Anonymous wrote:Time to do something about it! You know it’s not healthy and ok to keep your kids from socializing. Seek the help you need to cope with covid anxiety. In 15 yrs you do not want to have adults on your hands who still can’t cope all because you traded their social well being away to lessen the risk of this virus. You’re realizing it, so now it’s time to act.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Time to do something about it! You know it’s not healthy and ok to keep your kids from socializing. Seek the help you need to cope with covid anxiety. In 15 yrs you do not want to have adults on your hands who still can’t cope all because you traded their social well being away to lessen the risk of this virus. You’re realizing it, so now it’s time to act.
It’s not healthy for a child to lose a parent either.
What does that have to do with anything??
It has to do with Covid. Many kids lost a parent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is crazy. I live in Texas. I am pro vaccine and anti all of our state leadership.
But our kids are back to normal. School is normal. Sports are normal. Playdates are normal. It's all normal.
You have no idea how fortunate you are. I have family in Florida and they are the same way.
Honestly, be thankful for your state leadership. Truly. You have no idea how bad it is here in the DMV. Especially for the kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a friend whose Covid kid has never had a birthday party or celebration with anyone but their parents. And I doubt they will before they turn 3/4 because vaccinations are going to take a long time for authorization for the youngest of the youngest.
At least your kids know what normal is.
Wait, the kid is 2 - they’ve only HAD 2 birthdays. Why is it so extraordinary that those first two birthdays were celebrated only with the parents? Not everyone always does it up for birthdays even pre-pandemic. Not everyone lives in the same town as their extended family.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Time to do something about it! You know it’s not healthy and ok to keep your kids from socializing. Seek the help you need to cope with covid anxiety. In 15 yrs you do not want to have adults on your hands who still can’t cope all because you traded their social well being away to lessen the risk of this virus. You’re realizing it, so now it’s time to act.
It’s not healthy for a child to lose a parent either.
What does that have to do with anything??
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Time to do something about it! You know it’s not healthy and ok to keep your kids from socializing. Seek the help you need to cope with covid anxiety. In 15 yrs you do not want to have adults on your hands who still can’t cope all because you traded their social well being away to lessen the risk of this virus. You’re realizing it, so now it’s time to act.
It’s not healthy for a child to lose a parent either.
Anonymous wrote:Even being as charitable as possible to OP—meaning, she’s not just virtue signaling and genuinely feels a moral obligation to lock down for the benefit of others—she is by her own admission placing that generic sense of duty to “society” over the welfare of her own children.
I think that is really bad parenting. And morally questionable as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s better that way. They won’t know what they’re missing. Try having a kid on their third covid-affected year at college. Imagine finally reaching freedom only to encounter more restrictions than anyone could ever imagine. The whole thing has been a nightmare and a waste of money and time that they can never repeat.
My kid had a pretty normal year at Bama. I was initially resistant to the south but it was the best decision for these times although we couldn’t have predicted it.
This made me laugh out loud. There is absolutely nothing normal at Bama. Most people would choose covid restrictions over a place that accepts racism, The Machine, and zero sense of social responsibility as normal.
I know you feel morally superior but she is happy and forgets covid is even happening. Parties, she got a great internship through her sorority for last summer which was even in person and dated a biracial guy for a spell. I’m sorry your kids are doing hybrid classes at Columbia and masking in the form laundry room. Sad for them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s better that way. They won’t know what they’re missing. Try having a kid on their third covid-affected year at college. Imagine finally reaching freedom only to encounter more restrictions than anyone could ever imagine. The whole thing has been a nightmare and a waste of money and time that they can never repeat.
My kid had a pretty normal year at Bama. I was initially resistant to the south but it was the best decision for these times although we couldn’t have predicted it.
This made me laugh out loud. There is absolutely nothing normal at Bama. Most people would choose covid restrictions over a place that accepts racism, The Machine, and zero sense of social responsibility as normal.
Anonymous wrote:I was just getting to the point where I was thinking about allowing indoor play dates again. Maybe a small birthday party for my winter birthday kids. My oldest is 12 and fully vaccinated, my younger two have had the first dose. I was thinking after they were fully vaccinated we would try to return to more normalcy with friends. Now this news of a new variant and possible restrictions coming. I am so down and feeling a little hopeless. They miss their friends, normal childhood play, sleepovers. We are cautious and want to protect them and also prevent spread. But I feel like this will consume our lives for a long time and it is so depressing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s better that way. They won’t know what they’re missing. Try having a kid on their third covid-affected year at college. Imagine finally reaching freedom only to encounter more restrictions than anyone could ever imagine. The whole thing has been a nightmare and a waste of money and time that they can never repeat.
My kid had a pretty normal year at Bama. I was initially resistant to the south but it was the best decision for these times although we couldn’t have predicted it.
This made me laugh out loud. There is absolutely nothing normal at Bama. Most people would choose covid restrictions over a place that accepts racism, The Machine, and zero sense of social responsibility as normal.
Anonymous wrote:Time to do something about it! You know it’s not healthy and ok to keep your kids from socializing. Seek the help you need to cope with covid anxiety. In 15 yrs you do not want to have adults on your hands who still can’t cope all because you traded their social well being away to lessen the risk of this virus. You’re realizing it, so now it’s time to act.