Heidi Stevens
Resa Alb wants to host Father’s Day brunch. She and her husband, plus their two children and the grandchildren, would make 10 people — the exact number allowed to gather under phase three of the state’s reopening plan.
But her children aren’t sure. Her son rides public transportation to work, and her daughter’s child care provider is married to a nurse. They worry about inadvertently bringing the coronavirus into their parents’ home.
“Our daughter was real frank with us,” Alb said. “She said, ‘You guys are in that age group that really needs to be careful.’”
Heather Black Alexander wasn’t happy when her husband, Brian Alexander, left the house to get his hair braided recently — the first time he had his braids done since early March, but, to her mind, an unnecessary risk.
Adrian Rosales isn’t the least bit interested in standing around a sunny backyard hanging out with friends, but his wife, Beth Dugan, is sort of dying to.
“I’ll be like, ‘Hey, do you want to have couple X over next weekend, and I get the look like, ‘No, girl. I don’t want to have anyone over,’” Dugan said. “There’s a lot of me saying, ‘The state’s reopening! Let’s go visit your mom!’ and him giving me the blank stare.”
READ MORE
Expert tips for healthcare workers while treating Covid-19 patients
Refreshing cold brew recipes for the heat
Staying healthy and nourished during lockdown
Illinois has eased into reopening under a complicated set of phase three guidelines and restrictions, the same week the country surpassed the grim milestone of 100,000 deaths attributed to COVID-19. Which leaves families grappling with some incredibly tricky decisions, and not always agreeing on the outcomes.
How quickly do we tiptoe back to normal? Can your teenager attend a sleepover now? How about a sleepover with eight other friends? Does date night suddenly include an outdoor cafe? Do you get a pedicure with your girlfriends even if your spouse thinks it’s a terrible idea?
“We all have our own unique social contracts we abide by, but the stakes are high right now,” Rosales said. “My behaviour affects hers and vice versa.”
“It feels kind of parochial to need him to agree with me going out,” Dugan said. “At the same time it’s understandable. And frustrating. It’s very weird.”
The coronavirus is a beast. It has robbed us of plenty. Feeding it the relationships that sustain us, that bring us joy and purpose, that remind us we’re part of something bigger than ourselves, would add insult to injury.
And yet. Disagreements over what to shut down, whether to wear a mask, how to balance very real economic concerns next to the sanctity of life have, in the last few months, devolved into shouts of “grandma killer” and protest signs scrawled with Nazi slogans.
Families may be handling disagreements with slightly more nuance decorum, but they aren’t immune to the inherent tensions over what’s overly cautious and what’s overly risky.
“I’m very satisfied with staying in the house,” Black Alexander said. “I bought a bird feeder. I’m fine. I’m managing. My husband is taking calculated risks for things that are important to him.”
Then again, he doesn’t tease her when she sanitises all the groceries before putting them away, she said, even though she read the NPR article saying it’s not necessary.
“It’s so important to have compassion for the other person and not attribute motives to them that don’t exist,” said Lori Gottlieb, a psychotherapist and author of “Maybe You Should Talk to Someone.” “The problem is now the consequences are so huge, and that ups the ante.”
She asks couples to listen to the other person’s position and, more important, the feelings under that position. Then she asks each partner to adopt and defend the other person’s position.
Families with children in the house face another layer of pressure and decisions, as invitations start to trickle in for gatherings and outings that are now acceptable by official standards, even if they still make individual parents nervous.
“Parents need to remember that for children, several months is a bigger percentage of their life they’re missing,” Gottlieb said. “For us, three months is three months in the course of our lives. For them, it’s three months in that particular grade, and they will never get it back. Or it’s the summer before this grade that they will never get back. It’s a very different timeline.”
Children’s social lives are a crucial part of their development. It’s important, Gottlieb said, to keep that in mind during our conversations.
Which isn’t to say that parents should throw all caution to the wind. But it is to say that our conversations with our children, just like with our partners and other people we hold dear, should be layered with a heavy dose of empathy and, if possible, absent of contempt.
“What it comes down to is, ‘Do you care about me?’” Gottlieb said.
Do you care if I stay healthy? Do you care if I get kicked out my friend group? Do you care if I keep my job?
“Those are very different conversations,” Gottlieb said. “When you can get to what’s motivating people’s choices and people’s positions. When you can find a way to say, ‘I don’t think you care about me.' That’s a very different conversation.”
One that maybe we can bounce back from and even grow from, through phase three and an unpredictable summer and a possible second wave and who knows what else beyond that.
We’re accustomed, at this point, to taking precautions against this virus and the risks it poses to our body. It follows that we’d also take precautions against the risks it poses to our hearts, and the people who’ve captured them. What could be more important?
Tribune News Service