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What It’s Like Having Your Loved One In The ICU, On A Ventilator, Fighting COVID-19

When I was listening to New York State Governor Andrew Cuomo’s press briefing on the morning of April 9, I was shocked to learn that the statewide lockdown had only been in place for 18 days—and that it had only been 39 days since the first COVID-19 case had been reported in the state. It’s hard to wrap your head around; the amount of stress we’ve all been under has made the pandemic seem like it’s been going on for a lifetime.

Now, let me ask you for a quick favor: Close your eyes and try to imagine that your life has been turned upside down by the COVID-19 pandemic. One of your loved ones is in the hospital, in the ICU, on a ventilator, fighting for his or her life. All you can do is hope and pray that the infection will pass and he or she will get up and walk out someday soon.

Hopefully, that’s not your reality. But it has been for Saratoga Springs resident Sara Jancsy, the wife of Paul “Tucker” Jancsy, a major in New York’s Air National Guard, who’s been in Saratoga Hospital’s COVID-19 unit, on a ventilator, fighting for his life, for 14 days.

Paul Jancsy, who graduated from Saratoga Springs High School in 1998. (Sara Jancsy)

From the photos I was able to find online, Paul, a Saratoga native who graduated from Saratoga Springs High School in 1998—my graduating class, too—looks a lot different than I remember him looking when we were in high school together. Back then, he was a skinny, affable, intelligent guy, with a memorable smile, who was a member of the National Honor Society. (We weren’t in the same friend group, but we did have classes together, as far as I can remember.) From there, Paul went on to earn his BS in aeronautics from Dowling College in Oakdale, NY; and an MBA from Benedictine University in Lisle, IL. Paul then split a 17-year military career between the US Air Force (Active Duty) and the Air National Guard in New York. In the Air Force, Paul reached the rank of major, piloting B-52 aircrafts and serving as an Aircraft Commander for the 96th Bomb Squadron (a.k.a. the “red devils”). For the Air National Guard, he served with the 105th Airlift Wing (137th Airlift Squadron) as Chief of Tactics and a C-17 Aircraft Commander. (In conjunction with his Air National Guard duties, Paul’s also actively volunteered with the American Airpower Museum in Farmingdale, the New York State Airshow and the Tuskegee Airmen Red Tail Youth Flying Program.) Paul had forward-deployed with the US Army in support of ground combat during Operation Enduring Freedom and Iraqi Freedom, and had been deployed in the Pacific Theater in support of the Continuous Bombing Presence Mission. And additionally, he’d piloted humanitarian missions with the Air National Guard and served as an air liaison between the Air Force and the Army. On top of all of that, Paul’s also worked as a first officer for Delta Airlines for three-and-a-half year, where he’s flown Airbus A320 and A321 passenger airplanes.

Paul Jancsy has worked as a first officer for Delta Airlines for nearly four years. (Sara Jancsy)

Sara met her husband Paul in 2013 at her best friend’s wedding—”Paul is my best friend’s first cousin, and I was a bridesmaid,” she tells me—and the two are newlyweds, having just married last April. In fact, the couple recently celebrated their one-year anniversary on April 1, virtually, because Paul had already been admitted to the hospital by then.

After writing about Paul’s GoFundMe page yesterday, I was compelled to reach out to Sara. I asked if she’d tell you about what she’s been going through over the past two weeks, with Paul in the hospital. She agreed, and with the help of her father William Johnson, Paul’s father-in-law, she emailed me the note below (edited only slightly for punctuation and clarity).

There can be little if any preparation for mental demands imposed by situations such as this, having your husband and/or a loved one in the ICU for an extended period, in critical condition, on ventilator support, while daily reading of the toll being imposed on the country by this pandemic. All of the unknown elements are most difficult to deal with. All of the standard [questions] one would ask in such a situation are unanswerable with any degree of certainty—how is COVID-19 treated? What is the duration of the virus? What should I expect? and many others. Studies have reported an array of symptoms and outcomes that are too often unknown or present a moving target. All this [comes] at a time when what is desperately desired is just the opposite: specific answers and projected outcomes.

