Oroville Mercury-Register

Vacation plans have expanded too far

- Amy Dickinson

DEAR AMY » My sweetheart wants to plan a family trip. At first it just involved our household and one other household. Now it has expanded to include plans involving many other households.

I am uncomforta­ble with this, and have said as much.

The families involved have made suggestion­s to make me more comfortabl­e, such as the idea that we can check temperatur­es, etc., but I think it is a dangerous idea to gather in this way.

How would you navigate this?

— Anxious Annie

DEAR ANXIOUS » Here’s how I am navigating this sort of dilemma: I’m doing it by saying “no.” This can be surprising­ly hard to do, especially when considerin­g the competing agendas that surface during the holiday season.

I don’t consider myself in a particular­ly highrisk group, but I interact with others who are. I consider a “no” now to be an investment in a future “yes.”

If your sweetheart decides to take this trip without you, he should be tested just before he goes, maintain safe practice while he is gone (not just temperatur­e taking, but masking, maintainin­g good ventilatio­n, and social distancing), and then he should isolate elsewhere after he returns and re- enter your home only after he has a safe test result.

You should assume that he will not maintain ideal COVID protocol while he is gone, but isolation and testing afterward should ease your mind, and might protect your household.

DEAR AMY » I have an aunt who is at the end of her life. She may die within a couple of weeks.

I live in a different province, and due to COVID I won’t be able to say goodbye in person or attend the funeral, but I do want to send flowers and donate to a charity.

Does the etiquette surroundin­g flowers/donations change at all? Should anything be sent to the dying person in advance, or should it be treated like a regular passing and flowers be sent to the family after?

— Confused in BC

DEAR CONFUSED » Do not send your aunt a funeral spray. But if you think that a beautiful bouquet of her favorite flowers would make her happy (I could imagine that it might), then send them to her.

The most important thing for you to do for your aunt in advance of her death is to let her know how much you love and appreciate her. Whether that is through a card, letter, a video shot on your phone and shown to her — you have the opportunit­y to tell her that you love her, and that she means a lot to you.

After her death, you could send a bouquet or a food basket to her nearby family members, as well as donate to a charity in her memory.

DEAR AMY » Each day my husband and I read your column, state our answers, and then read your response. We’re really good. You’re better. Your vision is broader.

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