We all have a COVID-19 story. Here's our BC:
The Sat 29 Feb departure date was quickly approaching. The excitement was growing. So was the anxiety and nervousness. Luckily, though, the excitement prevailed. Some emails were exchanged between parents and school about COVID, whether the trip should continue, how the kids would be kept healthy and safe, etc. In early February, the parent info night was scheduled and school expected COVID to be a hot topic of debate. It wasn't. Cell phones dominated. Should the kids have personal phones or not? What would they do in an emergency? How often could they ring home if they didn't have a phone? How would they take pictures without a phone? What if, what if, what if...?
Trying on suits! Winner :-) |
The bag was packed. New suit, dress shoes, warm clothes. Warm clothes. NY is cold in Feb / March, he must have forgotten what cold feels like. Don't forget the MMUN binder. That's what this is all about, after all. Montessori Model United Nations. What an experience for the kid. What. An. Experience.
Departure day. No tears. So brave (for both E and mom). Fly little bird. Fly. Tracking the flight. Wondering, but not worrying. He's safe. He needs this. I need this.
With my big guy on departure day |
The group - 3 incredible educators + 10 students! |
By Mon, two days after departure, public schools are no longer allowed international excursions. Oh. They left just in time. No handshaking.
Reassuring emails. Parent WhatsApp messages flying. Phone calls home. Positive reports. No call from E, but that's ok. A visit from his Nani and Papi <3 So much love. Exploding with love. Our hearts are so full. Still no call. Daily emails. Pictures. He's ok.
With Nani & Papi in NYC! What a lucky guy. |
The conference begins. He is a delegate from the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. The arms race in space. I don't understand it at all, but he does. Pictures, videos, swapping home-country trinkets. Success.
Social distancing introduced. Keep distance. Prevent the spread. Flatten the curve. Stay home (STAY HOME) if you're sick.
One phone call at school's insistence. We were ok. He was ok.
The long flight home. Crossing the International Date Line, leaving the US 8 March, arriving home to AUS 10 March. And somewhere mid-air, the email. MMUN arrivals should not return to school for 6 days. Siblings, too. Anyone that came in contact with the overseas group. Okay, we can do this. We knew this could happen. I can work from home, take time off. We'll make this work. We always do.
He's back! |
Some of the travelers got sick. Tests. Negative. All negative. How did they dodge this bullet? They left the US just in time.
AUS acted quickly. Quarantine. Self-isolation. Stay home. STAY HOME. Borders closed. STAY HOME. Wash hands. Social distance. Don't touch your face. STAY HOME.
And yet, we feel so fortunate that our bird had this opportunity BC.
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