The inevitable result is wretched heartache and worry during this often protracted period of uncertainty. For us, the outpouring of support from family, community and friends locking arms locally and around the world has been an undeniable and much appreciated support during this time.

Ergo, we are forced to deal with the situation day by day, update to update, celebrating each small victory and relying on faith and mutual support to address setbacks. At all times, you know that people love and care about you, but while experiencing the full scope of this hardship, the full scope of the love and support fills one’s heart with rays of sunshine. If I could summarize the support we have received from around the world, I could truly create a “Tucker Tribe.” Master Sergeant of the [Air National Guard’s] 105th [Airlift Wing], Tony Galioto, has been at the forefront of support, organizing a GoFundMe page in honor of Paul, which greatly exceeded expectations as the goal was achieved within hours of its posting.

Major Paul Jancsy, who served as a pilot in the US Air Force. (Sara Jancsy)

If I could provide advice to other families on this same path, I would recommend standing strong together, and trusting and supporting the professionals working countless hours to nurse our loved ones back to health. And [to just] believe—believe in what provides you an emotional foundation to support and help you cope with this difficult time. Overcoming the obstacles in life’s road, like this, helps us find an internal resilience and strength we never knew we had. We get from one day to the next, not through tears and sadness, but [through] joy and laughter, remembering the fun times. Rest assured, the current generation of children will someday read of this pandemic in schools and history books and come along with a vaccine to preclude a repeat in the future.

During this surreal, torturous battle Paul has been fighting, we have a strong and unwavering belief in the medical professionals at Saratoga Hospital. They are staring at the virus straight on, and with us, they have been both compassionate and transparent while diligently working demanding schedules, organizing the chaos of patients pouring in the door. With all that, they continue to take time to care for our loved ones, while maintaining a high level of virtual communication with families as we are sheltered in place.

To these heroes, whether [they’re the] medical professionals treating patients or [are] our heroes who are the sick patients, [let us say a] loud “thank you.”

Unfortunately for us, at this time, the story does not have a definitive conclusion, although the strength intrinsic to Paul, combined with the strength and unwavering support of so very many, provides a clear and powerful light for all of us to focus on at the end of this long, dark, tunnel. My intent here is to convey a positive tone combined with a dose of reality for others. The truth is that not everyone survives this, but people need to hear of the often-overlooked success stories, which are also an integral part of these events.


Interested in reading Saratoga Living‘s entire “What It’s Like Series”? Click on the links below.

What It’s Like To Actually Have COVID-19 In The Capital Region

What It’s Like Being A Skidmore College Senior During The COVID-19 Crisis (Opinion)

What It’s Like Being a Capital Region Nurse During The COVID-19 Crisis

What It’s Like Being A Parent Who Believes His Child Has COVID-19

What It’s Like Being A Small Business Owner During The COVID-19 Pandemic

What It’s Like Being A Capital Region Doctor During The COVID-19 Outbreak

What It’s Like Grocery Shopping During The COVID-19 Pandemic (Opinion)

Governor Cuomo: New York Hits Third Straight Single-Day Record For COVID-19 Deaths

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When it rains, it pours. For the third straight day, New York State Governor Andrew Cuomo announced that the state had reached a new single-day record of 799 for the number of COVID-19-related deaths. The total number of deaths has gone down only once in the past six-day period, with the daily totals working out to be as such: April 2 (562), April 3 (630), April 4 (594), April 5 (599), April 6 (731), April 7 (779) and now, April 8 (799). Cuomo also noted that the state has had to bring in additional funeral directors to help deal with the surge in COVID-19-related deaths.

The reason behind the recent spike in deaths, noted Cuomo, is that the people who were admitted to hospitals weeks ago, who have been on ventilators since then, are only now beginning to succumb to the virus.

