Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • Hello again.

  • It's been cabinet still in quarantine, Wuhan.

  • That won't change for a while today.

  • I'm just gonna be answering some questions.

  • You guys have been posting on the previous videos.

  • Eso Let's get into it.

  • First question.

  • Are you scared?

  • You don't look so scared.

  • Um, I'm not scared.

  • No, no.

  • Yeah, I'm not scared.

  • And when I go to bed, usually quite late, I your mind starts to wander.

  • Well, you know, when you're going to bed and you can't sleep, you start to think crazy things.

  • But no, I'm not scared.

  • I just try not to think about it.

  • It's not time to worry yet.

  • Not for me.

  • I'm not infected as far as I know.

  • Um, so no need to worry.

  • No need to fear.

  • Just take precautions.

  • Be safe.

  • Be healthy.

  • Wash your hands where your masks You'll be.

  • Okay.

  • So no, I'm not I'm not scared.

  • Question to what is china doing in terms of sanitation To help prevent spreading of the virus?

  • China, Even before the virus I noticed, was quite a sanitary in the way that they would always every single day collect all the rubbish every single day.

  • You see trucks going back and forth, spraying water on the road, cleaning the road.

  • Only the other day, when I was actually at the shop, I didn't get a video of it.

  • There was a truck kind of like cleaning the midsection of the jeweled carriageway had, like, you know, just I don't know what to call that spinning sponges, if you will, just for the railing in the middle.

  • So especially since the virus, they've upped their game, and they were already quite good at being sanitary in the streets.

  • Three.

  • How are your family handling the news about you being in China with the outbreak going on?

  • Well, like I said, I I'm not worried.

  • I tell them not to worry.

  • In an ideal world, I wouldn't be here, but I am.

  • So there's nothing really we can do to get on with it.

  • Ah, we're always in touch.

  • I've had contact constantly now from my whole family ever since.

  • The real the lock down.

  • Basically, every day I get messages, I get called, so we reassure each other.

  • You know, I tell them not to worry.

  • They tell me not to worry.

  • We keep each other updated at the information for, like, evacuations and stuff.

  • So obviously they want me home and safe.

  • But until that's an option, a viable option, then I'm here and we just have to deal with or what is the hardest part about being quarantined?

  • What are you doing To avoid boredom?

  • The hardest part, the hardest part.

  • Maybe those annoying part is the cooking I actually like to cook, but here in China, I've only got 22 hubs, you know, two burners, uh, one walk and two putts on Not as many ingredients as I would like.

  • Obviously in a quarantine.

  • Um, so I like to cook.

  • But that's probably the most knowing thing because, like I said in the other video, I would usually eat out or have food brought in because it's just so cheap and it's so nice.

  • So that's probably the most annoying part actually gonna cook a carbonara tonight, so I'm looking forward to that.

  • I don't have spaghetti, so it'll be a penny carbonara.

  • I've got eggs.

  • I got bigon looking forward to that.

  • That'll be nice.

  • What was the rest of the ocean?

  • What am I doing to avoid boredom?

  • Well, this for one I do.

  • These videos kind of keep me saying For now that was a joke.

  • Um, today I'll actually clean my apartment because it is filthy.

  • I'm looking around and it is pretty untidy right now.

  • I'll show you there's my Washington just hanging up in the living room.

  • I'll quickly do that.

  • You go quite messy.

  • So that's what I'll be doing after this.

  • You know?

  • What do you do when you're on your on your holidays?

  • And you just you're in your apartments?

  • Like Imagine you were just in your apartment for a day.

  • What would you do to pass the time?

  • That's what I do.

  • I just every day.

  • Question five.

  • Are you getting anxious about any exposure?

  • Anxious about running out of food or money?

  • You are brave to say you will stay.

  • Well, uh, if I was that anxious about being exposed and I would never leave and I would just starve.

  • But I went out on Sunday.

  • When was that?

  • What day?

  • Today is Wednesday.

