Welcome to this weekโ€™s Reno News & Review.

This has been the sickest winter Iโ€™ve ever experienced. And I donโ€™t mean that in a good way.

Iโ€™ve been sick for three non-connective weeks this season. I went from flu to cold to strep. Itโ€™s not something I really enjoy except for one thing: I lost the five pounds I gained over the holidays and three more on top of that. That took me down to an impossibly svelte 227 pounds.

When I read sentences like that, for one miserable moment, I understand what is going on in bulimicsโ€™ and anorexicsโ€™ heads.

Iโ€™ve noticed during the last few years a change in attitude toward people who come to work suffering from contagious illness. It wasnโ€™t five years ago that people were kind of looked down on when they called in sick. Back then, to call in sick was to be weak and not a team player.

Nowadays, itโ€™s a little different. I came into the office on Friday to take a phone call Iโ€™d scheduled the day before. There was a disposable dust mask on my desk when I came in. I washed my hands twice while I was in the building, and I used my coat to turn the door knob. My co-workers were almost aggressive in their avoidance of me. After Iโ€™d gone to the doctor and was diagnosed with strep, I had to return to the office because I thought I lost my check card there. Youโ€™d have thought I had some kind of airborne syphilis. These days, youโ€™re not a team player if you infect the whole team with 102 temperatures.

But the next day was when I realized attitudes had really changed. I was out of tuna for my lunch, and I told my son, Hunter, I was going to run to Albertsonโ€™s to pick some up.

โ€œI thought you were sick,โ€ he said. โ€œI am.โ€ โ€œWell, then, why are you going to get everyone else sick, too?โ€

Do you think he learned that in school?

RTV No. 10: Someone you vote for could eventually legislate to get universal health care in this country.

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *