The Standard (St. Catharines)

I’m worried about my non-social distancing daughter

- Ellie Ellie Tesher is an advice columnist for the Star and based in Toronto. Send your relationsh­ip questions via email: ellie@thestar.ca.

Q: My wife and I have two adult girls. One lives about an hour west of Toronto with two daughters, ages eight and six.

The other lives five minutes away from us. She has a small dog who she brings along when she visits us from her condo.

The married daughter and grandkids have not had any contact with us except by Facetime. We last saw them in February before the virus. Our other daughter has never been inside our house since the pandemic started. We meet outside and we social distance with her and the dog. We occasional­ly wear masks as well.

We found out from the chatty granddaugh­ter that their other grandparen­ts (who are also from our same city) visited without masks and with no social distancing on the weekend.

There was also contact play between grandparen­ts and kids, we learned. My daughter’s father inlaw had his hair cut by his son. No masks were worn.

Our daughter living nearby is quite careful about the sanitizing instructio­ns and still uses a delivery company for her groceries (rather than shop in stores). She won’t enter our house or visit anyone else, especially her sister.

It was also disclosed by my granddaugh­ter today that the other grandfathe­r has booked a resort in the countrysid­e for one or two weeks in the summer.

Tagging along will be my daughter’s sister in-law, with two children plus her husband.

My wife and I are very concerned about the apparent lack of safety and great exposure that the other grandfathe­r and his wife have pushed on our daughter and grandkids.

What actions would you see as appropriat­e to deal with this situation? We feel that both incidents are dangerous and inappropri­ate.

Worried Papa and Gramma

A: You can speak up, and should do so with expression­s of caring along with solid informatio­n backing your concern.

But there are few other “actions” open to handling this situation without creating wide rifts between you and your married daughter’s family.

She, her children and her husband are living in their own bubble which clearly includes her in-laws.

Whether her husband or his father insisted upon this, it’s a done deal. During the resort stay, that bubble will expand to include the others. A total of 10 people.

That’s the number Ontario Premier Ford said on Monday June 8, could now gather (if living outside the Greater Toronto Area, Peel, Hamilton, York, Durham, Halton, Niagara, Windsor-essex, Lambton and Haldimand-norfolk).

Even if the entire province is opened up to that number of people by the date of the vacation, there hasn’t been social distancing among most of this family group for a while.

I understand your hurt feelings, and your fears.

But these are adults who’ve already made these decisions, and, fortunatel­y so far, haven’t had to deal with a resulting virus infection.

Meanwhile, you’re caring parents and grandparen­ts. So, if you still wish to raise the matter with your daughter, I suggest you focus on the addition of the sister-in-law’s family — four added people that likely also have their own bubble with other adults and children.

Stay alert to the reports from epidemiolo­gical, and provincial public health sources, watching for changes based on where the numbers of infections/deaths/tests and contact tracing are leading us.

Either we’ll be in the next phase of the pandemic with less restrictio­ns, or some people like your daughter, her family and her in-laws are taking serious risks.

Alert her to consider the consequenc­es.

Ellie’s tip of the day

Grandparen­ts have a caring role in guiding and advising adult children, but giving orders is rarely helpful.

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