Anonymous wrote:PPs don't you dare judge OP on what has obviously been a very difficult and agonizing decision. You know nothing about her condition and the risk coronavirus poses. There are multiple families I know who lost more than one loved on.
I'm sorry for what your daughter is going through, OP. I know some people have one friend over a time and they sit outside and talk from 6-10 feet away on chairs or go on bike rides. Is that an option?
I don't know how she is with online clubs but with school starting up some school clubs will meet virtually. I know it's not the same but it's something.
Anonymous wrote:I agree this is a lot to ask your child. Don’t do XYZ or you will kill mom. Wow.
I would let her meet friends outside for the next few months until it gets cold.
Anonymous wrote:She’s sad because she can’t hug her friends. She likes her books but Zoom school is not the same, especially at an age when 13 yo’s are trying to find themselves. She had a lot friends in theater at school, and sat at the drama/nerd kid lunch table, but recording solo scripts for a Zoom play lacks the social interaction.
Anonymous wrote:Not sure where to place this post, but DD is an 8th grader and very lonely. Pre-COVID, and most of COVID, she did fine with art, music & art as an introverted, creative, gifted kid. But social isolation is taking its toll. I’m squarely high risk with health issues since infancy. We’ve basically had to become hermits with the way people refuse to wear masks. How are you supporting your only children? What would you do? (And please don’t tell me to risk my life because my spouse vetoed this notion early on in the pandemic saying she needed two parents, not one—and he does not want to lose me). Before the trolls start typing, please stop and consider that these literally are life and death decisions with no easy answers for anyone on this planet.