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Executive Summary for cbmexperience.wordpress.com
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The CBm Experience | Observations on culture, teaching and life
Adding to the commentary on 2020, yes I have 2 cents. It was a hard year, but made harder by circumstances that could have been so much better. A year ago, I was driving for Uber, searching for other work, and gearing up for a tough winter. Driving Uber in Portland depends a lot on tourism, and that slows down from January through March, so I was hoping for a big December to carry me through, but that didn’t really happen. January and February were slow, difficult months, but I got a job lead working online, writing and editing for an international company. Yeah!March 2020, the virus became a reality. Around the tenth of the month, I started to see masks on people in shopping areas, and my first rider with a mask appeared. Suddenly, going to the airport became a concern. The fifteenth, the governor put the state on lockdown, and that week, ridership dropped by half, or even less. By the 25th, I was done driving, both because I was worried about my health, and because ridership was almost nothing–Uber assured us we would qualify for new unemployment money too, so I filed my first unemployment request at the end of March, and started waiting.Our daughter also got interesting news in March–her school shut down after spring break, and she never went back. As a senior, she was also assured that her completion was already secured. She just had to file her paperwork and walk on the appointed day. She was home full time, and my wife also lost her job. April and May we started binging movies to fill the quarantine time. I started a journal of drawings, and my wife started making coronavirus inspired art work. At some point during that time, our daughter got the great news that she was accepted at Colorado College with a full scholarship. She also applied and received a few additional local scholarships to help with fees, books and insurance.The job I found writing fell through. The company closed operations for the virus and I’m not sure if they are coming back. I started writing more blog posts, Black Lives Matter protests shook Portland, and Alisha had her graduation in the old Kmart parking lot, driving through to honks and cheers from her teachers. She had many online celebrations, but was sad that it ended that way. We followed the developments in Portland, and also began to follow news of Shushant Singh Rajput’s death in India, which I have blogged about here as well.Summer went by quickly, immersed in media, staying home mostly. My unemployment wasn’t coming through. After they sent me one week’s worth of money, they sent a letter asking me to reapply for benefits that might increase my weekly income, and though that application went through, no money showed up, and by August, the extra pandemic money was set to end and I was still waiting.We drove to Colorado in early August, where Alisha was part of an early arrival group that would be quarantined and tested, living in isolation. We were surprised when driving across the nation how people in many areas were not wearing masks or taking the pandemic seriously. Her orientation was unusual, but she made friends in that tight knit group. After she left, my wife kicked into full artist mode and the kitchen became a workshop. We were looking ahead to our employment vacuum, and I started working on my own writing projects. I put up two stories on Kindle, to get things started, and started going through old computer files, looking for my novel. I am still working on what I found, which is not the complete draft. I also started drafting another novel with the hopes of writing it in early 2021–a fantasy novel about racism in a time of epidemic/pandemic level disruption.By September, my financial situation was critical. Aside from the one week of unemployment, we had received the stimulus check and another 500 dollar bonus from the state of Oregon, but we also hadn’t been paying rent. I put out an SOS and some friends came through for me, and then, a job prospect, beginning mid-September, in a print and mail house, working on election material. That was certainly a godsend, but sadly, the hard work and long hours aggravated my hernia (and my back), and after four weeks, I had to go see a doctor. I could not continue, but I had made a few thousand dollars to keep going. Still, nothing from unemployment.Luckily, we have avoided Covid, but we heard more and more stories about suffering and death. From Bangladesh, there were a lot of people we know affected. In Canada, a friend was hit with long-term problems, and lost her job. Colorado College tested Alisha quite a few times, and sent us many updates about the situation on campus. She was in the clear, but it kept popping up on campus. In December, she came home before the end of the semester, but she had already dropped her last class, so she’s on break and waiting to hear what will happen in the spring. Her plan is to return in February, and maybe move to an apartment off campus. This December, my wife and I also heard from Independent University of Bangladesh, offering us jobs teaching starting next August. Depending on the vaccine situation, we are thinking hard about it. Uprooting is difficult, but with nothing on the horizon here, it might be our best bet to stay professionally engaged. Almost the 15th of December, and still waiting for unemployment money from April. Will we have a Christmas miracle? I pray it happens. Will 2021 bring better things? Again, we can only hope and plan for the best. Here’s wishing everyone a great year ahead. Put 2020 in the books and move on!!;Network & Infrastructure
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0.gravatar.com
af.pubmine.com
cbmexperience.wordpress.com
gmpg.org
pixel.wp.com
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s1.wp.com
s2.wp.com
stats.wp.com
wp.me
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The following issues occurred during analysis:
- Reverse DNS failed: No such host is known.
Analysis Complete
Analyzed cbmexperience.wordpress.com with 5 technologies detected across 5 categories
Analysis completed in 726 ms • 2026-03-23 11:02:41 UTC