Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cost us an enormous sum of money (small business owners)
2 of our 3 kids feel behind in school, one is also depressed.
DH and I have both gained weight and drink too much.
I had to go back on meds for my anxiety, and DH is depressed (first timer). Marriage not in a great place.
We were all healthy and thriving before.
It has been very unfair, and absolutely no one cares. A few have born the brunt of this, while so many others have “enjoyed the break”.
It is hard not to be bitter.
But, you asked.
I’m really sorry. A certain class of people (work from home with nannies or sahm
) have had the loveliest time of this. They have no self awareness or compassion for people like you. It makes me sick. Everyone’s ok-ness with no school encouraged our family to leave dc. Can’t live around so many thoughtless lemmings.
Umm some SAHMs were screwed just as much. I suspect the PP with husband who was out the door for 10 hours a day is one. With that many young kids.
Anonymous wrote:I feel so fragile now. Like a leaf struggling to hang on before another blast comes. I never felt like this before and our family has been through a lot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s left me utterly confused. The politics… the masking… the vaccine… the public school parents… everyone seems completely intolerant of different points of view now.
Yes. I truly cannot relate to a lot of people. Not looking to debate here just saying I personally cannot relate to people who supported the school closures in dmv, who continue to outdoor mask on hikes etc. I look at them and see nothing in common. It’s unsettling to feel like our society has splintered into maybe 3-4 very distinct camps.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Having small kids and taking care of them is the most isolating and tiring experience even when there is no pandemic.
People need to also understand that having more than 1 or 2 kids is not easy. No one owes the raising of your kids to you. The parents have to raise them. If they are lucky they will have paid or unpaid caregivers at various times but it is not a guarantee.
If you cannot do it on your own and do it well then don't have kids.
Oh shut up.
This poster isn’t wrong though…when the going gets tough, raising kids is entirely on the parents.
Anonymous wrote:It’s left me utterly confused. The politics… the masking… the vaccine… the public school parents… everyone seems completely intolerant of different points of view now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Having small kids and taking care of them is the most isolating and tiring experience even when there is no pandemic.
People need to also understand that having more than 1 or 2 kids is not easy. No one owes the raising of your kids to you. The parents have to raise them. If they are lucky they will have paid or unpaid caregivers at various times but it is not a guarantee.
If you cannot do it on your own and do it well then don't have kids.
Oh shut up.
Anonymous wrote:Having small kids and taking care of them is the most isolating and tiring experience even when there is no pandemic.
People need to also understand that having more than 1 or 2 kids is not easy. No one owes the raising of your kids to you. The parents have to raise them. If they are lucky they will have paid or unpaid caregivers at various times but it is not a guarantee.
If you cannot do it on your own and do it well then don't have kids.
Anonymous wrote:It’s left me utterly confused. The politics… the masking… the vaccine… the public school parents… everyone seems completely intolerant of different points of view now.
Anonymous wrote:Made me drink more, realize it was too much, make me nervous when I had a hard time cutting back, read The Naked Mind, and then quit altogether.
So the pandemic made me quit drinking.
And introduce me to the awesomeness that is leisurewear.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Covid put trump and his idiot sycophants in the rear view mirror.
Finally woke up the country to the fact that an idiot as Commander-in-Chief is the stupidest thing you can have in a crisis.
Anonymous wrote:It’s made me mad. I will never ever forget the feeling of abandonment. The whole world walked out. I was home alone with 3 small children, one with special needs, for 15 months. Our schools didn’t reopen. Therapies were only on zoom. And nobody cared. My parents social distanced from us. My DH can’t work from home and was out of the house from 8-7 every weekday. Soooo many “friends” and neighbors gushed about all the “silver linings” of the pandemic and how they enjoyed the family time and slower pace. Can’t relate. At all.