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#MaskUp

13 posts12 participants0 posts today
Continued thread

Wearing a mask is an act of refusal.

It is refusal to participate in a mass disabling event. It is refusal to leave behind disabled comrades. It is refusal to fall in line with the eugenicist logics at the heart of fascism. It is refusal to comply in advance with the mask bans.

Refuse fascism. Wear a mask.

Continued thread

And the winner of #MarchMaskness 2025 is… the 3M Aura/Trifold N95/FFP2 with headstraps! Your votes determined that the 3M Aura is the greatest respirator of all! 🎉

The 3M Aura ticks the boxes in function, filtration, fit, and fashion. It’s generally easy to find in smaller and larger sizes, with rubber straps (1870+, 9205+) or braided elastic straps (9210+), with or without valves/vents. It’s comfortable, versatile, and a fine introductory respirator for anyone starting their search for the best respirator for themselves.

In general, the trifold respirator offers good coverage while keeping a low profile. Measurements and features can vary among brands and models, so if the 3M Aura winds up letting you down, you have some solid runners-up to choose from within this category.

Go forth and wear your champion respie with pride!

Covid-Safe Scouts know — the actual best respirator is the one that fits securely and comfortably on your face and has a high filtration rating.

📗 "Viral Modernism: The Influenza Pandemic and Interwar Literature" by Elizabeth Outka

Have you wondered too: why is covid barely visible in modern media? Why do I never pick up a book with someone wearing a mask, even though it's 2020 in the story? Why do I watch tv shows set in 2021 and they act like everything is fine? I have to dig deep for any text that dares to mention the unmentionable (ongoing) SARSCoV2 pandemic, and that really bothers me.

Turns out this is not a rare phenomenon. The same happened after Spanish Flu a full century ago. This book from 2019 digs into the why of it, and then goes on to analyze the presence of the 1918 pandemic in the very few books that did mention it.

The book is divided into three parts. Part 1 zooms in on 'why?'. Why was the flu silenced in literature? Why was it such a taboo? Even if you're not interested in reading the rest of this book, this part is worth it if you've been wondering the same. It has some interesting theories. Partly the war overshadowed the pandemic. But partly it's also a problem of a lack of language and narrative. War is easy to explain: us, the goodies, fight a 'them', the baddies, and someone wins. But a virus is invisible and not well-understood. The 'enemy' doesn't invade from the outside, but spreads throughout your loved ones, penetrates your body and blurs all the lines of who's what. There was a lot of guilt about participation and ignorance. On top of the grief, there's a societal view of sickness as weakness, and of caring and ill health with femininity, which didn't help. I won't recap all of the book here, but it was a fascinating read to see why the pandemic was hidden in media, and how so much can be applied to the current times too. Plus there were lots of archival pictures that I'd never seen before!

In part 2 several books from around that era are discussed and the role of the pandemic in the story is analyzed. I was afraid that it might be too academic for me, but it was quite readable. Most notably I've gotten a more negative view of Virginia Woolf. Although she was one of the few acknowledging sickness in her literature, she also minimized Spanish Flu in daily life, not wanting to engage with it. I was also surprised to see 'look to windward' appear, which I've only known as a quote on war through Bank's books. And wow, the amount of 'living dead' analogies that pop up, interesting stuff.

Part 3 goes into two major trends that became popular post-pandemic: spiritualism and zombie tales. Both are forms of the dead coming back, one for mourning and peace of mind, the other for an outlet for fear and anger. I got quite upset reading about seances where ghosts of flu victims return to earth to exonerate their families from guilt of infection, hmpf. Either way, I thought it was engrossing. In hindsight, it all makes sense, and it helps me understand the way people behave now.

At the end the book states that we're not ready for a new pandemic, although we could be, if only we'd look reality in the eyes and prepare well. Covid started and... here we are. Millions dead, many more millions chronically ill, ableism abound, covid still around and mutating. And probably more pandemics coming at us in the near future. Every day I feel stronger about not letting this truth go unsaid. It's uncomfortable, but more tragedies will occur if the majority of people keep avoiding unpleasant realities. Don't look away, don't underestimate yourself -you can bear it and do your part to keep the people around you safe and well.

