In our household, last week saw every family member - including the ten-month old - regularly dissolving into bouts of distress. The ten-month old spent a lot of time asking to be put down and then face-planting the floor in despair at being put down. My husband hid in The Library (his home work-space) a lot, and I believe took to working on the spare bed in there, buried under duvets in a throwback to student days. I cried a lot and ate an entire packet of 'Squashies' in a single sitting. Us two adults found ourselves struggling with a sudden mutual dislike of on another's company, which was somewhat unfortunate given that we didn't exactly have anyone else to socialise with. Then, just as suddenly, the storm passed, and this week we've felt neither lethargic nor tearful, and returned to our habitual enjoyment of one another's companionship - though the baby is still clingy, and the duvet-nest has apparently become a preferred working space for my husband.
Speaking of having a weight on my back... |
Right now we are in the middle days of lockdown, and last week was a wrong-mountain, slipping-up-on-a-cowpat sort of time. The frisson of novelty has worn off, and the question of when and how this will end (if end is really the right word) is still up in the air. The post-lockdown hugs, visits to friends and family, being able to have coffee in a coffee shop or lunch in a restaurant, are all too distant to lighten our steps towards them just yet.
This week, at least, I am trudging fairly happily. I'm tired of having the weight of lockdown on my back, as I'm sure many are, but me and my team-mates are getting on well again, and I've calmed down enough to stop and enjoy my surroundings. Until the next cowpat.
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