Despite the grim news, Governor Cuomo did continue to report positive numbers in the realm of hospitalizations, which are continuing to trend downward, as well as ICU admissions and daily intubations.

Cuomo also noted that it appeared that New York State was “flattening the curve,” but “so far,” he emphasized, saying that this is not the time for New Yorkers to stop social distancing or staying at home. “Our efforts [to contain the virus] are working; they’re working better than anyone projected that they’d work, because people are complying with them,” said Cuomo.

New York still has the most COVID-19 cases of any state in the union, with more than 150,000 cases confirmed and more than 7,000 total deaths reported.

Opera Saratoga Cancels 2020 Summer Festival Due To COVID-19 Crisis

Sad news for Capital Region opera fans. Opera Saratoga announced today (April 9), that due to concerns over the ongoing COVID-19 outbreak, it would be cancelling its 2020 Summer Festival. Originally scheduled to run from May 18 through July 15, the 2020 Summer Festival included all of Opera Saratoga’s scheduled performances for the year plus the company’s popular annual gala, Opera on the Lake, which for now has been postponed.

“As we’ve been monitoring the spread of COVID-19, it’s become clear to us that proceeding with the Festival is no longer possible,” says Lawrence Edelson, Opera Saratoga’s artistic and general director. “From a practical perspective, with Saratoga and much of the country essentially shut down, it’s become impossible for us to continue building the sets and costumes for the opera productions that were to premiere at Opera Saratoga this summer.”

Opera Saratoga’s 2020 Summer Festival was set to include performances of operatic classics such as Gilbert and Sullivan’s The Pirates of Penzance and Puccini’s Madama Butterfly, as well as the New York State premiere of Sky on Swings, which had its world premiere at Opera Philadelphia in 2018 and explores two women’s descent into Alzheimer’s Disease. The festival schedule was also set to include the company’s now-postponed summer gala, which was originally scheduled for June 7. Revenue from the spring and summer season regularly accounts for nearly 70 percent of Opera Saratoga’s annual income. “While we’re working to ensure that Opera Saratoga emerges from this crisis, we also have an ethical responsibility to do our best to help those who bring Opera Saratoga to life every summer,” says Edelson about the company’s many artists and seasonal workers. “COVID-19 has not only endangered the health and lives of millions around the world, but it has also hit the arts sector particularly hard.”

To that point, the local opera company is asking patrons who’ve already purchased tickets to consider donating them in support of Opera Saratoga’s furloughed artists and workers. Edelson says that Opera Saratoga will be contacting ticket-holders to determine if they want to turn their purchase into a tax-deductible donation or receive a full credit to their Opera Saratoga account. Fulls refunds are also available upon request.

“Though we’re having to make difficult decisions right now, we are doing so to make sure that everyone is safe,” says Edelson. “Opera Saratoga will be ready to create transformative and vital experiences, creating connection and community through the power of opera, when these challenging times have passed.”

Saratogian And Air National Guard Pilot Fighting For His Life Against COVID-19

For weeks now, I’ve been working out of my home office here in Troy, taking one walk a day around my residential neighborhood in the morning with my wife and dog and not doing much else. And although I’m very much aware of what New York Governor Andrew Cuomo has been reporting at his daily press briefings (I’ve been covering the majority of them), I am very much removed from the COVID-19 pandemic.

Although I miss my old Brooklyn neighborhood dearly sometimes, of late, I’ve been thankful that I no longer live in New York City, which has quickly become hell on earth, the epicenter of the virus’ carnage and death. I recently confessed to someone that this feels like the September 11th terrorist attacks every day. When 9/11 happened, I was in my first few weeks of senior year at Connecticut College, and I remember not only feeling numb, day in and day out, but also this sense that I wouldn’t ever be able to fully grasp what had happened, because I hadn’t been there when it did. I realize how morbid that sounds, but I assume that’s part of the reason why I continue seeing my neighbors openly flout the governor’s stay-at-home and social distancing orders. They’re not being directly affected by this virus, so what’s the need?

