The Friday before Lockdown,
the girls came home with their school iPads and a load of books and on the
Sunday night before their first day of online school, we had emails, with a
detailed schedule for my 13-year-old secondary school daughter. This schedule
involved days beginning online at 08:30 and finishing between 16:30 and 17:30.
My Mittelstufe 10-year-old daughter had a more relaxed schedule, with a list
of work needing to be completed each day by herself but which involved online
work and online messaging with her other classmates.
But the very best thing was a
delivery on the first week from school into our mailbox of 20 franked postcards.
Every week, each child is given the name of another classmate to whom they must
write a little positive letter. She loves looking for her postcards each week
and reading them. She keeps them in pride of place on her wall, in a growing
collection of positivity.
I thought this is a wonderful
way of connecting the children during quarantine. We have also done cards for
family in the UK and on Monday I sent two parcels to a friend in Switzerland
who is really struggling to work from home with her little ones onboard. They
were just parcels made up of things my children have grown out with, including
a Wallace & Gromit DVD, which I know they will love. She sent me a gorgeous
little video message with their glowing faces and thank yous.
As well as Facetime and Zoom
apps perhaps we can also return to snail mail at this time. It’s such a lovely
way to keep in touch and there is nothing better than getting a personal letter
or little package in the post. My children love it – even my normally moody
13-year-old can’t resist her pleasure at receiving post.
So yes, I’m still struggling
with this weird Coronavirus twilight world we’re living in but focusing on small
details of love is helping enormously.
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