MINNEAPOLIS -- As we emerge from the pandemic, we're starting to see the return of an age-old ritual: the handshake. Many of us went a year or more without clasping someone else's hands. But as ...
MINNEAPOLIS – Several years into the COVID-19 pandemic, a strong and symbolic form of greeting people is making a slow comeback. It's something many Americans specifically put off doing for some time.
When you’re unemployed, you will meet a lot of people as you network and interview to get your next job. Naturally, you can expect to shake a lot of hands. Sure, a typical handshake only lasts a few ...
It's a ritual we take for granted, when we say hello, when we say goodbye, as a gesture of good will, as a show of respect … and it's something we've all of a sudden had to learn not to do. But ...
Editor’s Note: This article is part of “Uncharted,” a series about the world we’re leaving behind, and the one being remade by the pandemic. Handshakes, historically, have often been invoked in that ...
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