USA TODAY US Edition

Pauley Perrette offers best ‘stay-at-home’ tips

- Bill Keveney

Self-proclaimed recluse and germophobe actor called upon by LA mayor for advice.

Quarantine, self-isolation and government­al stay-at-home orders are forcing many people to make dramatic changes to their lives, but what’s becoming the new normal doesn’t faze “NCIS” alum Pauley Perrette.

“I am a notorious recluse. And I’m also a notorious germophobe,” says Perrette, who stars in the coming CBS sitcom “Broke” (April 2, 9:30 EDT/PDT). “I’m always making excuses when I don’t want to go anywhere, so now I don’t have to. I’m suddenly cool for the first time ever.”

So California’s recent stay-at-home order, one of a number of restrictio­ns affecting millions of Americans across the country, doesn’t require much adjustment to Perrette’s daily routine. Perrette, who became friends with Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti years ago as part of her nonprofit work, offered him a list of tips titled “How to survive being a recluse.”

“I’m a recluse. Eric’s not. He’s a really social guy,” she says of the mayor, who has instituted strict limitation­s in Los Angeles. “He texted, ‘Do you have any advice for people who are having to be you right now?’ I did. I told him I could teach a master class.”

While everyone has their own specific stay-at-home situation, Perrette, 50, sees it as an opportunit­y to learn things and develop new skills. Here are her seven tips for making the most of enforced domesticit­y from the “single mother of three rescue dogs and four Venus flytraps.”

1. Foster a pet

“I have a houseful of dogs, which helps. It helps if you have a pet,” says Perrette, an animal-rescue activist whose dogs are Rosie, Grace and Bug. “There are are lot of rescue organizati­ons, from national Petfinder to your local rescues. Now is a really fantastic time to foster a dog.”

2. Nurture your green thumb

“I love to plant things,” Perrette says. “I have an Amaryllis that I was tweeting about. They bloom and it’s so beautiful and then they go dormant and come back. This is year two. His name is She, and my four Venus flytraps are Audrey 1, Audrey 2, Audrey 3 and Steve,” a nod to “Little Shop of Horrors.”

3. Learn a new skill on YouTube

“YouTube is crazy, but it’s awesome. And it’s super-informativ­e,” Perrette says of the site’s many how-to videos. “You could come out of quarantine and know how to play the guitar (or) knit a sweater.”

4. Reconnect with an old skill: using the telephone

In our technologi­cally advanced age, telephone communicat­ions often take a back seat to digital conversati­ons. But there’s something important about hearing a human voice.

So make a phone call! “Actually call people and talk to them,” she says.

5. Catch up on reading

Take a second look at the selections that may be gathering dust on your bookshelf. “Books! Our old friends! I constantly read books,” she says.

6. Exercise in place

Perrette says you can turn your home into your own fitness center. “Learn the simple art of using your own body weight to work out.”

7. Watch TV

“I love television. That’s my favorite thing to do,” she says.

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