Well, I remember one somewhat comical story about Covid - once I needed to take a city bus through a nearby town to buy a supply of wheelbarrow bearings. And that was the time when there were quarantines and Covid. I stopped at a bus stop and bought a shawarma (we often have food stalls near bus stops, and shawarma is a flat lavash bread that is wrapped with a mixture of fried chicken or lamb, as well as finely chopped cabbage, carrots, tomatoes, sweet and hot peppers, and mayonnaise and ketchup). So, I'm standing at the bus stop, eating this shawarma, and a crowd of people has gathered nearby. Everyone is standing next to me, close, without masks or gloves. A big bus pulls up, everyone sits down and, according to the regulations, takes out masks and gloves, because it was forbidden to ride on public transport without masks and gloves. I quickly finish my shawarma, put on a mask and gloves, and we go.I'm so loving the stories you tell us about Russia. How you handled the pandemic, your lifestyle, etc. Tell us more!
Well, that is, everyone stood next to each other without masks for about half an hour, chatting with each other, and then, when the bus arrived, they got on it and started putting on masks, because the government gave orders to wear masks.