As a fairly high-strung, working mom of three kids, the “Sunday Scaries” are not a new concept to me. But recently, after a few days off for the Thanksgiving holiday, the scaries set in on Saturday. I knew that was a bad sign.
I realized the general buildup of anxiety is a result of what I’m calling the “winter scaries,” which are quickly approaching.
We’re nine months into this global pandemic, and after a tiny bit of reprieve with warmer months that allowed for outside gatherings, some return to work and school and maybe even a little local travel or camping, a long, dark winter is on the horizon. Many schools that had opened are now shuttering. Many states and cities are enforcing stay-at-home orders due to rising Covid-19 numbers. And holiday travel to visit loved ones? Forget about it.
Not to mention, most of us are facing extended time working from home while trying to supervise remote learning, or are without jobs at all. And our front-line workers continue to work extraordinarily difficult and long shifts.
Yes, a vaccine is here. But it will inevitably still be a long, dark winter. So, how do we prepare, get through it, and even thrive?
Remember that you are in control of YOU.
“This is as big as World War II, the biggest crisis in a lifetime,” Dr. Karin Michels, chair of the UCLA Department of Epidemiology, told me. “The thing you have to remember is that this is solvable. If we all stay home. If we all wear masks. If we all stay six feet away, we could kill this virus in a matter of weeks.”
For me, one of the hardest parts of the pandemic is the lack of control. I often feel like I have no idea what or how to plan for, well, anything. But knowing that this is solvable, that we can all play a part in ending this crisis, is empowering.
“I get it,” said Dr. Michels. “Even the top epidemiologists are fatigued. But this is the time to be vigilant and be in control of you and your decisions and your family.”
Settle in for the telework.
Front line workers, you really are my heroes. My neighbor Jim continues to manage the local supermarket graveyard shift to keep the shelves stocked. And my dear friend Sara, a nurse in our local hospital’s Covid-19 ward, continues to take on extra shifts to cover staffing shortages as beds fill up.
But for many of us, we’re stuck at home for the next few months at least. And that can also be stressful.
Cindy Auten, a telework subject matter expert and senior partner at ICF Next, said a transition has happened.
“By summer, most people realized that a metal folding chair and card table weren’t going to cut it [for working at home]. This is time to realize that this could be months – or years – and you may need to get an extra computer monitor or an office chair that doesn’t cause back pain from hunching over all day.”
As we head towards shorter daylight hours, Auten advises that you be disciplined about boundaries. Also, as a mother of two, Auten advised, “schedule in short breaks, time to eat, and time to work with your child on school work. This is the time to have an honest conversation with your manager and team about what you need.”
I have taken to blocking 2:15-2:45 p.m. on my calendar every day. It’s the end of my 8th grader’s online school day and we walk around the neighborhood, talk about his day, assignments and anything else that matters. I find that if I give him that undivided attention there are fewer interruptions during my workday and this connection point allows me to understand what’s going on in his school life without “helicoptering” in.
Press reset.
My kids were last in school on March 12th, so we have figured out what works and what doesn’t. But we needed a reset. We had a family meeting on expectations for virtual school, including setting an alarm and getting up on one’s own and wearing a shirt (not robe!) to virtual class.









