English, asked by AyushKoshti, 8 months ago

write a letter writing to tell her about the experience which you are facing in lockdown period​

Answers

Answered by prashavisruth
1

Answer:

facing lockdown is very tough. it's like a world war but I enjoy the leaves spend in the time to family. I watch TV and sleep watch TV and sleeping this was my routine now I wake up early in the morning but that is very nice . then my school was taking online class‍‍‍‍‍‍ i just I sit and listern but that booking taking the book is very sleepy TV watch means no just Happy then it will routine so it's not a matter. ok but I your VIP

I have a doubt how I follow you in this. I didn't Kno w please say

Answered by sumantiwari4799
1

Answer:

LETTERS TO LOVED ONES, FRIENDS, COLLEAGUES AND ESSENTIAL WORKERS ON LIFE UNDER LOCKDOWN FROM VICKY PHELAN, JOE SCHMIDT, MAEVE HIGGINS, LYNN RUANE, IRISH TIMES JOURNALISTS AND OTHERS

Explanation:

To my niece and god-daughter, Lucy

You will be so mortified when you see Ant at it again, writing about you. We’ve had many names for each other over the years. Right now, I call you Niece, a knowing formality only possible because we are anything but formal with each other.

You call me Ant at the moment instead of Aunt, accompanied with the ant emoji in our texts, because it’s a joke. You’ve never actually called me Aunt. I’ve always just been Rosie. I already publicly mortified you last year when I dedicated my book of travel essays, Elsewhere, to you.

When you’re not holed up in your house these days, you’re at work, in Crumlin Children’s Hospital. Children don’t stop getting sick of other illnesses during a pandemic. You have seen and experienced things that I, more than twice your age, never have or will. When you were training, and living with me for a time, you came home more than once distraught by a dying baby you’d cuddled and tried to make comfortable in their last hours.

When my recent trip to Zimbabwe to see old friends was cut short by the need to leave before its borders closed, it was you who arrived – socially distanced – at my doorstep, offering to do my shopping. I hadn’t been back in the country more than two hours, but you knew I was starting a fortnight’s quarantine. That’s love and thoughtfulness, and the kindness you have so much of.

There’s a new addition to our family since January, Baby Amelie. My great niece and your first niece (or nephew, for that matter). You too are an Ant now. When I snuggled Baby Amelie for the first time in the hospital, I remembered the abundant love and immediate familiarity I felt for you, when I first held you.

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