Cape Breton Post

Be ready to help, but not intrusive

- Ellie Tesher Advice

Ellie's Note to Readers: I urge you to share how COVID19 and the news about it is affecting every relationsh­ip we have — with partners, children, parents, friends. Share your personal stories, how you're adapting, and how you're not, so we can find solutions for these unusual times.

Q - I'm mid 40s, married with children, working part time from home. I have many friends plus family and normally connect with four people daily — my mom, sister and two best friends.

Counting my brother, closest cousin and two other female friends, I actually checked in with eight people twice a week. I cared about every one of them.

But now, when it's easier to maintain contact because we're all at home, no one's contacting me.

I get that since we're all living under the same rules and restrictio­ns, there's not a lot different happening for each other.

But I believe that now, during this coronaviru­s pandemic, is an even more important time to stay connected.

If a family member or close

friend of any of us becomes ill with COVID-19, we're the essential support group for each other.

We know each other's relationsh­ips, the closeness between the family generation­s, etc.

But I'm the only one making the effort now. It's really getting me down.

— Missing My Connection­s

A- Time to lift yourself up. You're still the same person who'll help whomever needs it and pull everyone else together when group support's required.

Recognize how lucky you are since everyone you care about seems OK.

After weeks of same-same, most people are just busy managing their own scene.

You know the demands on everyone for time and patience — making sure children are following their athome school programs and assignment­s, finding physical activities they can do at home to curb their restlessne­ss.

You're working, needing groceries without risking proximity to other shoppers, cooking family meals and cleaning up along with husband and kids.

Everyone in that situation is busy but also distracted, trying not to over-worry while wondering about the future.

Your mother's in a special category, especially if she's alone. She needs to know she can always reach you or her other children.

You've previously given a lot of time to your friends, when frequent contact was the norm between you.

Now, they're trying to just carry on, hoping that they and their kids won't make a mis-step with exposure to the virus.

All of them, all of us, are relying on an old saying whose origin we hardly know:

“This too shall pass” (it's an ancient Persian adage used in multiple languages, commenting on the temporary nature of the human condition. Pandemics, thankfully rare, do qualify).

An occasional text message

or social media post of encouragem­ent from you is enough for now. FEEDBACK regarding the single mother, an essential worker, who made child-care arrangemen­ts for her son, eight. He spends the day at his mother's friend's house, home-schooling along with her same-age daughter who's his friend.

Reader - I fully understand essential workers' roles in these awful times and the urgent need for child care if you are a single parent.

The issue I think those other parents who disapprove­d of the plan have, as I do, is the role of the child's mother working all day then picking up her child and returning him the next day for babysittin­g.

Is public health involved? I'm a former elementary­school teacher who taught for 35 years. Eight-year-olds don't social distance.

Here's a quote from the Ontario Coalition for Better Child Care:

"Home child care can also be a good option, provided they get the proper support from public health so that all the right precaution­s are being taken.

FEEDBACK regarding the grandmothe­r worried because her granddaugh­ter, 14, no longer wants to live half-time with her divorced father.

Reader - My son decided at 16 that he wanted to spend more time with his dad. While it may feel like rejection, children in early-teens are legally allowed to make these decisions before 18 (Ellie: in Ontario, and some other jurisdicti­ons). If her granddaugh­ter wants less time with dad (but still seeing dad) it should be permitted.

I didn't want my son to be with his dad more, for many reasons, but he did and we've continued to have a great relationsh­ip.

My younger son wanted less visitation with his dad, so it works both ways.

The daughter shouldn't have to sit at her dad's place doing “nothing” for half of the next four years.

Her mother needs legal advice. Children by age 13-15 should have a say in custody so there isn't resentment later. ELLIE’S TIP OF THE DAY Being supportive means being ready to help but not intruding with it.

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