Anonymous wrote:My son is coming home, and we informed our close friend (like a grandma to my kids), so she had the option of not joining us for Thanksgiving. She agreed that she would wait and see us when the numbers are back down. My son has had four covid tests due to random testing at his campus, and all have been negative. Still it's a risk.
Our house rules are the same as they have been since graduation: no drinking, no weed, (he's not 21) need to be home at 1am, or find some where else to sleep. Doors are locked at 1, unless you've cleared it with us first.
I'm not even sure he will go back to campus in January.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My wife is a bit lax. But I am not. I recall during pandemic since I had a pool and a nice flat backyard my kids friends would come over. Parent drop them off with mask enter my yard. Pretty soon using my bathroom as hot and buggy. I have a full finished basement I never use. They come in and hang out. Whole group, parents pull up and text kids would put on mask and go out my back door and appear from yard. Eventually all parents did this. Kinda pod.
Go to Cabin John Mall in Potomac on a nice day at lunch around 200 kids outside no masks hanging out.
I guarantee you Thanksgiving weekend Cabin John Mall will be packed with college kids.
I guess life kinda sucks if you are a college kid and Cabin John Mall is your hangout space. LOL
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son is coming home, and we informed our close friend (like a grandma to my kids), so she had the option of not joining us for Thanksgiving. She agreed that she would wait and see us when the numbers are back down. My son has had four covid tests due to random testing at his campus, and all have been negative. Still it's a risk.
Our house rules are the same as they have been since graduation: no drinking, no weed, (he's not 21) need to be home at 1am, or find some where else to sleep. Doors are locked at 1, unless you've cleared it with us first.
I'm not even sure he will go back to campus in January.
Any rules about where he can hang out? With whom? Indoor vs out? If he goes to a friends to watch a movie does he have to wear a mask?
Anonymous wrote:Parents who allow gatherings at their house or throw graduation parties cause fights for other families whose parents are trying to be more cautious.
Anonymous wrote:Op coming back here to share this as I just saw it and it confirms what many have been saying here about indoors, in case it is helpful
https://www.google.com/amp/s/amp.theatlantic.com/amp/article/617122/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sophomore lands on Friday, their school is testing all of the kids on the way out (just got their test back, negative). I realize they may catch it on the plane home (too far to drive, across country) so we're setting up a test on this end again. If that comes back fine then they don't have to quarantine.
Any rules about where he can hang out? With whom? Indoor vs out? If he goes to a friends to watch a movie does he have to wear a mask?
Anonymous wrote:Sophomore lands on Friday, their school is testing all of the kids on the way out (just got their test back, negative). I realize they may catch it on the plane home (too far to drive, across country) so we're setting up a test on this end again. If that comes back fine then they don't have to quarantine.
Anonymous wrote:My son is coming home, and we informed our close friend (like a grandma to my kids), so she had the option of not joining us for Thanksgiving. She agreed that she would wait and see us when the numbers are back down. My son has had four covid tests due to random testing at his campus, and all have been negative. Still it's a risk.
Our house rules are the same as they have been since graduation: no drinking, no weed, (he's not 21) need to be home at 1am, or find some where else to sleep. Doors are locked at 1, unless you've cleared it with us first.
I'm not even sure he will go back to campus in January.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^^^^ 9/15
NCAA rules 14 days isolation, 7 days back to health plan with full cardio and lung tests before fully practicing with the team.
I would say for my no son it took the full 21 days to feel good enough to practice. But he suffered from depression and anxiety after (more related to the isolation) and is still being treated for that.
They test all players 3x /week but once they test positive no testing for 90 days.
I’m sorry about your nephew I hope he fully recovers.
If you haven't already done so, you should get your son in to see a cardiologist at Children's before returning to sports. Inflammation can be deadly.
And your own house rules are nuts. Im hoping you're a troll. Your plan risks the health of a dozen people just in thr first round.
It's myocarditis and appears to be a fairly common/non-rare development in young people who have had COVID-19. It appears to last at least for months after a person tests negative, although it is too early to tell if it persists longer or leaves behind permanent damage. Myocarditis is the leading cause of sudden death in high school and college athletes. Get you son to a cardiologist before he goes back to practice. Truly can be a ticking timebomb.
And just to add what others here have written, your cavalier approach to this uncontrolled, lethal pandemic is scary. I'm truly hoping you are a troll, getting your jollys seeing everyone else tell you that you're an idiot.
NCAA requires it. So every athlete dies that. Also playing was not really optional for athletes on scholarship, they said it was but it wasn’t.
Hope you enjoy fear porn you seem addicted.
You're out of your mind. You have no idea--because no one can have any idea--what the long-term health consequences are for your son if he had COVID. But would definitely check for myocarditis and keep him out of practice for a few months. OP, or whoever is posting, is so ridiculously opposed to any kind of understanding of the pandemic, that I assume either you are just a troll stirring the pot or you are writing this note from some bar in South Dakota.