"Don't wish it away, Don't look at it like it's forever..."

This coronavirus lockdown thing is still like a bloody rollercoaster isn’t it, just when we think some aspects of life look like they are taking a step nearer normal we are reminded how very far we are from normal in many other aspects. I think we have all spent a good portion of time wishing that 2020 would just leave or that we could hit reset and start the whole year over (what would we do differently if we knew then what we know now?). Passing COVID-19 test sites and advertising hoardings loudly proclaiming “Stay Alert, Control the Virus, Save lives” on my runs is enough to reduce me to tears at the side of the road, blubbing quietly to myself that I have had enough and I would like my life back now please. Invariably I realise that I am actually quite a long way from home and no one is coming to get me so after a brief pity party I wipe away the tears and run back home.

Our lives are affected daily by this once in a generation global pandemic and no doubt we will continue to feel the after effects for many years to come. And yet through it all, no matter how rubbish it has been and continues to be, life goes on, life good and bad still continues outside the rules of a pandemic, lives are shattered by events that are not affected by the virus, the terrible blast in Lebanon for example, people are still victims of brutality and violence and lives are still lost all too soon to illness and incident.

When lockdown started back in March it was really important to me for my kids not to come out the other side thinking this was the worst time of their lives, that we had made the best of it that we could and that as a family we had done our best to embrace this time together and learn from it. I asked the kids what the best thing about lockdown had been for them and they all gave very different replies:

Jack said that whilst home learning had been at times stressful he had really enjoyed the bonding time we had together during homeschooling - a mother can always trust a son to say something nice right! Abigail said she had learned new ways of dealing with difficulties in friendships - she is 14 and girls can be the worst but this time has allowed her space to grow in strength and confidence and she was able to call time on a friendship that was really no longer lifting her up. Ellie’s take was that school uniform was a waste of time - she is bonkers and let’s see how she feels about that in a couple of weeks!

I have learnt a lot over this period - I have learnt just how resilient my kids are, we can chuck all this craziness at them and with love and support and understanding they ping right back up again, their strength and determination never ceases to amaze me. I have learned to lean on my friends a little bit more instead of always trying to be the strong one - you know friends and family are life - and some friends, well they just are family aren’t they? And one thing I have really understood is that none of us give ourselves credit for how tough we really are, I may say I have had enough but always pick myself up, dig deep and move on and isn’t that a great metaphor for life, running everything - no matter how hard it is you can push yourself further and harder.

Before lockdown long runs were really stressful for me and I felt I had lost sight of what I was doing, I feel like the last couple of years has been a whirlwind of travel and training for one marathon after another and the whole thing had become a bit on the stressful side whilst managing three kids, a dog and a full time job.  Having the opportunity to run long on a Sunday with my buddy taken away from me during the early days of lockdown felt even harder and so during this time of no racing I have worked really hard to re-connect with my reasons for running, why I started running to begin with and what running means to me - I guess re-connecting with my why. With no racing there is nothing to train for and no pressure to hit every workout and for the first time I have really embraced my pace - honestly on some of these hot August days I am like a hot sweaty turtle but I have returned home with a smile on my face - it feels good to work hard and feel the sun on my face.

It has been a joy to be able to run with my buddy again as lockdown has begun to ease, and I have concentrated on enjoying every single step and every single moment in the sunshine. Last Sunday we run in one of my favourite places to run (needless to say it is as flat as a pancake although the weather system on one side of the park is often completely different to the other side!) for the first time since lockdown and that felt so good. And during that gorgeous sunny run (where I did resemble a sweaty turtle and was perfectly ok with that) we got to talking about how time is so precious and so short and even when it seems so hard there is so much to learn and so much to celebrate.

So let’s not wish it away - this is not forever ..

Much love xxx

Lockdown week #659

At least that is how it feels!!!

Yesterday I was talking to a colleague in Chicago (via Skype of course) and he was saying how he just wanted to get back to normality. I asked if he meant normal as in how life was back before anyone had ever heard of coronavirus or social distancing or lockdown or did he mean a new post-lockdown normal where anything a little bit less lockdownish felt like a win and a step towards normal. We laughed but the truth is that we are a long way from getting all the way back to life as we knew it aren’t we?

Lockdown has been hard on everyone for so many different reasons, many of my friends are furloughed or find themselves without work. I am one of the lucky ones as I am still working full-time in my IT job. We started working remotely 10 weeks ago and honestly it took some time to get used to, even Fridays stopped feeling special! We always worked from home on Friday but once I had to work from home full time Friday felt like every other day. One thing I certainly do not miss is my commute - the most frustrating futile waste of time - how it took an hour to drive 12 miles I do not know!!

The week after I started working from home the kid’s schools closed and home learning began - where do I begin with that? There have been so many ups and downs and tears (mainly mine) and just when I think I have it all worked out it all falls apart again. My three kids are different ages and all at different schools so the juggle is real! The support from the schools has been amazing, I know that it was a herculean effort to switch to online learning in such a short space of time and I know more is being asked of the schools now as they prepare for some children to return to the classroom. Unfortunately my three kids do not fall into the year groups that will be returning to school in the near future - or fortunately none of them are in critical years at school is another way of looking at it!

