I’ve forgotten how to talk to people in person. What do I do with my arms?
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27/05/2021 05:00am BST
Many of us learned new skills during the Covid-19 pandemic ― from bread-baking to tie-dying to making TikTok videos.
But it also seems we may have lost a few skills as we spent so much of the past year indoors and away from others. Socialising, interacting with strangers and putting together outfits that don’t involve trackies are just a few examples.
The funny folks of Twitter can offer even more. We’ve rounded up 40 funny tweets about the things people have forgotten how to do over the course of the pandemic.
Tweets About The Things We Forgot How To Do During The Pandemic huffpost.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from huffpost.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
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Do you miss plane trips across the pond? Southern California travelers don’t need to go far to find Europe-influenced destinations as long as they don’t mind the kitsch.
Times travel writer Christopher Reynolds recently outlined 21 nearby destinations where Californians can get their continental fix. Care to cozy up in an English pub? Grab a seat at Ye Olde King’s Head in Santa Monica. Longing for a trip to Venice, Italy? Take a gondola ride in Long Beach. Craving castles? Southern California has those too if you don’t mind paying to see Sleeping Beauty Castle at Disneyland or Hogwarts’ façade at Universal Studios Hollywood
À Rome, des centaines de corps en attente de crémation sputniknews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from sputniknews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
A video recorded on Monday and seen by the Guardian shows hearses queueing up outside Prima Portaâs administration office. Later in the clip, the cemeteryâs manager tells a group of funeral directors: âThere is no space.â
Ama said it was doing its utmost to resolve the situation and that it was working to create 60,000 new burial plots across the city. The company has also threatened to sue funeral directors, who earlier this month laid wreaths close to Romeâs city hall in protest, for âcausing alarmâ.
The alarm was in fact first raised in early April by a bereaved relative, Oberdan Zuccaroli, who mounted huge billboards across Rome with the message âMum, Iâm sorry Iâve not been able to have you buried yetâ. Zuccaroli, who owns a billboard company, told the Italian press that his mother died of a heart attack on 8 March. His aunt, who died on 9 January, had also not been buried.