My daughter wants a sleepover with boyfriend
Q: I’m so torn on what to do with my daughter, 18. She hasn’t seen her boyfriend since COVID started. Her birthday’s coming soon, she wants to sleep over at her boyfriend’s house, and is using her birthday as an excuse.
I feel for my daughter because she’s been good with physical distancing and hasn’t gone out with her boyfriend since March break. But I have my 69-year-old mom living with us and don’t want to risk her getting sick.
The boyfriend is also staying at home with his family. Knowing that there are other family members who may or may not be exposed is just too much of a risk. My heart breaks for my daughter, but I need to keep my mom safe. Is there any way this can work out?
A: It’s sometimes lost on those focused on immediate personal concerns, as to how other age groups are affected by this pandemic. Youngsters have had to be away from friends and indoors for hours doing home-schooling on the very computers/devices their parents used to take away to limit overuse.
Working moms had to leave their close office friendships to spend hours monitoring those youngsters’ studies while keeping up their own work-athome assignments. Teenagers have also suffered — more than those who don’t live with them might understand. Young teens lost their early independence to go out alone with friends and summer camp is also no longer a choice. Older teens have had to forgo the major milestones of a graduation ceremony, and a final high school prom.
No wonder your daughter wants to use her 18th birthday as a rare chance for doing what she wants most — spending a timeout from COVID-19, and its restrictions on being with her boyfriend.
But you, as her mother, must explain why that’s not yet possible. Luckily, she’s been agreeable so far. Now, don’t hold back any punches of information. A “sleepover” means close contact (even if they promise otherwise).
It involves being in rooms where there are other people whose virus status is unknown. Returning home from those exposures means risking Grandma’s health, and maybe her life. There’s no other way to put it.
She’s aware enough to know that older, more vulnerable people have made up the highest percentage of those infected or killed by the novel coronavirus.
She and her boyfriend have been able to stay connected since March break. They will be able to renew their closeness in person, soon enough. And she’ll be grateful that she could protect Grandma. FEEDBACK Regarding a man’s wife (both are 60-year-olds) who flirts with a man, in his early 20s (May 20):
What Do I Do?
Reader: If only you’d shared polyamory resources explaining how one person doesn’t fulfil all our life’s needs/ desires. These situations are “normal” and can be witnessed, discussed, resolved.
I know I won’t be all things to my partner. So if someone (friend or otherwise) fills a void in our relationship, I have “compersion” for her having found someone who can do that.
Ellie: “Compersion” is used in the polyamorous context to mean “vicarious joy associated with seeing one’s partner have a joyful sexual or romantic relation with another” (Wiktionary).
The letter-writer didn’t feel vicarious joy. He felt hurt, jealous and troubled. I advised him accordingly. Ellie’s tip of the day
Show empathy regarding the pandemic’s restrictions on all age groups, but stay firm that we must still protect our vulnerable seniors from greater risks.
Ellie Tesher is an advice columnist for the Star and based in Toronto. Send your relationship questions via email: ellie@thestar.ca. It’s sometimes lost on those focused on immediate personal concerns, as to how other age groups are affected by this pandemic.