@topgold
Bernie Goldbach
@topgold · 4:16

Do you have Discovery Points from the last pandemic?

article image placeholderClonmel Guard
And some of these horses came back from World War One. They had men with them that were coughing, and now they're interred in St. Patrick's Cemetery, just out of town. Those people that died from the Spanish flu brought it back from the mainland continent of Europe. I'll show a walking tour through Zoom and I'll share the link in Swell and on a blog. I have. But for right now, the overhead question I would ask is, Have you ever thought about that?

Irish streets are full of them, like https://flic.kr/p/8mQQE4 the Clonmel Guard.

@topgold
Bernie Goldbach
@topgold · 1:13

We went on a Zoom Walk to explore this https://youtu.be/lZKRKe_oDR0

And I hope to expose some of the street furniture, the buildings, other built environment that still stands here today, near where our campus is to make thought, it's really evident that this isn't the first time that we've had a major epidemic and it probably won't be the last hope. You enjoy the clip. Bye for now. Bye
@Goth_Wife
Louise Prendergast
@Goth_Wife · 1:07
Well before the pandemic. I like to go to that Asian shop where you can buy the bubble teas. And I loved the place where let me see I love go to the library
@Swell
Swell Team
@Swell · 0:15

Welcome to Swell!

@fauxclementine
Niye Aihie
@fauxclementine · 1:25

#whatdoesthefuturehold

So a shared concern between the two experiences would be the challenge of planning for one's future when you are uncertain about what the future actually will be like. So this could be big or small plans. But this uncertainty makes it a lot more difficult. So a person living during the 1918 Spanish Flu pandemic might have had these very thoughts as they sat in the Franciscan ferry, gazing through those big, tall, colorful windows in hopes of finding an answer
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