Business
Don’t know what day it is or who said what at the last meeting? Blame the coronavirus – The Conversation AU
When home and work life look the same, events tend to blur into a single unmemorable blob. And that’s when we start to forget things.

We are all living through a major historical event, a once-in-a-century pandemic that has radically changed how we work, learn, travel, socialise and spend our free time.
But for many of us juggling working from home, schooling at home and Friday night Zoom drinks, this is a period likely marked by memory failures. We forget who said what, who was at which meeting, what tasks and appointments we have, and even what day it is.
Why doesnt our memory serve us well in this pandemic? Anxiety may b…
-
Noosa News14 hours ago
Family pleads for help after 17-year-old Pheobe Bishop disappears in Bundaberg before flight
-
Noosa News23 hours ago
Farmers sell off record numbers of stock as southern NSW drought bites
-
Business15 hours ago
ASX 200 lifts on the RBA’s latest interest rate call
-
Noosa News18 hours ago
No conviction recorded for teen behind attack on Peter Dutton’s office