As the book says: "Reading the letters and stories told by the survivors of the pandemic —and the literary representations that simultaneously revealed and hid these very stories— launch us into new narrative streams, allowing us to hear voices long ignored in part because the viral, dust-like form at the heart of the story was itself invisible and silent."

I'm adding this book under #PlagueBook and I've also gone back and tagged all previous books that talk about pandemics that I've reviewed with that too (in a tiny effort to not lose these works into silence once again). You can view them all here:

c.im/@reading_recluse/tagged/P

Please stay safe and #WearAMask !

It’s your cool-ass internet pal modelling her elasto respie headscarf combo, the latest innovation in Covid-avoidant couture. The scarf features hook-and-loop dots to secure it around top head strap of the respirator, eliminating the need for fussy knots and fiddly hair pins. So chic. So safe. So easy.

cw: eye contact

Replied in thread

@DenisCOVIDinfoguy they also cite pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/358102

which has this absolute adjective of a hypothesis:

SARS-CoV-2 may bind to ACE2 in order to enter the host brainstem cell and change baroreflex sensitivity

because

The integral parts of the brain renin-angiotensin system, as ACE2 enzyme, are highly expressed in the brainstem, which may also be involved in baroreflex sensitivity, playing an important role in HRV.

which would help explain POTS!!

PubMedPotential autonomic nervous system dysfunction in COVID-19 patients detected by heart rate variability is a sign of SARS-CoV-2 neurotropic features - PubMedIncreasing evidence strongly support that the newly identified severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) leads to the development of COVID-19-associated central nervous system (CNS) manifestations. The presence of SARS-CoV-2 viral protein in the brainstem, which includes cardiovas …
El COVID no ha terminado:
• El 50% de las infecciones son asintomáticas.
• Mínimo 10% de las infecciones acaban en COVID persistente.
• Las vacunas no evitan ni reinfecciones, ni el contagio, ni las secuelas persistentes del COVID.
• Las reinfecciones nos destrozan. No hay forma de “entrenar” el sistema inmunológico porque no es un músculo. hay una idea errónea común de que la exposición a gérmenes dañinos fortalece el sistema inmunológico. las enfermedades virales como COVID, gripe, sarampión debilitan el sistema inmunológico, dejando la posibilidad de daños duraderos. La realidad es que no construyes tu inmunidad con infecciones repetidas, las vacunas fortalecen el sistema inmunológico enseñándole a reconocer los patógenos sin todos los riesgos. Centrarnos en la prevención de las infecciones es clave.
• Un test de antígeno rápido solo logra detectar con éxito alrededor del 60% de las infecciones tempranas sintomáticas y aproximadamente el 22% de las infecciones asintomáticas. Los PCR y test moleculares son los test con más precisión.
• El COVID se propaga y mueve como el humo de un cigarro, piensa en las personas de tu alrededor y en ti como personas que están todo el día fumando, se hace más visual entender cómo se mueve el COVID.
• En las infecciones con síntomas se tarda un par de días en dar los síntomas lo que quiere decir que estás por lo menos un par de días infectando sin saberlo. Eres infeccioso de COVID por lo menos 10 días.

#MaskUp #WearAMask #CovidRealist #CovidIsAirbone

#LlevaMascarilla #RealistaCovid #CovidSonAerosoles #birdflu #gripeaviar #LongCovid

When I lived in Africa in the 90’s and 2000’s I tried various chemiprophylaxis regimens for malaria. After my fourth bout with malaria on one regimen, I decided “I can’t keep doing this” and switched regimens. What I don’t understand today is all the people who keep getting sick month after month, yet refuse to try anything different as far as mitigations. #covid #maskup

Replied in thread

Some highlights from @ducky 's weekly roundup at covidbc.webfoot.com/2025/03/28

SARS-CoV-2 can interact with / activate the CD147 receptor to get into lymphocytes (T-cells and B-cells). (sciencedirect.com/science/arti)

women are 13.4 times more likely to get Long COVID if they are 🤰pregnant than if they are 🚫🤰not, with the danger highest if they catch COVID-19 in the third trimester. (sciencedirect.com/science/arti)

the rate of cases of postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome (POTS) has gone up more than fourteen times compared to pre-pandemic (academic.oup.com/ehjqcco/advan)

covidbc.webfoot.com2025-03-28 General – Pandemics in British Columbia