A mother in rural Wisconsin said she felt "utterly helpless" as she sent her 13-year-old off to school. Another, in suburban New Jersey, expressed frustration that her highly vaccinated district had returned to remote learning. One in Chicago said she hoped the city's teachers followed through on their threat to walk out so her 12-year-old daughter wouldn't have to return to a crowded classroom.
This is parenthood nearly two years into the pandemic, as schools reopen after the holidays. Or don't. Or do halfway, or open and close again, or — they're not sure. They'll let you know tomorrow.
The New York Times asked parents to share how they were handling their schools' approaches. Hundreds responded, almost all of them mothers. Their answers varied widely in specifics but mostly boiled down to: Not well.
"I am screaming inside," wrote Cathy Nieng, the Chicago mother.
"I cry a lot," said Juliana Gamble, whose children — ages 2 and 7 — have been in school and day care in Boston for just 11 days in the past eight weeks. "I feel a total loss of control of my life."
Kate Hurley, of Minneapolis, sent her 7-year-old daughter to school Monday with a KN95 mask but kept her 4-year-old son home because he isn't eligible for a vaccine yet.
"When we started the pandemic, parenting and teaching while working remotely was hard," she wrote. "Now we are tired and drained and nearly two years in. Doing it all over again feels insurmountable."
Some parents whose children are learning remotely are upset that they aren't in school in person. Some whose children are learning in person are upset that they can't be remote. Many are torturously ambivalent, trying to claw good solutions out of situations that offer none.