Honestly somedays have been a breeze juggling home working and home schooling and other days have felt like I was doing everything badly. I have trained adults all my life, teaching your 12 yo son about the chemical reaction between metals and acids or explaining the difference between past perfect and past imperfect tenses whilst doing back to back Skype meetings for work is a whole new ballgame! I was not good at Physics and Chemistry when I was at school, evidently I am still not good at Physics and Chemistry!

The thing is that no matter how hard and stressful it has been trying to keep it all together I am extremely fortunate to still be working in these crazy times and as tempting as it has been to quit, I am a self-employed single mum of three kids and I am under no illusion that it would be near on impossible to find another job right now and could be for the foreseeable future so I just need to stick with it.

Of course there have been good things to have come out of this extended lockdown - I cherish the time spent with my kids, all too soon they will have grown up and leave for university (except for the little one, she says she will never leave me!). The big girl has taken to baking every week - she started with macarons and this week we have had blondies - I think I have managed to instill in her now that a good cook cleans up after themselves - the first week I was left to deal with a mess akin to the Icelandic ash cloud!! Bless her heart she is 14 and missing her friends and finding that hard but she makes time to FaceTime my 89 year old Mum every single day. Even the boy has learnt new skills in lockdown - he is now able to tie his own ponytail - a skill that will stand him in good stead if he is blessed with daughters in years to come! If lockdown goes on for much longer he may well master plaiting his blue hair!

This week the kids are officially on half term holidays so no home schooling - hurrah as I think we all need the rest!! Looks like the English weather is at least going to play ball so a staycation in the sunny Costa del Backyard it is!!! And after that who knows what the next few weeks and months will bring?!

Much love xxx

Lockdown Week #2

“You can’t fail at this - there is no roadmap, no precedent”*

Two months ago coronavirus was something that was happening far far away in Wuhan, China and like most people I don’t think I thought it was going to affect us.  Four weeks ago social distancing and lockdown were things that were happening in other places, here, we were still going about our everyday business as normal – I remember my last run with my running buddy before social distancing measures were put in place – an unremarkable run on a beautiful sunny day – so pleased that spring seemed to be finally on it’s way after such a wet few weeks.

By the end of the following week I was working from home and my running buddy and I were running two metres apart and all we talked about was coronavirus, no sweaty hug at the end of the run.  The same weekend the boy played what turned out to be his last match of the football season – the boys elbow fived at the end of the match and I think there was a feeling amongst the parents that we wouldn’t be seeing each for a while.  The Premier League had already been suspended and grass roots football was to follow soon after.

By the end of the next week the three schools my children attend were all closed except to children of key workers and homeschooling had begun, followed closely by lockdown.

I know that lockdown is different in each country, here in the UK lockdown means you can only leave home for the four following reasons:

  • Shopping for basic necessities such as food and medicine – shopping trips should be as infrequent as possible

  • One form of exercise a day – this should be done alone or only with people you live with

  • Any medical need or to provide care or help a vulnerable person (this includes moving children under 18 between their parents’ homes

  • Travelling to and from work, but only where work absolutely cannot be done from home

We have now been in lockdown for two weeks and there have been so many ups and downs and bumps in the road along the way.  There have been more tears than I can shake a stick at (I admit I have hidden in the loo more than once and just cried)– the craziness of the situation can creep up on you and take your breath away – the life we took for granted has just disappeared almost overnight.  And I think it is that the boy has struggled with so much – there was no warning, no getting used to it, it all happened so quickly and so suddenly that the change has been totally overwhelming for him.

We have found huge positives though:

  • Facetime and Zoom are the new going out – the kids have had playdates, we have done quizzes and I have even been to the theatre via Zoom! (No need for a designated driver or a dash to make the last train home!)

  • We have been out to the park and played frisbee as a family every day – and the dog has wallowed in the same smelly muddy puddle every day.  We are not getting any better at frisbee but our excuses for being so poor are definitely improving

  • I kind of like the queuing surreally around the Sainsburys car park with everyone at 2 metres distance – it feels like I am in a scene from Shaun of the Dead – somehow the calm sunny plane free skies make it feel even more bizarre (I am naturally an introvert so if there is some way to make everyone respect the 2 metre rule once this is all done count me in!)

  • The clapping on our street on a Thursday night for the NHS and key workers is so overwhelming and bloody emotional!

We have tried hard to find something positive everyday and we try really hard to concentrate on what we can do rather than what we can’t do.  And we have found things to laugh at in amongst the craziness too.

And on that lighter note I watched “Contagion” last night – anyone else think it was a good idea to watch Hollywood’s idea of what life would be like during a global pandemic?  Nice try Hollywood but I found myself watching and saying out loud “no it is not like that!”  Please make more Tiger King – that is just so car-crash but so hilarious!

It is now Easter holidays here and I know it will feel very different to normal school holidays but we have lots of staycation activities planned.  I would love to hear how you are staying sane during the lockdown and your suggestions for keeping the kids occupied, oh and Netflix suggestions gratefully received!

Let’s all take this one day at a time and please please please #stayhome

Stay safe and much love

Jane x

*From an article by Margie Donlon