That shift in perspective only begins when you start hearing first-person accounts of what it’s like out there right now—from a doctor or a nurse or a local business owner. I’ve tried to make that happen on this website with our “What It’s Like” series, the most recent of which featured a young woman who had been infected with COVID-19 and thankfully, recovered. I hope, at some point, it shifts my neighbors’ perspective.

The other path to a reality check? When you hear about people you know who have been infected. Someone from my Saratoga Springs High School class today (April 8) posted a GoFundMe page on Facebook for a fellow classmate of ours who’d been stricken by the virus. I hadn’t heard his name in 20-plus years, but upon cracking open my yearbook, I remembered: Paul Jancsy, who nowadays is known to his family and friends as “Tucker,” and who had gone on to become a major in the New York Air National Guard. He’s currently on a ventilator, fighting for his life in the Intensive Care Unit at Saratoga Hospital.

Jancsy, who graduated from Saratoga High in 1998, earned his undergraduate degree in aeronautics from Dowling College and an MBA from Benedictine University. He spent just under nine years as a pilot in the United States Air Force, and has been serving for more than eight years in the Air National Guard and a first officer at Delta airlines for just under four.

The GoFundMe page was set up only a day ago, with a goal of $2,500, and at press time, that total has exceeded the $23,000 mark. Pitch in if you know Paul—or even if you don’t. You can help fund it here.

 

Governor Cuomo: New York Sees Second Straight Single-Day Record For COVID-19 Deaths

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Unfortunately, there’s even more bad news to report for New York State, regarding the COVID-19 pandemic. In his daily press briefing on April 8, Governor Andrew Cuomo announced another single-day record had fallen for COVID-19 deaths in the state, up from 731 on April 6 to 779 on April 7.

This comes on the heels of yesterday’s grim news, previously the single-day record for COVID-19 deaths in the state so far. The number of hospitalizations is still trending down, noted Governor Cuomo, but the recent spike in deaths is likely due to the fact that many of the initial COVID-19 patients, who were put on ventilators and have been on them since, are just now beginning to die. (Cuomo has directed flags to be flown at half-mast in the state in honor of those that have been lost to the virus.)

Governor Cuomo also made mention of the fact that a higher percentage of COVID-19 deaths in New York City has been occurring in minority communities. “It always seems that the poorest people pay the highest price,” said Cuomo. And the numbers don’t lie: 34 percent of the total COVID-19 deaths in New York City have hit the Hispanic community, while 28 percent have hit the African-American community. (Outside of New York City, Hispanics and African Americans account for just 14 percent and 18 percent of overall deaths, respectively; obviously, that has to do with population density.)

To that previous point, Governor Cuomo noted that he’d ordered more testing and research on why minority communities had been so adversely affected, and that he’d asked SUNY Albany’s President Dr. Havidán Rodríguez to head up the effort, with the help of the New York State Health Department and nonprofit organization Northwell Health. “Let’s learn these lessons now,” said Cuomo.

Local Entrepreneur Dan Pickett Named President And CEO Of aptihealth

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One local power player has landed a new executive-level role only a handful of months after leaving his previous one. Dan Pickett, who’s best known in the area for founding Clifton Park’s nfrastructure—now a multibillion-dollar company owned by California technology firm Zones—has been named president and CEO of aptihealth, a digital platform and app that is looking to streamline the overall patient and physician experience in the behavioral healthcare space. (A detailed feature on the business is set to publish in the Spring 2020 issue of Saratoga Living magazine, out early next week).

Pickett’s business partner at aptihealth, Dr. Alex Marsal, PhD, who has run a Troy area behavioral healthcare clinic for more than two decades, has also been named Chief Clinical and Science Officer.

Pickett was most recently president of Hudson River Capital Holdings, an initial seed investor in the aptihealth platform. Through the end of 2019, Pickett was also the president of Zones, which acquired nfrastructure in 2016. (The company is now worth $2.4 billion.) He’d also served as CEO of Zones nfrastructure, and Chairman and CEO of nfrastructure prior to its acquisition. Pickett was born in Troy, raised in Mechanicville and is a graduate of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI).

