The Denver Post

Families deal with cabin fever

- By Nellie Bowles

Anita Tandon and Sujit Chakravart­hy, parents of three young children, ages 3 months to 7 years old, have taken extreme measures to keep order in their home during quarantine.

“At 9 o’clock, school’s in session and I stop being ‘Mommy,’ ” said Tandon, who runs a marketing advisory firm in Burlingame, Calif. “They have to call me ‘Teacher Anita.’ They can’t just goof off like they can with Mom and Dad.”

There are worksheets, activities, Khan Academy online courses and writing games. Around 5 p.m., Teacher Anita retires to work. Chakravart­hy takes over, springing out of his home office ready for PE. He goes by Coach Chakravart­hy.

“It’s Day 3 of God knows how many,” Tandon said wearily.

It has been just over a week since Americans began to be ordered to stay at home and out of the way of the coronaviru­s pandemic. For many people, it already feels like an eternity.

Kids are trying to escape. Careers are falling apart as parents working from home become de facto kindergart­en teachers. Marriages are being strained. Couples who wanted to break up are stuck together; Craigslist roommates are suddenly family. And everyone has to stay put with others 24 hours a day, seven days a week, because there is nowhere else, really, to go.

For many people, it’s hard to complain: If they can stay home as a unit and their work allows them to make a kitchen counter into an office, they are the lucky ones.

But cabin fever is setting in. Families are going slightly mad — and getting mad at one another.

On Twitter, some people cracked jokes about selling their children. Some were even tired of seeing so much of their pets. Gov. Andrew Cuomo of New York said Sunday: “I live alone. I’m even getting annoyed with the dog, being in one place.”

The stir craziness is likely to be just beginning. By the end of last week, at least 20% of Americans were under orders to shelter at home, with more states following this week. It’s unclear how long these restrictio­ns will last. Schools might not open again until the fall semester.

“There’s going to be increased misbehavio­r, defiance, tantrums and blowing up,” said Jennifer Johnston-Jones, a child psychologi­st in Los Angeles. “After a natural disaster, you go back to normal. With this, there’s not going to be a back to normal.”

Sabrina Benassaya, a privacy specialist in Menlo Park, Calif., has four children ages 2 to 10, whose school and day care have been canceled.

“It’s hard. I cannot lie,” Benassaya said. To survive, she had David Magidson, a clown who performs under the name Boswick, give a birthday show last week for the kids via FaceTime.

The Benassayas have a house and a backyard. To quarantine in a home like that is a privilege that many American families do not have, Benassaya acknowledg­ed. “We are so lucky,” she said.

Family coaches are offering tips to help get through this.

“One of the messages I’ve been trying to push to parents is there’s only the two of you,” said Maryellen P. Mullin, a family therapist in San Francisco. “There’s nowhere to go out, and no one can come in.”

Her schedule has been so full, she is starting to offer a new workshop for $20 called “My Kids Are Home, I Need Help.”

Escapism seems key. Katie Jacobs Stanton, a mother of three and the founder of Moxxie Ventures, a startup investment firm in San Francisco, dressed as if for a prom one day. Another day, the whole family wore onesies.

“Last night, we came to dinner and pretended we were someone else in the family. It was really funny until my son did his impression of me,” Stanton said. “I’m no longer paying for his college education.”

Her friend Aileen Lee, who is also a venture capitalist, has been posting photos of her husband in different costumes every day. One day he dressed as a mermaid, with a red wig and shiny sequined skirt.

The burden of handling coronaviru­s quarantine in many homes was falling on mothers, families said, with much of the new tension in couples caused by fights over what women thought were battles that had already been won.

When Lea Geller, a novelist, blogger and mother of five in Riverdale, N.Y., first

thought about a quarantine, it seemed it could be fun.

“I thought it would be a week of snow days,” Geller said. “But now it’s lasting forever and ever.”

“To some degree, it feels like we’re running a WeWork,” she said. “My husband’s running tech support, running round with cables, and I’m just shoveling food into everyone’s mouths and loading and reloading the dishwasher a million times a day.”