  • I feel fine.

  • I took precautions.

  • I wore my mask.

  • I looked silly in my goggles, but I It's been three days.

  • I still feel fine.

  • It's I'm not too anxious about it.

  • Like I say, I try not to worry about.

  • If I get infected.

  • Hopefully I'll be fine, even with the infection.

  • Gosh, now, I'm not too anxious, but over the anxious about anxious about running out of food or money Uh, China is great because it is not too expensive.

  • And so the food isn't too expensive.

  • So the money I'm not too worried about that.

  • Obviously, I was going to go on holiday, so I've saved all that money.

  • Oh, my holiday money is now, I guess.

  • Quarantine money.

  • Ah, food.

  • Like I said, I went out three days ago and I was fine.

  • The shops are always fully stocked.

  • Food is always gonna keep coming into the city.

  • That won't stop.

  • That just can't stop.

  • So maybe in a week, 10 days or so I'll go back out and do another big shop.

  • I have to get toiletries last time.

  • So this time I'll just focus all on food.

  • Um, suitcase again.

  • Just full of food.

  • I'm not worried about running out of food.

  • No, I just try not to worry about anything.

  • If I worry about it now and then it happens, then I've suffered twice.

  • I've suffered when I worried and I suffer when it happened.

  • So no point worrying.

  • What was the rest of it?

  • You are brave to say.

  • You will say I'm not brave.

  • I'm not brave to say Alice Day.

  • It just makes sense to me to stay.

  • The medical experts in America, Japan, Australia.

  • They're all saying we can bring home the people on dhe.

  • It should be OK.

  • We can have quarantined, set up and stuff ready for them when they arrive.

  • But there are exceptional circumstances for some people who definitely should leave.

  • I don't believe everyone should stay.

  • But unless you absolutely have to.

  • For now, while it is in this current States like I can't I don't know.

  • It could get much, much worse.

  • And then I might regret stay.

  • But right now, the way things are right now, I think staying isn't It?

  • Isn't.

  • It probably isn't the best option, but it definitely isn't a terrible option.

  • Plenty of food, Plenty of water.

  • China are handling the situation very well, so no, I'm not brave for staying.

  • I'm just just doing what I think is the right thing to do.

  • I don't want to infect anyone else, and I don't even maybe I would be infected by being evacuated.

  • Maybe so.

  • I just to me it seems like the best idea.

  • I people would probably disagree with that.

  • Some people would want to get out as soon as possible.

  • My family, like I say, they want me home.

  • But I think the way things are now, that's what I'm saying.

  • The way things are right now, staying isn't a terrible options.

  • As for the evacuations that are underway, I don't know too much about Australian.

  • Japan doesn't really concern me.

  • Um, the Americans.

  • There was a flight of Americans that left yesterday morning, I think was 7 a.m. or 10 p.m. I think it was meant to be seven.

  • No, the Americans, the American flight with people on it, left last night, and I believe now they're in Alaska for a week of quarantine.

  • So that's good for them.

  • The British, uh, I believe there's a flight Thursday morning.

  • I think it's at 7 a.m. On hopefully people I was referring to earlier in dire circumstances who are at the most risk.

  • Hopefully, they'll get on that flight and they'll get out.

  • Uh, I am in touch with the Irish Embassy.

  • We communicate.

  • So if there is evacuation for me, like I said, I'll do the evacuation under the right circumstances, knowing that quarantine and health and medical professionals are making these decisions.

  • So we have to trust them.

  • We have to put our trust in them.

  • They know what they're talking about.

  • I'm just a guy in Wuhan.

  • I just live in the situation.

  • They really know what to do.

  • So I think we can trust that if people are being evacuated, they're being evacuated in the right way, in the right manner.

  • And we can just hope for the best six.

  • How are the people within Wuhan reacting to this?

  • Are the people that mistrustful or feeling optimistic that they can weather this?

  • I can't remember what day it was.

  • He was the 27th No, 26th.

