Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The amount of angst cause by dishes and laundry is astounding. It doesn’t matter. In 10 years it won’t matter. Change the things you can and accept those you cannot. Focus on what matters and your life will improve 10 fold.
But like, even if it doesn't matter in 10 years, do you suggest that people just let the laundry pile up and wear dirty clothes and put dishes in the sink until it is full... ???
I get what you are saying to a point, but it isn't actually a solution.
How about doing dishes after dinner and laundry on the weekend….like we did pre-pandemic?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's draining because there hasn't been a recovery, really. I sort of expected a year of misery and then there would be a treatment or a vaccine that actually works and we would be able to go back to normal en masse, maybe with some new values and lessons learned. Instead half the country went back to normal while the other half made it a religion to stay isolated. Families broke up over this. Friendships are over. Economically things are far worse than two years ago for most families. Companies have decided to get by with half the employees making everyone miserable. Schools are peddling depressing lessons to the kids. All I can do is make things nice in my little house. It's a lot of pressure to be upbeat...
It’s this. If you go to a part of the country that isn’t as covid obsessed, everyone seems a lot happier and relaxed. Something is in the air in DC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The amount of angst cause by dishes and laundry is astounding. It doesn’t matter. In 10 years it won’t matter. Change the things you can and accept those you cannot. Focus on what matters and your life will improve 10 fold.
But like, even if it doesn't matter in 10 years, do you suggest that people just let the laundry pile up and wear dirty clothes and put dishes in the sink until it is full... ???
I get what you are saying to a point, but it isn't actually a solution.
Anonymous wrote:The amount of angst cause by dishes and laundry is astounding. It doesn’t matter. In 10 years it won’t matter. Change the things you can and accept those you cannot. Focus on what matters and your life will improve 10 fold.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because a sizeable chunk of us have kids under 5 and we are invisible and forgotten. No vaccine forthcoming, but the most stringent illness and quarantine requirements, still expected to work like nothing is different, and the rest of the world has largely moved on.
This 100%.
I am grateful for having young kids during the height of the pandemic and not having to deal with online schooling.....but two years in, our daycare kicks out kids with Covid for 10 days. And there was always a reasonable sick requirement....but now every slight fever or runny nose or cough (i.e. all winter long) and you are asked to stay home for 48 hours.
Not to mention covid exposure (false) scares and whole classrooms plus sibling classroom shut downs.
Agreed. Unless something changes with the quarantine rules, and covid exposure is treated the same as exposure to flu and RSV and HFM (we've never encountered classroom shutdowns for those, despite high levels of transmission), this is still rough on families with young children in daycare. But PP is right...it is almost as if some people have forgotten these kids and their families exist, and we should all just be back to normal by now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The amount of angst cause by dishes and laundry is astounding. It doesn’t matter. In 10 years it won’t matter. Change the things you can and accept those you cannot. Focus on what matters and your life will improve 10 fold.
That $hit matters if you have a spouse: https://www.huffpost.com/entry/she-divorced-me-i-left-dishes-by-the-sink_b_9055288
Anonymous wrote:It's draining because there hasn't been a recovery, really. I sort of expected a year of misery and then there would be a treatment or a vaccine that actually works and we would be able to go back to normal en masse, maybe with some new values and lessons learned. Instead half the country went back to normal while the other half made it a religion to stay isolated. Families broke up over this. Friendships are over. Economically things are far worse than two years ago for most families. Companies have decided to get by with half the employees making everyone miserable. Schools are peddling depressing lessons to the kids. All I can do is make things nice in my little house. It's a lot of pressure to be upbeat...
Anonymous wrote:It's draining because there hasn't been a recovery, really. I sort of expected a year of misery and then there would be a treatment or a vaccine that actually works and we would be able to go back to normal en masse, maybe with some new values and lessons learned. Instead half the country went back to normal while the other half made it a religion to stay isolated. Families broke up over this. Friendships are over. Economically things are far worse than two years ago for most families. Companies have decided to get by with half the employees making everyone miserable. Schools are peddling depressing lessons to the kids. All I can do is make things nice in my little house. It's a lot of pressure to be upbeat...
Anonymous wrote:The dual working parent life is insane unless you have:
1) One parent with an extremely flexible or preferably part-time jobs
2) Heavy involvement from grandparents
3) A nanny who also helps with housework
I am fortunate to have all three but if I didn’t have at least one, I would quit. I know plenty of people in my area (Howard County) living on one income. They stopped at one kid and they’re doing just fine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because a sizeable chunk of us have kids under 5 and we are invisible and forgotten. No vaccine forthcoming, but the most stringent illness and quarantine requirements, still expected to work like nothing is different, and the rest of the world has largely moved on.
This 100%.
I am grateful for having young kids during the height of the pandemic and not having to deal with online schooling.....but two years in, our daycare kicks out kids with Covid for 10 days. And there was always a reasonable sick requirement....but now every slight fever or runny nose or cough (i.e. all winter long) and you are asked to stay home for 48 hours.
Not to mention covid exposure (false) scares and whole classrooms plus sibling classroom shut downs.
I am the PP you are responding to and this was our experience so we got a nanny last fall. I am grateful we were able to and it saved our sanity but there are trade offs, too,mainly the isolation.
So we are trying to do a swim class and other things. Even when DD was in day care two weeks out of the month there was an element of isolation.
I was grateful for no online schooling but the under 5 crowd has just NEVER had good options. Only not great or not bad options.
And there is just NO END IN SIGHT for this weird Twilight Zone existence
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because a sizeable chunk of us have kids under 5 and we are invisible and forgotten. No vaccine forthcoming, but the most stringent illness and quarantine requirements, still expected to work like nothing is different, and the rest of the world has largely moved on.
This 100%.
I am grateful for having young kids during the height of the pandemic and not having to deal with online schooling.....but two years in, our daycare kicks out kids with Covid for 10 days. And there was always a reasonable sick requirement....but now every slight fever or runny nose or cough (i.e. all winter long) and you are asked to stay home for 48 hours.
Not to mention covid exposure (false) scares and whole classrooms plus sibling classroom shut downs.