The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Mom needs to stand her ground

- ELLIE TESHER

Q- What do I do when my adult daughter thinks COVID-19 is political, not based in medical facts and that businesses should be opened the sooner the better? Help! A Concerned Parent

A- Your daughter is either involved in a business and wants to get back to it, or she’s restless for the life she knew pre-COVID, when businesses were open for her convenienc­e. I get it, and at some level, you probably do, too. We could all use a proper haircut and would prefer to shop for food whenever and wherever we so desire.

For owners of businesses that are shuttered without a defined end to losses in income to cover rents and for non-essential workers stuck at home with no money arriving to pay their bills, sequesteri­ng has felt like a financial nightmare.

Ask your daughter, what’s political about that?

Would government leaders and civic officials decide to extend unnecessar­y periods of economic pain for citizens without urgent reasons for it?

Ask your daughter, what about the numbers of coronaviru­s infections, many of which were touch-and-go as to whether the patient would survive?

(I write this column at least two weeks ahead, so even if the COVID curve has flattened, the amount of illnesses over time also overwhelme­d entire health-care systems wherever the virus struck).

What about the numbers of deaths? Were those helpless humans who succumbed, dispensabl­e? No longer counted because so many were seniors or elderly and/or disabled, in nursing and long-term-care homes where the virus shot through like a fire bomb?

Your daughter’s attitude (she’s not alone in it) and your concern are what makes this a relationsh­ip question.

She may not even read/ listen to the medical facts directing much of the virus response. She prefers to argue her point with you. Your role as a parent of an adult child is to simply offer your own informed view, once. You can also send her solid medical informatio­n, but you can’t make her swallow it. However, this is a situation where agreeing to disagree is not enough. She must respect your stayhome rules or your extending reliance on them because you believe it’s safer. And she cannot break those rules if staying in your home. Send relationsh­ip questions to ellie@thestar.ca.

Follow @ellieadvic­e.

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