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Gérard Mclean's avatar

I miss the summer of 2020 when nobody had expectations of me and there was nothing to do except survive. Two hour walks in the middle of the day with my dog, in the woods, the park, around (and in!) the lake... it seems so very long ago.

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Karen Davis's avatar

This is beautiful (as always, but it is). I've been thinking a lot about the concept of "common humanity" - that we will all experience holidays that aren't the front of the postcard. Sometimes I'm amazed by just how clueless I was about how things were for my grandparents when their spouses died and for my parents when their parents died. I really was oblivious to it all. And in some ways it's good, I think my nieces and nephews are too and so they help me and my dad just in their "normalness" too. But I have learned a lot (and know I still don't know what so many things people go through are really like).

I've been reading through the past years of Carolyn Hax's "Hootenanny of Holiday Horrors" - if you want something that makes you feel better about your own weirdness or that of your family, this is doing it for me! (May be behind the paywall though: https://www.washingtonpost.com/advice/2022/02/08/carolyn-hax-hootenanny-transcripts-by-year/ )

Somehow reading these has helped me see that I am loved and accepted by my family for having my own needs and needing to do things my own way. I'm not sure I'm ready to go maskless on Thursday and though I know I'd be the only one wearing a mask, I've given myself permission if it helps my nervous system cope with the day. And they will love me anyway.

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