The Day My Computer Caught the Delta
Variant Covid Virus
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I suppose
it’s my own fault. I should have known when the toilet tank innards up and died
and bled water all over the floor.
But no, I
had nary a clue. Then a few days later I remained blissfully unaware when my
washing machine puddled all over the bodega floor. Turned out a crack eroded in
the tub which had to be replaced. I should have caught on that something was
afoot more than the simple mechanical obvious.
The
appropriate specialist doctors came out and applied the appropriate
medications, in these cases, new innards. Life went onward.
Had I only
known, I could have taken measures and stopped the infection before it raged
out of control. It’s not rocket science. But it is health science. Wash hands,
mask, apply liberal doses of disinfectant while going from place to place. Easy-peasy.
But, no, not
me. I got careless, complacent, smug, self-satisfied.
Then my
computer got sick. It simply didn’t respond to my pleas. Please, pleas, beg on
knees pleas. Please. The wallpaper stuck to the screen but it would not let me
through the door.
Years ago my
son taught me two magical tricks that usually work. First, check all the
connections. Check. Secondly, reboot. Check. Nada. Nothing.
I walked
next door. “Do you have internet? Is Telmex down?” Nope, that wasn’t the
problem.
Then I did
the next best thing. I phoned my son, the computer genius. “HELP!”
My son knows
me well. He knows that when my computer is down, I’m a mess. Panic might be a too
strong a word for what I feel, but is there such a thing as “panic once
removed”?
“I’ll call
you when I get off work,” Ben said.
Meanwhile,
disconnected from friends and family, isolated in middle Mexico, I began to
build a worst case scenario. By now I have figured out that my computer has
caught the Covid virus. I’ll probably have to buy a new computer, which means
Ben buys it for me and formats it for me and ships it to me which will take at
least two months, given shipping time during the last Covid surge when there
were not enough healthy drivers to keep the trucks on the roads.
Now I’m on a
roll, masked and gloved, spray bottle of disinfectant in hand, I wipe down the
refrigerator, the stove, the light fixtures and plug-ins.
I put my
brand-new sewing machine, just delivered, into quarantine.
I look
around for anything that could possibly get infected, break down and die.
Electric toothbrush? Yikes! Electric teakettle—check. Blender—check. I live
very simply so it does not take me long to isolate and reinstate all safety
measures.
That left me
idle hours to work on my paranoia and related conspiracy theories.
My son lives
in the Pacific Time zone. I live in the Central Time zone. At 7:10 my time, the
phone rang. “Here’s what I want you to do,” Ben said. “Reboot.”
“I already
did, complete reboot twice, off at the surge protector, wait ten minutes or
longer, turn it on. Same results.”
“Uh huh,”
Ben said, “Do it again.” We were on the landline so when I turned off the
computer at the surge protector, my phone service died. Computer and phone are
a package. While I was calling him on my cellular phone, he called me back on
the landline, just as I turned my computer back on. “Now do this and click that
and hit ‘Enter’. What do you get?”
Like magic,
my computer came to life, lifted itself out of the grave, resurrected, and I
embraced her.
“What went
wrong?” I asked. Ben told me but when he speaks computer garble it is in
language so foreign to me that I don’t even know when to nod and smile and
pretend to understand.
I may not
understand what Ben said, but I know what happened. My computer had contracted
the dread pandemic virus. While I waited for his phone call, Ben gave my
computer the electronic version of the vaccination.
He then
advised me to tell my computer daily how much I appreciated its good work and
to let it know I love it, you know, slobber on it a little.
Hey,
whatever works, works. Thank you, Ben. I loved on him a little too.
Sondra
Ashton
HDN: Looking
out my back door
September 2,
2021
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