If you're in the UK there are lots of Mutual Aid societies that have set up to help neighbours who are self isolating. You can see the directory here - https://covidmutualaid.org/
I'm in one of these in Shacklewell and it's great to see people helping each other on small scale with shopping, prescriptions and friendly phone calls and chats.
It's interesting that most of them are using WhatsApp or Facebook groups. They're not really tools that are suited to this kind of thing but they're the easiest and most available thing we've got.
The law in the US is the CAN-SPAM act in 2003. It requires email to have unsubscribe instructions at the bottom of the email and to take people off the list within 10 days of a request. There are similar laws, many of them stricter, in different jurisdictions.
I walked it this year and found http://www.shikokuhenrotrail.com/ is a great site for information, particularly about the individual temples. It has a forum as well where you can ask questions.
It took me 50 days but I did 20 extra temples and had a few diversions (some intentional, some not).
I walked it this year as well, about 20 days before you it seems. I've started reading your journal, it's great. I found a picture of a woman who gave me a mikan and told me "when you are hot, it will exist" on Day 5, she was lovely.
It was one of the best things I've ever done.
Returning to the real world, work was a bit of a struggle. The charity and spirit of giving and receiving was incredible.
Mine is SUPERMAN KRYPTON which I rather like. I could also go with EMERGENCY REBEL, DOUGLAS PHOTOS (I live in an area with lots of Douglas trees), CATATONIC TYRANNOSAURUS, etc.
I realised when I was living in Japan recently how much I miss the UK postcode system. When I'm in the UK I can give anyone a short alphanumeric string and they can find me. A global coordinate system like this is really useful. I hope you can get some traction with it.
I spent six months travelling and working remotely recently, in Japan, Taiwan and Australia. I only had a carry on suitcase and I never missed anything.
I'm now back in London and after two weeks I have bought at least three small suitcases worth of new things. It's amazing how quickly things pile up. Once I had the space I started accumulating possessions. I go into shops and come out with things I didn't know I needed.
In the UK I'd always been told you had to give a reference, usually by phone, and couldn't say anything negative but would just say "she worked here" if the employee wasn't very good.
One day at a small company I worked for the phone rang and a fellow developer answered. He said "the CEO's in a meeting right now, can I help?... Oh Andrew? He was terrible, couldn't code his way out of a cardboard box and he was really hard to get on with. I couldn't stand him personally... Ok, you're welcome, bye". My mouth was on the floor, I'm pretty sure Andrew didn't get that job.
In the United States, free speech principles as they apply to defamation law basically allow anyone in your former company to say TRUTHFUL things about your PUBLIC behavior in the workplace without fear of legal liability. But because most employers are allergic to lawsuits, they generally advise their employees to say NOTHING other than verifying dates of employment (to prevent employees saying illegal things about their former colleagues like what race or religion they are, for example). But if you actually phone up references, many of them are quite talkative. Whether they follow the boss's advice not to say much is on them. And a really wonderful way to use references (which I did, as a community volunteer advised by a professional search firm for my local school district many years when it was hiring a new superintendent) is to call and ask for BACK references, that is "Who else do you know who could comment on how well Mr. Smith could do this job he is applying for?" That is perfectly legal, and very informative.
https://www.denofgeek.com/tv/the-new-york-times-just-invente...