“The healthcare system today presents endless challenges for people suffering from behavioral health issues,” said Pickett in a prepared statement. “From diagnosis to timely access to effective personalized care, the system is frustrating and confusing to navigate. I’m passionate about addressing these issues and empowering behavioral health specialists, medical providers, and patients with an engagement platform that can change lives. We’re innovating the integrated care model and fast-tracking patients into high-quality, personalized care for results that matter. As a director, I’ve gotten to know the aptihealth team quite well, and I look forward to working with them to make a difference.”

Dr. Marsal is also no stranger to the local tech space either. After working for a decade in hospital management at Troy’s Samaritan Hospital, Dr. Marsal founded Vanguard Behavioral Solutions, a web-based behavioral healthcare treatment/assessment firm, which served as the basis for aptihealth. As Chief Clinical and Science Officer, Dr. Marsal’s will be overseeing aptihealth’s clinical science team, and will focus on research and integrating clinical science with clinical engineering and user-experience to drive innovation.

“I’m thrilled Dan is joining aptihealth and look forward to working with him to help solve the behavioral health crisis,” said Dr. Marsal. “aptihealth is delivering innovation across detection, assessment, treatment, and care coordination. This work is critically important as we address this crisis and help patients quickly access high-quality care.”

NYRA Delays The Opening Of Saratoga’s Oklahoma Training Track

While the New York Racing Association (NYRA) helped quell the fears of many Saratoga Race Course fans when it confirmed that the track would still open on July 16, it certainly didn’t silence the naysayers. And now, the they have even more fuel for their fire.

Per NYRA,  because of the continued statewide lockdown due to the COVID-19 crisis, it will be delaying the opening of the Oklahoma Training Track and stables at Saratoga Race Course. The training track was supposed to open on April 15. No new opening date has been confirmed as of yet.

Why is this significant? The opening of the Oklahoma and its facilities usually mark the unofficial start of the Saratoga racing season, a time in which the Thoroughbreds that will later compete in mid-July across Union Avenue can begin to get in morning works. The Oklahoma, which first opened in 1904, features both dirt and turf surfaces, and has its own stables.

This comes on the heels of New York State Governor Andrew Cuomo announcing on April 6 that the work-from-home order had been extended to April 29. NYRA says it’s currently working with the New York State Gaming Commission and public health agencies to determine a new opening date.

NYRA did, however, drive home the point that the postponement of the Oklahoma’s opening did not impact the start of the Saratoga Race Course season.

Governor Cuomo: New York Sees Largest Single-Day Increase In COVID-19 Deaths

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Governor Andrew Cuomo has kept New Yorkers’ expectations in check throughout his daily news conferences, noting that it’s possible that glimmers of hope during the COVID-19 outbreak could mean something or next to nothing. He said as much a few days ago, when the state experienced its first drop in deaths since the outbreak hit.

But that positivity was seemingly erased yesterday (April 7), when Cuomo announced that the state had suffered its greatest single-day loss of life so far, with 731 deaths reported (that was up to 5,489 from 4,758). So far, the daily trend has mapped out to this: April 2 (562), April 3 (630), April 4 (594), April 5 (599) and April 6 (731).

This ran counterpoint to a few other data-points: the number of hospitalizations, ICU admissions and daily intubations was down.

New York still has the most COVID-19 cases of any state to date, with more than 130,000 reported (the state with the second most, New Jersey, has 40,000-plus).

SL’s Job Hunters: Calling All TikTok Content Creators And Freelance Writers

One of my favorite musicians, Phoebe Bridgers, tweeted this the other day: “It was the worst of time; it was the worst of times.” She was, of course, riffing on Charles Dickens’ much more balanced 1859 quote and being her usual sarcastic Twitter self, but she wasn’t that far off from the truth. Over the past few weeks, we’ve learned that nearly 10 million Americans have filed for unemployment benefits. Yikes. And that number will continue to climb, steadily, as the COVID-19 pandemic digs its nails deeper into the country. And, look, we can sit around idle or we can take action—and as far as I’m concerned, the latter sounds like the only road worth taking.

