I don’t want to speak too soon, but it’s day 10, and I seem to be emerging from my covid infection.
In case it helps other people facing the virus, I’ll explain how it progressed for me. Please bear in mind that the symptoms + severity of covid-19 are extremely variable
Thread/
1. My health status: I’m 57. Mildly asthmatic. Keep fit. Never smoked. Scarcely drink.
It’s reassuring to know that it wouldn’t have made any difference if I’d died of covid. To the billionaire press, my “pre-existing condition” (asthma) means I was on the way out anyway.
2. Our eight-year-old was the first to show symptoms. After someone in her class fell ill, she threw up and had a brief headache, then recovered instantly. We all got tested, but at that point, only she tested positive. Soon afterwards, I felt nauseous and had a headache.
3. This was followed by four nights of fever. I’ve had a lot of fevers, including several bouts of malaria. These were by no means the worst. Generally they lasted a couple of hours. I went cold, my teeth chattered, my mind raced, I sweated, then they suddenly peaked and broke.
4. I was exhausted during the days, and mostly stayed in bed. Thankfully, my partner wasn’t hit as hard and remained up and about. Otherwise, I’m not sure how we would have coped with a very bouncy eight year old, over Christmas.
5. She tested positive, but I felt too ill to travel. We had no contacts to report, as we’ve been really careful, and we would all be sticking to the same isolation rules anyway.
6. Our very kind neighbours bought fresh food for us, and a brilliant friend brought a rescue package, which included an oximeter, that she and many others said was really important. We’ve been using it a lot, and it has given us reassurance.
7. When the fevers abated, I was struck by breathlessness. This was the worst of my symptoms. It felt like having a plastic bag tied round my head: however hard I breathed, I couldn’t seem to get enough air into my lungs. It was frightening.
8. But then I found an NHS page on managing breathlessness, and it really helped. These exercises immediately calmed me down, regulated my breathing and reduced my feelings of suffocation: royalberkshire.nhs.uk/Managing%20bre…
9. For a couple more days, I still felt I was living 5000 m above sea level, though sadly without the fresh air and long views. But now I've more or less come back down to Earth.
10. I had some weird olfactory hallucinations. Some kinds of food smelt and tasted like the most revolting rotten carrion you could imagine. I threw away two jars of pickles before I realised it wasn’t them, it was me.
11. I still feel quite tired, and everyone has advised me to continue resting. The virus has set off my asthma, as all viruses do, and my sleep hasn’t settled down yet, but apart from that, I believe, and hope, I’ve climbed out of the hole. We’ve been very lucky.
12. Our isolation ends at midnight tomorrow. Emerging from quarantine into mere lockdown is going to feel like freedom. We can buy our own food! We can walk round the block! But I’m going to be moving slowly until I feel all danger is past.
13. I can't thank you all enough for your kind and encouraging words and support. They really did help, and I'm sorry not to have been able to reply to them individually.
Take care and stay safe.
Thank you. ❤️💚

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More from @GeorgeMonbiot

18 Dec 20
This is how the living world ends: with overgrown boys in giant Tonka toys boasting about their role in its destruction.
(h/t @JFDIecologist)
Read this exchange in the thread beneath this boastful video, and weep:
To me, this highlights the undemocratic nature of power over the land. No one made the land, yet those who assert ownership of it are empowered to treat it - as in this case - in ways that horrify most of us. Why do they have greater rights to decide than we do?
Read 4 tweets
17 Dec 20
Like Johnson and Farage, Rees-Mogg owes his political position to the media, who thought he was colourful and interesting and funny, so gave him a massive platform.
In reality, he's just a cruel, sheltered, pompous arse.
mirror.co.uk/news/politics/…
But this is how the media - including the BBC - creates our politics.
The bigger the idiot, the greater the airtime.
theguardian.com/commentisfree/…
Sorry about the language, by the way. There are moments when polite words don't suffice.
Read 4 tweets
16 Dec 20
Goodbye soil.
Maize is the greatest threat to soils in the UK.
Yet it is expanding rapidly, largely for biogas production in anaerobic digestion plants.
Prime land is being trashed in response to a perverse incentive created by the government.
Biogas was sold to us on the basis that it would be produced from slurry, sewage and food waste. But, as some of us warned, you can make more money by growing crops specifically for producing it.
Far from heeding the warnings, the govt actually encouraged this.
And @NFUtweets called for a massive expansion in crops for biogas (generally on Grade 1 arable land), taking this land out of food production.
At they same time, it opposes rewilding even of the least productive land, because it would, er, take this land out of food production!
Read 5 tweets
16 Dec 20
It's now looking quite likely that Brexit will coincide with both a third lockdown and - if the longterm forecasts are correct - severe flooding.
Any one of these events would be a national crisis.
Together they could amount to a national catastrophe.
God help us.
Our government has a track record of:
- ignoring warnings
- leaving the necessary action to the last possible minute
- then bungling it
- using a crisis to enrich its friends and advance its political agenda
- leaving the poorest and most vulnerable to sink or swim
These tendencies, in combination with a possible concatenation of crises, present a severe threat to our wellbeing. We are not in good hands.
Read 12 tweets
14 Dec 20
I’m being targeted by some conspiracy theorists, because I called for a "Great Reset" a month before the World Economic Forum did.
But all this shows is how misplaced the theory is.
Thread/
theguardian.com/commentisfree/…
I spelt out what I meant in that article: putting more emphasis on ecology and environmental issues in education, re-engaging with the living world, moving towards an economy that stays within planetary boundaries. All deeply sinister, I’m sure.
For the record, I’ve never had any contact with the World Economic Forum. As @NaomiAKlein explains, its own version of the Great Reset is basically a cynical rebranding of capitalism as a force for good. It’s hypocritical and self-serving. But not satanic.
theintercept.com/2020/12/08/gre…
Read 7 tweets
13 Dec 20
The government is suddenly instructing supermarkets to stockpile. But how, when UK warehouse capacity is more or less maxed out? I warned about this a few weeks ago, but couldn't get anyone in government or the media to take an interest.
theguardian.com/commentisfree/…
It's classic Johnson.
Ignore the warnings.
Panic.
Blame someone else.
Because Johnson has never done the work himself, but tells other people to 'make it happen', he has no idea what is and isn't realistic. The time to tell businesses to stockpile was 9 months ago, accompanied by a major warehouse building and logistics programme.
Read 4 tweets

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