  • It was a day it was in the past.

  • Very, very recently.

  • Maybe 234 days ago.

  • On an eight o'clock all the citizens of Wuhan who are still here the millions that are still here, They went to their windows.

  • They went to their balcony on everyone was shouting Jail and joy.

  • Oh means come on.

  • It's like encouragement.

  • So people were shouting, JJ, I owe to the city like Come on, we could do this, showing how resilient they are and just really showing that we can band together on Dhe.

  • Wu Han can get through this.

  • So yeah, that answers the question, doesn't it?

  • How are people reacting?

  • Everyone's reacting very well.

  • People are staying inside.

  • People are wearing their masks.

  • When they go outside, they're taking the right precautions on DDE.

  • I think everyone's doing pretty well.

  • What was the rest of the question?

  • Are people mistrustful or feeling optimistic?

  • People are feeling optimistic.

  • Obviously, in a city of 11 million, if only 1% of them or even half a percent of them are feeling restless or mistrust, well, then you might see a video of someone freaking out.

  • But such a small percentage.

  • The city is coping well with this terrible situation.

  • Question seven.

  • How do you manage to draw the line between?

  • But how do you manage to draw the line between precaution and paranoia?

  • Under such a situation?

  • I am like I said before about going out, you take the right.

  • Precautions.

  • You take the correct measures to make sure you don't get infected.

  • So masks goggles.

  • That probably relates back to the other one.

  • About what our china doing for sanitary was I have this mask.

  • It's a dust mask.

  • And I didn't know.

  • I wouldn't have known that that wasn't gonna be good enough on its own.

  • Uh, but China sent out loads of information.

  • The right precautions.

  • Take what?

  • What meets to avoid?

  • Uh, you know, wash your hands with what kind of soap?

  • Antibacterial alcohol, soap, stuff like that.

  • But the paranoia thing I saw comment saying something like, uh I hope he washes the wheels on his suitcase when he gets back from the shop on.

  • I was like, uh, seems a bit much I'm not gonna be looking to is off the suitcase.

  • I mean, I'd say you just use your common sense.

  • What's too much?

  • If you think about it too much, You think Oh, my God.

  • When was the last time I wash my hands?

  • I can't talk to my face.

  • You think I'm inside?

  • I'm in the apartment.

  • The Hammond is clean and safe.

  • Cook your food thoroughly.

  • You know, just you know, common sense.

  • Really.

  • Just don't go to fire with it.

  • Don't want to become, You know, every five minutes, clean your hands.

  • It's just it's unnecessary.

  • You don't need to be that bad.

  • You wouldn't do that if the flu was going around.

  • Question eight.

  • Are you worried about the puppy you saw on the streets?

  • Yeah, that was yeah.

  • He was so cute.

  • He was so cute.

  • Um, I am.

  • I was thinking about him because you know what?

  • Today, I guess I was worried about him then.

  • I think now, with no one on the street, he's probably safest.

  • He could ever be with no one on the streets.

  • And he's a little puppy.

  • You definitely fend for himself.

  • I think he'd be okay.

  • The girl I was with the shop, She got a message from someone who saw the video in Wuhan who helps strays.

  • So they went out to that area to see if they could find the puppy they couldn't.

  • Unfortunately, Bush, you know, people know he's out there now looking around in that area, so I think he'll be okay.

  • I hope he'll be okay.

  • You'll probably be okay because there's no one on the street.

  • Someone might take him in because the Corona virus can spread through animals.

  • Cats and dogs can't spread through cats and dogs specifically so someone might see him and take him in Probably.

  • Oh, I wouldn't you He was so cute on again.

  • I don't know if, though, I don't know if the other part will be in here, but I want to thank everyone so much for the birthday wishes.

  • That was so kind of you.

  • And I didn't expect that at all.

  • I was just letting you know it was my birthday.

  • But thank you.

  • That was all very kind of very touched by that.

  • So thank you very much.

Hello again.

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it