So, the pool of viable jobs keeps shrinking, but there are still a number out there, both remote and local, to apply to, if you’ve recently lost your job or are looking for a way to pad your income. (Many of us are reaching burnout levels, because working seems to be the only thing that keeps us sane in these most troubling of times.) Also, even if you’re out of work, there are a number of ways to stay mentally active and continue building your “brand,” so that when a flood of wonderful, cool jobs eventually crops up, you’ll be more than prepared to land the job of your dreams.

Just ask Saratoga Living/Capital Region Living‘s latest intern, Matthew Harding: He got hired mere minutes after doing an informational interview with me on the morning of April 3. I connected with him through family friend Renee Walrath of Walrath Recruiting, who reached out to me on LinkedIn, because she’d wanted to get involved with the SL’s Job Hunters column. Poetry in motion.

Local Job Opportunities

Cool Job Opportunity (Local)
New York City-based startup, WayUp, which helps find entry-level jobs for college aged adults struggling to find employment, is looking to hire its own employee—a part timer, who can create 15-second TikTok videos to help market the company. (If you’re unfamiliar with TikTok viddy this hilarious example, set to the tune of one of my favorite anatomie gym class songs; mind you, it sounds like your job would be to make classier vids.) The job would amount to creating, editing and posting 3-5 videos per week, which, ironically, would be about showcasing college life, first time experiences job hunting and interviewing. It’s a paid job, and the pay is negotiable. Search for the position on LinkedIn Jobs or check the company’s careers page.

Cool Job Opportunity (Local)
This one is posted on the Home Base Recruiting site (check out the disabled veteran-owned business profile in our first edition of SL’s Job Hunters). HBR’s client is “a leader in the global shipping/freight industry vertical” and is looking for a Brokerage Manager for the Import/Export Business. This would be a full-time, direct hire, base salary opportunity with benefits. Apply for the job here.

Cool Job Opportunity (Local)
Schools will likely be out of session for at least another few weeks, maybe more—but many are going the virtual route, and some are even still hiring, like the Albany Academies, which is seeking an Assistant Director of Admissions and Enrollment. (They’re also on the lookout for a Student Mental Health Counselor.) You can find the job postings by searching Indeed, or you can read about them here.

Cool Job Opportunity (Local)
Are you a paralegal looking to make a difference in the lives of immigrants? Walrath Recruiting has an opening listed on its site for an Immigration Paralegal, “who will handle visas and assist clients with documentation and filings as needed. This is a full-time, permanent position supporting a Partner-level attorney in the Albany area. Apply for the job here.

Cool Job Opportunity (Local)
One destination in the culinary world that will never go out of style—even if there’s a potentially deadly virus raging outside—is the pizza restaurant. Home Style Pizza in Schenectady is looking for a daytime pizza slinger (experience is necessary). Stop by the shop and ask for Anthony. (The job posting was found on Craigslist.)

National/Remote Work Opportunities

Cool Job Opportunity (Remote)
Shipt, a company, similar to Instacart, that home-delivers groceries to folks—a trending job at the moment for obvious reasons—will apparently be hiring thousands of new employees in locations across the country. (Search Google for postings in Latham, Averill Park, Castleton-on-Hudson and other Albany-area locations.) You can even apply for a fully remote position at the San Francisco-based company—and a doozy of one at that. Shipt is looking for a Business Development Manager. The position would be all about “prospecting and closing new business, delivering on the strategy that you also help to create,” with a focus on the Midwest (clearly, it will be a requirement that you have experience with and deep contacts in the Midwest; travel will be a must once that sort of thing starts up again). For more information on the post or to apply, click here.

