I already work from home, no kids (just the furry kind), and my husband is still taking the walking-distance commute to his office (he's the CEO and everybody else is gone). Our biggest adjustment has been eating, since we typically go out several times a week. We're stocked up but mostly ordering from local restaurants to support them and their staff.
I was dealing pretty well until we had a 5.7 earthquake on Tuesday morning! We're on the 11th floor of a 12-story condo building in downtown Salt Lake. Thankfully the building is newer and built for this, but that means it moves, and BOY DID IT MOVE! I had just come off the elevator from walking the dog, got into my unit and there was a huge BOOM, power went out and then the rocking and rolling went on for a full minute! My poor husband was in the shower and thought he was passing out. He came out frantically looking for me during the shaking.
Thankfully we only had some doll shelves topple and lost some wine glasses. My cats hid for a day or so, and I had to take my 16-year-old dog up and down 11 flights of stairs. Power was back on in a few hours, no building damage and nobody hurt, so we were thankful for that. But we've had more than 200 aftershocks since! My nerves were pretty rattled, but after the first 24 hours or so they were small enough to mostly go unnoticed.
My gym closed this week and I haven't been great about running. I work in animal welfare so my job has been crazy busy with us trying to help shelters get animals adopted and into foster before they have to close to the public.
Please, if you're stuck at home, contact your local shelter and foster an animal! Most shelters provide all the supplies you need. They're often operating on an appointment basis right now, so check their website and/or social media pages.
So, yeah, it's been a fun week. Yesterday my husband and I decided to take the hour-long road trip to see the Bonneville Salt Flats. We've lived here more than 25 years and had never bothered to go out there. Well worth the trip! And there were a few others, but you can see we had plenty of space to keep our distance.
