Make a diary entry about a day you spent with your friends before the lockdown. (In 75 words)
plz ans fast
Answers
Answer:
Dear Diary,
These past days were traumatic. Italy is in a total Lockdown because of the Coronavirus, so I’m forced to stay at home, against my will, until the 3rd of May. I miss going out with my friends, to parties or visiting my grandma and spending time with her. However, I’m going to do what I need to do if I want the Coronavirus out of here.
The country was wholeheartedly Locked down, with all the schools closed and people needing to maintain social distances from one another when they are walking or going to the supermarket. However, on a positive note people are starting to wash themselves more often and are generally being more hygienic.
Talking about school, my school decided to do video lessons for a month or so, until this all blows over, anyway. My day in quarantine starts at 7:45 when I wake up and prepare myself for the first lesson at 0815. When the first two lessons are done, at 1005, I have a ten minute break. Then the other two lessons begin and then finish at 1205 and have a lunch break of 30 minutes. Then we have the last two hours and we finish school at 1425, a total of 6 hours a day.
So, my day in quarantine is not that interesting, but I am getting through it.
Bye and see you soon.
Answer:
Chronically busy people are busy all the time, any time: that's why their 'busy-ness' is a chronic condition, like rheumatism or indigestion. I've been diagnosed with this malady in my childhood, before the word 'workaholic' was invented. I've never known a moment of idleness since I was toddler; I've always been mystified by people saying they were 'bored', since I had no personal experience of boredom. All my life, there has always been more that I wanted to do than I had time for.Which is why there was some curiosity among family, staff and friends when the lockdown was announced. Opinion seemed broadly divided into two camps: those who said "Shashi can finally find time for all the things he's kept pending" and a sceptical minority who murmured, "maybe Shashi will finally learn to relax." The subtext in both cases was, however, "bet Shashi will still manage to be busy…"For one who had been travelling insanely - 13 different cities between January 3 and the opening of Parliament on February 1; hurtling to the constituency every weekend after a full schedule in the national capital, and making speeches, attending events and meeting importunate visitors during the hours I was out of the House during the session, lockdown meant a life without any of the three main things that had kept me busy thus far – meetings, events and travel. Surely this would help me ease up on my 'busy-ness'?
Within a day or so it became apparent this would not be the case. Immediately a huge amount of Covid-related work, especially relating to the constituency, arose. On the evening Parliament adjourned, I had requested the Prime Minister, in the presence of the Lok Sabha Speaker, to amend the rules to permit MP funds under the 'Member of Parliament Local Area Development Scheme' to be used for essential supplies to combat Covid. On the first day of lockdown, the Speaker called me while I was at lunch: my MPLADS proposal had been accepted, a revised order would be issued.