It is now Thursday here in the US, and tonight I will be watching Winter Olympics in Beijing on television like most of you. It will be the first time in 16 years that I have done that, and it will be with really mixed emotions.
First of all, I would like to thank the hundreds of people who reached out via email, blog comments, social media...in support of my decision not to go to China for these games. I really appreciate your feedback. Truly!
I spent the better part of two days undoing everything I had been working on for the year. Communicating with my contacts at Team USA, cancelling flights and hotels, cancelling Covid tests, and reaching out to all of my sponsors.
A lot has transpired in the last 5 days, since I wrote the last blog post, both great and bad.
Let's start with the great news!
Saturday night I was at home and getting ready for bed. It was supposed to be my last night at home before heading to China and I definitely had mixed emotions. And then...I got a text message from my son that his wife was in labor, two weeks early, and it was happening fast. I stayed up and waited, excited to hear the news, and at 12:49am my first grandchild was born! She arrived on the same morning that I would have been flying to China. That would have been REALLY hard for me not to see her in person for a month! I guess this was meant to be.
I am currently with my son and his family now and loving the time with them. I promise to post some photos in the future.
And then there is the bad news:
I mentioned in the last blog post that I would reach out to my photographer friends who were going to Beijing, to have them share content for the blog. I had two friends who I was communicating with the most. Kyle (from USA Today) who also decided not to go, and my buddy Ian MacNicol, who is an amazing sports photographer from Glasgow, Scotland. Days before Ian was supposed to fly out from Europe, his charter flight was cancelled (since so many people pulled out) and he had to scramble to get new flights. He ended up flying out earlier than expected.
Then he arrived in Beijing only to find out that he tested POSITIVE for Covid!
When he got to the airport, Ian had to do his Covid test and he said "This lady carried out a PCR test on me today, however I am sure she chose to use a knitting needle rather than a swab, the real killer was it felt like she drove it in with the heel of her hand! I swear I felt it scrape the back of my eyeball." This would put me over the edge!The following morning Ian was tested again. This time they gave him a choice of a nasal test or a throat swab. As he told me "I was seriously worried that if they did the deep nose test everyday, they may cause brain damage to me." He happily chose the mouth swab. At this point he had symptoms as well, and found out that his son had Covid at home. If he had left on his original flight and not left early, he would have tested positive in Scotland and never left the country,
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6 comments:
Hi Jeff. What a good news. Congratulations to you and family. Very unfortunate for Ian he got it. Hope he is fine now. Stay safe.
Jeff: glad you made the right decision. I know you miss having the camera in hand and making 25,000+ images of amazing athletics but you made the right decision. Thanks for sharing the story you did today.
I was hoping that you could take photos of some Olympic events on your TV and have them published here in the 6.2 seconds you would have if you were there in person. :)
In actuality, a video of your workflow would be cool. I've read your descriptions many times, but to see it in action could be enlightening.
I'm sorry for Ian. I don't know how the financials work, but as a small business/freelancer it would seem the photog will be out a lot of money, only to miss all the main events they wanted to cover, plus all that time that went into prep.
Congrats on the grandchild. Those will be great pictures too.
Congratulations Jeff. My granddaughter was born 6 days ago and is absolutely gorgeous. Sorry about your friend from Glasgow, that's about 30 miles from me!
Congratulations Grandpa! I think you made the right call. I don't know if photographers and the news media are also isolated in an Olympic bubble; probably not. Ian's experience would be my worst fears; being a Stranger in a Strange Land (Robert Heilein). I hope that Ian recovers quickly and without complications.
Hey Jeff. Glad to stay home but sorry about your friend. I started following him on Instagram and wished him well. What a terrible place to be stuck.
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