Cool Job Opportunity (Remote)
I couldn’t believe it when I first read the job description, but it’s legit: An e-commerce website called This Is Why I’m Brokewhich sells everything from a $3,000 Mandalorian armor set to $30 Wu-Tang Clan scarves—is looking for freelance content writers, who can ghost write gift guides for them. It’s a part-time, contract position. Apply for one of them here.

Cool Job Opportunity (Remote)
An even stranger cool job than the one above? Try unwrapping this one: Oddfish Games is looking to hire a new Business Manager for its company, which produces popular Role-Playing Games (RPGs) such as Cooking with Dice and How to RPG with Your Cat (being tested as we speak), as well as a line of “adventure scents,” or fragrances that apparently help make RPGs more real for gamers (we’re not entirely sure how, but we guess that’s what’ll keep the role of Business Manager interesting). The gig is fully remote, part time and pays $15-$20/hour. As the ad notes, “In addition to remote work, there may be the option of participating in tabletop gaming conventions in the future (depending upon the COVID forecast), with travel, accommodations, and admission paid for by the company.” Search for the job on Indeed.com, or you can contact Oddfish directly on its website for further details.

Local + National Job/Business/Volunteer Resources

Cool Way To Give Back (Local)
Our local nonprofit organizations in the greater Capital Region are being hit extremely hard by the COVID-19 outbreak. One .org that could use a little love right now is Pitney Meadows Community Farm, basically the last remaining piece of undeveloped land in Saratoga Springs (it’s that massive tract of land that’s approximately across from the Saratoga YMCA), which is used for actual farming and educational programming. Its mission is to provide healthy food for the Saratoga community, and it’s never been more critical at a time like this. “We are immediately increasing our planned acreage under production to allow us to increase our support for local food pantries and customers,” notes a rep. “We cannot do this without community investment.” To contribute to Pitney Meadows, click here.

Cool Job Resource (Local/Remote)
Remember how valuable I said LinkedIn Jobs could be in nabbing your next remote or local position? Well, the smarty-pants journos on the LinkedIn content staff decided to encourage all employees searching for new hires to use the #HiringNow hashtag. And LinkedIn is keeping a running list of all the open roles. Talk about bringing the power to the people.

Cool Job Resource (New York City)
Once COVID-19 decides to get itself and disappear, it’s going to take awhile before life gets back to normal. But for all of you college kids out there dreaming of getting into the New York City media business like I did in 2003—I actually did a gap year teaching English in Madrid, Spain before rolling into the Big Apple—make sure to keep your eyes glued to the two greatest junior NYC job boards on the planet: Ed2010 and Mediabistro. There’s much goodness to be gotten from them.

Cool Job Resource (Anywhere)
Several years ago when I was a full-time freelance writer/editor, I got really into the concept that I owned my own business. I mean, yeah, I was the lone employer and the lone employee at the same time, but I was fascinated by the guts of what a good business could be and how to make it fire on all cylinders. And the inspiration for that perspective came from the oddest of sources: in an interview with an Australian entrepreneur that ran a pornographic website in the Netherlands. He was really into maximizing his business’ output and told me to read a book about it called The E-Myth: Revisited by Michael Gerber. I didn’t get through the entire book, but the part I read was fascinating. Maybe it wasn’t meant to be read cover to cover.

If Your Stars Are Properly Aligned…
The good folks at Psychic World—I wonder if they can predict what I’m going to write next?—have put together a list of all the top side hustles it thinks we should do, based on our star signs. Example: Because I’m a Sagittarius, apparently, I need to become a podcaster (not a bad idea, Psychic World!). I did just buy some home recording equipment. I guess I should give it a try.

Cool Resources For Kids

The Whys And Wherefores
You’ve probably been wondering why I’ve been including these cool resources for kids. It’s for reasons twofold: One, if you’re recently out of work, you need to have time to focus on your job hunt, with little distraction (obviously, if your kid is running around with a pasta strainer on his head, with rigatoni shoved up his or her nose, that’s something you’ll probably have to intervene on…but fun, educational resources could help you avoid future situations like that one); and two, kids are really our future: If we can get them interested in learning about, say, science in the middle of a global pandemic, maybe the next time one of these ugly outbreaks rolls through town, that same kid will be the doctor that finds the cure to it.

