This week marks six months since my husband and I got sick with covid. We are still very much dealing with the aftereffects. Here’s the view from half a year out. (thread, 1/x)
My husband is still coughing. It’s nothing like the apocalyptic coughs we had during the acute illness, but it’s still there. He has been coughing every day for six months. It's been very, very slowly improving with the help of two inhalers. 2/x
Both of us, still, get out of breath very easily. Just the other day, I carried some groceries upstairs to our apartment, and at the top of the stairs I had to drop the bags on the floor and lean against the wall to catch my breath. 3/x
In my husband’s case, the doctor thinks this is because of the same airway inflammation causing his persistent cough. In my case, it’s because of inflammation around my heart, which tests revealed in July. It’s treatable! But it is, to say the least, scary to deal with. 4/x
I’ve been taking colchicine for two months, since that diagnosis in July. I have to take it for one month more. Then I’ll get more tests, which we hope will show that the inflammation is gone. 5/x
My senses of smell and taste still — still, after six months! — are not back to normal. I can smell some things but not others. The things I can smell are less intense than they should be. Sometimes I smell a weird scent that’s not actually there. 6/x
Adding up the explanations of benefits I’ve received so far, my doctor’s appointments, tests, and treatments have cost more than $10,000, which I'm extremely grateful is almost fully covered by my insurance. I'll be getting more EOBs, and more tests, in the coming weeks. 7/x
I’m young and had none of the underlying conditions that put people at higher risk. I feel gross saying that because — and I can't believe this needs to be said — people who are older or do have underlying conditions are just as important and don't deserve to get sick or die. 8/x
But I don’t know how else to tell the “I’m young and healthy, I don’t have anything to worry about” people that they’re wrong. 9/x
This virus isn't a goddamn joke, and death rates — which are MORE than unspeakable enough on their own — don't even begin to capture the full toll. 10/end
Such a great website
And if anyone needs a reminder of what the acute phase of the illness can be like:

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More from @MaggieAstor

Feb 8, 2023
Here are some of the things NYT management is resisting while increasing dividends and authorizing hundreds of millions of dollars in stock buybacks 🧵 nytimes.com/2023/02/08/bus…
⚫️ a $65,000 salary floor for our lowest-paid employees, including news assistants and security guards
⚫️ wage increases that keep our salaries competitive amid inflation and make up for three years without any raise 🧵
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⚫️ reimbursing cab fare for employees who leave the office after 10:30pm 🧵
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Though I worked with @blakehounshell, I didn’t know him as well as many of my colleagues.

I know depression, though. I know how it lies to you. Every time, even if you’ve endured it before, even if you’ve endured it a hundred times. It tells you it’s not possible to feel better.
I know it so well that I got the truth tattooed on my arm. To remind me, from me. Often, in the depths of it, it doesn’t help for other people to remind you. A tattoo on a forearm. It says in black ink, "The Shado
The semicolon marks where a writer could’ve ended a sentence but chose not to.

Eventually, you're so glad you chose not to. At least, I am.

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Oct 26, 2022
New from me: Fetterman's debate appearance was exciting and validating for many people with disabilities, because it's so rare for political candidates to be candid about disability. Much of the public response, however, was painful. 🧵 nytimes.com/2022/10/26/us/…
I'm going to highlight some of the reporting from the piece, and some additional quotes and reporting that I wasn't able to include.

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Many people try to hide their disabilities, though, bc of stigma. So it's a big deal to have a Senate candidate get on a debate stage with a disability that's impossible to hide in that context, and talk about it matter-of-factly. nytimes.com/2022/10/26/us/…
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Aug 31, 2022
Additions to the list of Republican candidates downplaying Trump support they once emphasized: Adam Laxalt and Ted Budd, running for Senate in NV and NC, respectively. Screenshots of the changes (previously unreported, as far as I can tell) in here: nytimes.com/2022/08/31/us/…
At least 10 GOP candidates in competitive races have updated their websites to de-emphasize Trump endorsements and/or abortion. In addition to the ones I named, they've been identified over the past week by news orgs including NBC, CNN, WaPo, and The 19th. nytimes.com/2022/08/31/us/…
Laxalt spokesman said that this story was "ridiculous" and that they were "proud of our Trump endorsement." Budd spokesman said the website changes reflected the fact that "general elections have different dynamics than primary elections." nytimes.com/2022/08/31/us/…
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May 10, 2022
Some Texans experiencing miscarriages have been unable to fill misoprostol prescriptions because "the pharmacy has said, 'We don't know whether or not you might be using this medication for the purposes of abortion,'" an OB-GYN told NPR npr.org/sections/healt…
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May 9, 2022
So excited to learn today — a few days late, apparently — that @JulietMacur, @pinkgrammar, @larrybuch, @dawncai624, and I won an Associated Press Sports Editors award for our Olympic gymnastics coverage apsportseditors.com/new-york-times…
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