1/ THREAD. Most people are vain. We think that people are up to date on what's going in our lives.
This is not the case. People are busy with their OWN lives.
But for anyone who cares (hi Mom!), here's...
The Current State of My Life, in 12 Tweets.
2/ A few recent messages from friends have reminded me that not everyone is up to date on what's going on with me (shocking, I know).
So I thought I'd write about all the recent changes in my life. Think of it as a holiday card update, except in July.
3/ HEALTH. I'm happy—and grateful—to be feeling good these days.
When I left @nyulangone on 4/1/20 after my 3-week #COVID19 ordeal, I feared I had suffered permanent damage—to my lungs, heart, or vocal cords (since my voice was shot from the ventilator).
4/ I don't think I have suffered any major permanent damage, knocking wood—and thanking God.
It took a year-plus, but my #LongCovid symptoms have finally dissipated, for the most part. The pulmonologist and cardiologist have given me clean bills of health.
5/ My one issue is that during exercise, which I've resumed, I get unusually winded, and my heart rate goes too high.
But this has been improving with exercise, and it should continue to improve. The docs say I don't need any meds or procedures, just time.
6/ JOB. My near-death experience with #COVID was very clarifying for me, in terms of my career.
It reminded me that life is short—and we should, to the extent that we can, do what we love. For me, that's writing.
7/ In May, I left legal recruiting and @LateralLink—a great company, where I enjoyed working with wonderful colleagues during my two-year stint—and returned to full-time writing.
I liked recruiting, but I love writing. More here:
8/ I now make my living from Original Jurisdiction, my @SubstackInc newsletter about law & the legal world. I'm giving myself until May 2022 to see if I can get enough paid subscribers to make it work. I welcome your support!
9/ Although I founded Above the Law (@atlblog) in 2006 and led it from 2006 to 2017, and it's what I'm most known for (aside from #COVID), I have no involvement with the site today or control over its content (and haven't really since 2017).
10/ HOME. Our family just moved from Manhattan to Summit, NJ. Three weeks in, we're enjoying suburbia.
My husband Zach and I grew up in NJ, our parents still live here, and it's great having them so close, especially since they help us with our son Harlan.
11/ I feel incredibly blessed—to still be here, given the 600,000 Americans and 4 million worldwide who have lost their lives to #COVID, and to be doing as well as I am, given the challenges that so many still face.🙏🙏🙏
12/ Thank you for your prayers, good thoughts, and wise advice, during these 16+ months. Twitter gets flak, some of it deserved, but it's also a source of support during tough times.
I'm happy to add to this thread to answer any questions. Thanks again.
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Is anyone aware of research on the susceptibility to the Delta variant of people who had a natural infection of #COVID19 (seropositive) and then got fully vaccinated with an mRNA vaccine on top of that?
3/ Just went to @nyulangone to give blood for a research study I joined back in March 2020, when I was hospitalized there. I go there every few months to donate.
1/ An important update regarding the hiring as a #SCOTUS clerk of Jessica (Jessie) Garland, daughter of Attorney General Merrick Garland, by Justice Kagan.
From Patricia McCabe of the Supreme Court Public Information Office:
2/ I appended this to the end of my earlier thread, but since I really can't make heads or tails of why Twitter displays some of my tweets widely and others not at all, I'm tweeting it out this way too.
3/ The key points:
(a) Justice Kagan hired Jessica Garland BEFORE #MerrickGarland was AG (and before @JoeBiden was elected president.
(b) Jessie Garland won't clerk for Justice Kagan at #SCOTUS during Merrick Garland's tenure as AG.
1/ Before my critical case of Covid-19, I had a resolution to walk or run at least 25 miles a week, which averages out to around 3.5 miles a day. And I generally adhered to it.
2/ From 2015-2019, I basically managed to keep this resolution. Here are the years and my average daily walking/running totals (per the handy Health app in my iPhone).
2015: 4.2
2016: 3.7
2017: 4.3
2018: 3.8
2019: 3.9
3/ In 2020, thanks to Covid, I averaged just 2.4 miles a day. I did hardly any walking in March, much of which I spent in the hospital, and April, the first month of my recovery (when I could barely walk across the house or up a single flight of stairs).
1/ Everyone keeps assuming that Justice Stephen Breyer will retire from #SCOTUS either this year or, as is looking more likely right now, next year.
But what is the basis for this assumption? Might Justice Breyer stick around for several more years?
2/ In his recent interview with @JoanBiskupic of @CNN, all Justice Breyer said was that (a) he hasn't decided on when to retire and (b) he would consider his health and the needs of #SCOTUS in deciding.
What do those factors say right now about retirement?
3/ Justice Breyer seems active and healthy, and he's still making meaningful contributions at #SCOTUS.
This past Term, he wrote opinions for the Court in such major cases as CA v. TX (the big ACA case), Mahanoy v. BL (student free speech), Google v. Oracle.
1/ THREAD. Some of the coverage connecting the departure of John Demers as head of the Justice Department’s National Security Division to the uproar over the DOJ leak investigations is a bit misleading.
2/ Look at all of these headlines, which imply that John Demers’s departure was prompted by the furor over the leak investigations, Apple/Google subpoenas, etc.
3/ But then read this @nytimes by @ktbenner, which has the right facts (even if the headline and sad-face photo, which Benner isn’t responsible for, reinforce the narrative that John Demers’s departure is tied to the scandal).