March is Long Covid Awareness Month!
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gRegor Morrill

My name is gRegor Morrill, a.k.a. gRegorLove. I live in San Diego, enjoy tinkering on the web, and try to make people laugh. Yes, “Gregor is a weird name,” and I know gRegor is a weird capitalization. More about me

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Long Covid Awareness Day

March 15 is Long Covid Awareness Day.

“Long Covid is a multi-systemic disease following a COVID infection, this includes severe, mild, or asymptomatic infections. Long Covid can occur in young and healthy people, including children.

The wide range of symptoms and conditions caused by Long Covid can last for weeks, months, or years.

There are currently no proven treatments or cures for Long COVID.​”

What Is Long Covid? International Long Covid Awareness

If there were two things I wish people would understand about Long Covid, they would be:

  1. People are at risk of Long Covid after each infection, regardless of how “mild” the symptoms were. That risk is cumulative; each infection increases the risk.
  2. The research is young. Since there are a variety of symptoms and no tests/treatment currently, the best way to avoid Long Covid is to avoid Covid infections.

As always, I recommend a layered approach to prevention: wear high-quality respirators, clean the air, and stay up-to-date on your vaccinations, if possible.

Additional Information

Definition of Long Covid:

Advocates and Communicators:

Research:

  • Long COVID in Young Children, School-Aged Children, and Teens doi:10.1001/jamapediatrics.2025.1415
    “Long COVID is common, affecting up to 10% to 20% of children with a history of COVID-19. With almost 6 million US children potentially affected, this is higher than the number of children with asthma, the most common chronic health problem in children.”
  • Experiences of Canadians with long-term symptoms following COVID-19
    “As seen in Chart 2, Canadians reporting two known or suspected COVID-19 infections (25.4%) were 1.7 times more likely to report prolonged symptoms than those reporting only one known or suspected infection (14.6%), and those with 3 or more infections (37.9%) 2.6 times more likely.”

General:

Dark silhouette of a person with a red heart on their chest. Headline in teal: 'LONG COVID' Subtitle: 'Every heartbeat counts' followed by a list of cardiovascular conditions: 'Fibrosis, Necrosis, Pericarditis, Myocarditis, Hypertension, Heart Failure, Fibrillation, Heart Attack, Thrombosis, Vessel Damage, Arrhythmia, and more...' Text at the bottom in teal: 'Every COVID infection can cause damage. High quality masks can help protect you. Finally, hashtags in the bottom corner #LongCovid #LongCovidHeartbeats #LongCovidAwareness
Image from https://www.longcovidawareness.life/graphics

Previously

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A white coffee cup sleeve that the barista has written 'Chai XCX' in black marker

I ordered a dirty chai and I complimented the barista on his handwriting as he wrote out this “Chai.” As he drew the “X”, he explained he used to write “Chai XXX” since, ya know, dirty chai. Then he figured, “Why not Chai XCX?”. Much appreciated handwriting and wordplay.

Notes


I am trying out a method to reduce bot attempts on forms like on my contact page based on fluffy’s example.

On select pages, I now check for a specific cookie. If it is not found or is more than 24 hours old, then the browser redirects to the “Sentience Check” page. That page is a minimal form with a button to indicate “Yes, I am a hooman.” Submitting the form sets the expected cookie and redirects back to the original page. If Javascript is enabled, it will submit the form as soon as the page loads, so most hooman visitors will only see the intermediate page for a second and should be able to continue without issues.

Also at fluffy’s suggestion, the sentience check page returns a response code of 429: Too Many Requests with a header that indicates: retry after one hour. I have no high expectation of the bots respecting that, but maybe the lack of successful response codes will cause some to back off.

The last thing I did was add a noindex meta tag on the page, so search engines should ignore it.

If you’d like to view the page, I recommend turning Javascript off temporarily and then visiting: gregorlove.com/sentience-check/.

I am interested to see how much this will reduce bot attempts on the contact and public sign-in pages. I have had CSRF and honeypot form field protections on both for quite a while, but of course I still see a lot of attempts on them.

Depending how this goes, I might expand its usage to the “send a webmention” form and explore using it to block LLM bots.

I did consider using “I am a meat popsicle” on the button, but not everyone might get The Fifth Element reference.


I added a banner to go along with my Long Covid Awareness Day post.

screenshot of the banner currently at the top of my site: a horizontal band of black that transitions downward to teal at the bottom with a light grey shadow underneath it

“International Long Covid Awareness Color Codes: Teal: #18929A, Grey: #939393, and Black: #000000

https://www.longcovidawareness.life/graphics

Aside: I quite like this teal color. I might have to work that into my site in some places in the longer term.

Previously, Previously


I really enjoyed watching Winged Migration (2001). Some breathtaking footage of bird migrations all around the world. I was shocked how close some of the footage was and learned via Wikipedia that the filmmakers raised several species from birth so they would imprint on the staff and be accustomed to the ultralights and camera equipment.

Thanks to Fractal Kitty for the recommendation for IndieWeb Movie Club!



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