Geller thought maybe she would have extra time with her husband, Mike. But the only private time they have had was when they “literally hid” from their children in a back room the other day, she said.

“My new office mates are significan­tly more high maintenanc­e,” Mike Geller said, referring to the kids. He added that at least the tech support was now largely sorted and ready for Week 2 and more.

The hardest part is that Lea Geller’s own work has gone on hold. When her husband’s office shut down, she gave him her home work space. Now she is having trouble thinking creatively in the 30-minute increments when she can sneak away from the family.

“There’s the constant certainty that someone is about to interrupt me and ask me for food or a stapler,” she said.

Maria Colacurcio, chief executive of Syndio, a human resources analytics company in Seattle and the mother of six, said the lopsidedne­ss was not a surprise. Even without a pandemic, domestic labor largely falls on women.

“So now where do you think the extra falls?” Colacurcio said.

Leah Wagner-Edelstein, director of an academic institute at the University of California in Berkeley and the mother of a 5-year-old and a 3-year-old who are now home all day, said she and her husband, Jason, had what she considered an equal arrangemen­t.

“I still manage more or less our whole household, the cooking, most of the cleaning, the bulk of the home schooling,” she said. “Those gender divisions, they just come out immediatel­y.”

Toddlers need constant entertainm­ent and can focus on only one thing for a few minutes. So WagnerEdel­stein got some younger cousins to sign up on a spreadshee­t to help with entertaini­ng her children every day. They can choose hand puppets, a dance party or name-that-color.

Teachers, she said, need to be paid much more.

Despite it all, WagnerEdel­stein said she was finding that her love for her husband was deeper. She is being gentler with him, and vice versa. They are focusing on small joys.

“We think of fun as big vacations,” she said. “But now maybe it’s just digging a hole in the front yard and finding what color the soil is.”

Not all cabin fever families are dealing with toddlers. College students have been sent home, repopulati­ng their parents’ empty nests. Other adult children, sometimes with friends and fiancés in tow, are turning their parents’ kitchens into co-working spaces.

But the reunions, at least initially, are careful. Many young adults said they were scared they could be taking the virus home to their parents, who may be more susceptibl­e to the outbreak because older people are more at risk.

“All my Stanford friends and I are self-quarantini­ng in our own rooms away from our families after getting booted off campus,” said Netta Wang, 22, a Stanford University senior who returned to her parents’ house in San Mateo, Calif. Her parents leave trays of food at her bedroom door.

Gillian Lurie, 20, had a great time on a studyabroa­d semester in Florence, Italy, but as coronaviru­s swept through that country, the program was shut down. Already on spring break, she traveled through Spain, Germany, Portugal and Ireland. This month, she came home.

“She managed to have a great time, but she brought home a souvenir,” said her mother, Lisa. “A little something called the coronaviru­s.”

Now Lisa Lurie and her husband, Brian, who run Cancer Be Glammed, a lifestyle company that supports women coping with cancer, are quarantini­ng their daughter in a back room of their Pittsburgh home. They communicat­e via FaceTime and drop meals at the door.

“The only thing keeping me sane is online mahjong,” Lisa Lurie said.

Other parents are setting up rules for their suddenly multigener­ational households.

Haley Walker, 24, lives in New York and works as an analyst for a commercial real estate company. For quarantine, she went back to her parents’ house in Williston, Vt., with her two sisters. Also in tow: one boyfriend and one fiancé.

When they all got to the four-bedroom house, they were thrilled and spread out. They set up mobile offices all around, commandeer­ing the kitchen table and the living room.

Walker’s parents, Adele and Bob, did something she said had never happened before: They called an emergency family meeting. No more co-working and taking calls all day in the kitchen and living room, the young adults were told.

 ?? Oli Scarff, Getty Images ?? A mother helps her sons navigate online learning resources provided by their school Tuesday in Marsden, England. Families across Great Britain and the world were coming to grips with home schooling and cabin fever.
Oli Scarff, Getty Images A mother helps her sons navigate online learning resources provided by their school Tuesday in Marsden, England. Families across Great Britain and the world were coming to grips with home schooling and cabin fever.

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