English, asked by shiktasinha03, 4 months ago

essay on life of mother in covid 19​

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Answered by picbite
1

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I am writing this piece in a bit of an impulse. It has been several months now since life was normal. I used to have childcare support and I could often go outside to work, to run errands or for any other reason. Now, my 2‐year‐old daughter wakes me up at about 6:30 AM and I play with her until lunchtime. She takes a 2‐hour nap in the afternoon, a period I use for remote work meetings. When she wakes up, I stay with her until around 7:00 PM. Then it is TV and dinner time for her and work time for me again. She typically goes to bed at 8:30 PM, and I stay in her room until about 9:30 PM. At that point, I am exhausted. I can rarely work at that time. I have been in self‐isolation at home with my elderly mother, who is at high risk for SARS‐CoV‐2 infection. Of course, it does not help that I no longer can count on external childcare and that in my country the response to COVID‐19 has been the second worst in the world, with potential to become the worst soon.

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Answered by vaidehi1419
3

Answer:

There’s a lot of pressure on households, and it’s falling particularly hard on the shoulders of women and mothers. Across the world, even before the pandemic hit, women do more housework and childcare and have less leisure time than their male counterparts. They are the household managers with brains always activated with planning, anticipating, organizing.

And, as a national poll shows, women are more likely than men to say their lives have been disrupted because of the coronavirus.

We’re hearing from families how they’re making difficult decisions on how to divide unpaid labor in the home. Like nurses who set up tents in their garages to protect their family, leaving only one parent to care for the children. Grocery store clerks who scramble to find someone to care for their children so they don’t lose the only income their family has. Those who are only able to manage 2-hour shifts, alternating childcare and home-schooling for young children.

Closed schools and isolation make parents’ and caregivers’ lives significantly harder. Yet despite the multitude of adversity and challenges, mothers are not wavering. They’re holding families and communities together in new and remarkable ways. Filling homes with love and comfort – cuddling little ones under blankets, baking treats, reading stories, bandaging scrapes, and playing games.

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