What got to me wasn't that I had to tell her to pull up her mask--they can in fact slip when a person is talking. I was expecting that either she would just pull it up, or say something like "sorry" or "it slipped" rather than trying to convince me it didn't matter.
At my OT's office, the receptionist sometimes has her mask around her neck when I arrive, and pulls it up when she sees me enter, or hears me and emerges from the back of the reception area. Part of what I like about that office is that they are still being careful about masking. They're also still requiring patients to wash our hands, which makes sense for that kind of therapy, and I don't want the flu either.
no subject
Date: 2022-09-21 02:50 pm (UTC)At my OT's office, the receptionist sometimes has her mask around her neck when I arrive, and pulls it up when she sees me enter, or hears me and emerges from the back of the reception area. Part of what I like about that office is that they are still being careful about masking. They're also still requiring patients to wash our hands, which makes sense for that kind of therapy, and I don't want the flu either.