining about things being online while the death toll mounts, and they warn us that hospitals will be overrun. I know over the summer we did a few things, but we really tried to analyze the risk involved, and currently the community spread of this virus is out of control, and you have to assume that you or anybody you run into might have it.

On a brighter note:

IMG_7006

If I’m stuck at home (and technically I’m not, I could be going to concerts, restaurants, and weddings) at least I’m stuck with these guys. Aren’t they the cutest?

Pandemic Life

I was thinking the other day how I often feel like I’m just counting down the days…counting down the activities each day until the end of the day. Is this normal? How do we live in the moment when the moments are all the same and feel unending but we know that it’s because we are living through a bad time? Am I just depressed?

28E04D40-08BD-4D41-99F0-8520257D87FC

Anyway, it was a normal week. Cats, a little recording of Christmas music, lots of students. I’m looking forward to Thanksgiving Break and having some time off…it’s funny how weekends aren’t enough for me anyway. To be fair, I’m doing an online workshop for 10 hours this weekend so I’m pretty busy. We aren’t 100 percent sure on what we are doing for Thanksgiving (well, it’s mostly because I know what I want to do which is just eat at home, but Louie is waffling a bit and feels like we should try to eat with his parents who live in town, but I feel like that’s needlessly risky) but otherwise we are hoping for decent weather (unlike today, which is raining) so we can get in some good outdoor activities. I also want to do a little baking and make some cranberry things, and then decorate for Christmas. I don’t plan to decorate as fully as last year when I had company, but I’d like to make the place a little festive. That will happen AFTER Thanksgiving Smile

IMG_6961

A selfie while waiting to record two Christmas songs for an upcoming Opera Edwardsville video performance. I wore a festive holiday, as you can see. I am excited to see the video for that and also really excited to hear the recording of A Winter’s Tale that I did with the students at St Louis University.

IMG_6979

These guys took my seat when I had a short break from teaching. It was a bit of a challenge shooing them out of there! Kind of like herding cats.

I had a dream the other night that I overbought bananas, that we had 5 bunches of them in the fruit bowl, but that I also kept finding a bunch of them in nearly every basket and on every end table throughout the house! This was the same night I also had a dream that I was visiting a friend who said that they don’t wear masks but that it’s okay because as they are talking they move their hand up and down really fast to dissipate any virus in the air. Weird night.

I can’t decide if my early morning job is giving me a nice structure to my day or making me absolutely miserable with exhaustion. I think it’s somewhere in between. Last night I slept from 10:30 to 7:30, and only got up one time, and woke up to a nice rain, and I feel great. I know parents do this kind of thing all the time, but there are a variety of reasons one chooses not to be a parent, and while sleep wasn’t the main one for me, it is something I get to have for myself. I also haven’t been sleeping well for the past four years, especially lately, so it was nice to get a solid 9 hours rather than tossing and turning and maybe getting 5 to 6. I do enjoy doing the classes for students, and that age group (4th and 5th graders) is an age group that tends to really enjoy my sense of humor, so that’s good.

Thanksgiving dilemma: do I order dinner for 4 (for 2) to have leftovers and it’s NOT twice as much as dinner for 2? Or just dinner for 2 to be reasonable? I might still supplement with some bread from another place and a home baked pie and homemade cranberry sauce or relish. What would you do?