Kano Star Wars The Force Coding Kit
I’m a massive dork, as my colleagues can attest, so any educational tool that may have a hint of dorkery in it is the type I like the most. How about this Star Wars-themed coding playset? Get your kid STEMing it early, with this kit that can help your child learn about coding, making music and yes, sharing, all within the context of “the force” and other things you’re embarrassed to talk to your significant other about at the dinner table. It’d help if your kid had a tablet to go along with it, but you can just buy the kit separately here.

Also…A Message From Billionaire Mark Cuban:

Sign your kid up here.

Cool Diversions

 

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Follow This Instagram Account
We’ve sort of been on a roll with Instagram accounts of late, so if you’re in need of a good laugh during your all-day session of social isolation, we’d suggest checking out @wfhfits, an account entirely devoted to people’s incredibly eccentric work-from-home outfits, most of which are as close to high fashion as it gets, even when it comes to home-office-wear. (If you’re like me, it’s been jeans, flannels and slip-ons for the duration.) Are you wearing some haute home couture? You can DM the account a photo of yourself, and its fashion-minded managers might share your photo with the account’s 20K-plus followers.

Take Some Ivy League Classes…Or Complete Your Entire Freshman Year for FREE!
Ever want to pretend like you’re Matt Damon’s character in Good Will Hunting? (How do you like them apples?) Class Central, an online hub that features a bank of MOOCs (i.e. Massive Open Online Courses), has posted a number of Ivy League classes—from top schools such as Brown, Columbia, Cornell, Dartmouth, Harvard, Penn, Princeton and Yale—that can be taken for free. If you want to take that a step further, one of my old bosses runs a nonprofit organization called Modern States, which is looking to help underserved high school seniors, military veterans and others do their entire freshman year of college for free. Find out more about the program here.

Listen To This Song
One of my favorite bands in the whole wide world is Nada Surf, the indie power-pop band that, if you’re of a certain age, you might remember gifting us with “Popular” back in the ’90s. And although some may claim the band’s a one-hit wonder, they’ve, in fact, been producing some of the best indie rock albums since the early aughts. Take 2005’s The Weight Is A Gift, for example. It’s one of my all-time favorite albums, and in fact, I wrote at length about a song from it, “Do It Again,” on LinkedIn, and how it saved my professional life. Read about it here. Listen to it above.


 

Want more insight into the Capital Region job market? Check out Saratoga Living‘s first two installments of SL’s Job Hunters below:

SL’s Job Hunters: Volume 1

SL’s Job Hunters: Volume 2

 

‘Saratoga Living’ Quarantinis: Delayed Patio Season

Next up in Saratoga Living‘s quaratini series comes from the best of the best: Adelphi Hotel bar manager Tim Everhardt. (You may remember him from our Saratoga Gives Back event in December, where he served up what attendees voted Saratoga’s Next Great Saratoga Cocktail, the Saratoga Smash.) Since Everhardt can’t be slinging drinks from behind the Morrissey’s bar, he’s chosen to share his mixology wisdom with the social distancers of Saratoga, presenting a tequila cocktail he calls “Delayed Patio Season.”

Delayed Patio Season

2 oz. Tequila
1 oz. Strawberry-kiwi syrup
1/2 oz. Lime juice
1/4 oz. Tangerine juice
Egg white
Slice of kiwi

Combine the first five ingredients and reverse dry shake (shake it once with ice, strain it and then shake again with no ice). Pour into a glass and garnish with a slice of kiwi!

—Submitted by Tim Everhardt, Adelphi Hotel Bar Manager

 

Want in on the fun? Saratoga Living wants your best quarantini recipes, and we’ll publish the best ones of the bunch on our website. You can send your recipes to [email protected] (with a photo, if you have one).