Posted on 02/28/2022 1:44:30 PM PST by nickcarraway
When I got COVID and had to go into self-isolation, my son coped with the absence by replacing me with himself.
I tested positive for COVID-19 on February 8th, 2022. About 3 weeks from my third (booster) vaccine shot, the unimaginable happened. I started off having a sore throat and I initially blamed it on eating too many pineapple tarts during the Chinese New Year break.
But I knew better than to brush it off, with the Omicron variant going rampant and cases rising rapidly over the past weeks. I had also been informed by a friend who came over for Chinese New Year visitation that she had been exposed to a suspected close contact.
So I bit the bullet and paid the premium for a PCR test and got my results in under 24 hours. Unfortunately, the results came back positive. My doctor told me to stay calm, pack whatever I needed, and isolate myself from my family.
Self-quarantine parenting: Missing the family from afar self-quarantine parenting
In the 7 days I remained in self-isolation, I watched my son on the CCTVs around the house, heard him singing and laughing and my heart ached so badly to not be able to hug him or smell him or comfort him in times of sadness.
The first day was tough. He came home and asked for "mama" but I was not around. On day two, he was still asking for me, but to my husband's credit, he really stepped up in this time of need and not only attended to my son’s needs but mine too. He promptly delivered my morning coffees, my lunches, my afternoon snacks and dinners without complaint.
He did all of this while juggling our active 2-year-old and his full-time job. He made sure I had enough water. He made sure our son had enough food, clean clothes and that his diapers were changed on time.
The house ran smoothly despite my “absence”. It was a great “break” for me as a mother. To be able to rest and recover from COVID and not have to worry about the household was an amazing feeling.
But I couldn’t shake that feeling of longing for my family. And what happened with my son psychologically, shook and scared me to my core. It made me realise that having grown up with an absentee father had left more emotional scars than I knew.
The memories I have of my father not being around don’t go as far back as toddlerhood though he left us when I had barely turned 3 or 4. My memories only go as far back as maybe 7-8 years old.
The worst of the memories played out in my teenage years and my rebellion was in full force. We always think of the psychological scars that an absentee parent leaves to be in later years of a child’s life. But in my mere 7-day isolation, I saw my son replace me with himself.
Around day three or four of my self-isolation, my partner reported to me that our son started referring to himself as “mama” and that he adopted his stuffed toy cow as “baby”. He would take “baby” everywhere and he was inseparable from that toy.
My mother, who came to visit, also reported the same.
He also played with his dollhouse which comes with a family and during this time, he would play with it and only include "papa" and "baby" (referring to himself) but no "mama".
In just a few days of having an absent parent, my son felt the need to assume the role of a parent to the stuffed toy and he also actively left out "mama" from his dollhouse. He took on the role of a parent because he couldn’t understand why his primary caregiver wasn’t around or whether his mama would even be coming back. It was heart-breaking.
To fill a void, he created a new persona for himself and cared for his “baby” the way I cared for him. My heart shattered hearing this because I knew what it was like to have this void to fill. In my time of isolation, my eyes have really opened up to how incredibly sensitive and emotional children are to losing a parent. It can affect them in ways we truly cannot understand.
From day five onwards, my son had completely stopped using the word "mama" in his vocabulary.
When I went downstairs to see him for the first time in 7 days, both my partner and I expected him to be overjoyed or even to break down in tears but he was rather indifferent towards me.
We don’t know if this indifference will last or if my 7-day absence has caused permanent damage. But I hope to be able to undo any damage I’ve caused in my absence with all the love and reassurance I can give him in the coming weeks. So, parents, we might not think that children as young as 2 even understand what’s going on around them, but there is an underlying psychological element to all of this that we have to consider.
Psychologist weighs in According to Dr. Geraldine Tan, Director/ Principal Psychologist at The Therapy Room Pte Ltd, by 8 months, an infant would have developed the concept of object permanence, hence, peekaboo would be a fun game to play with them as they are able to peel open your hands and find the person behind.
“By 7-8 months, the child would also have started to form a bond to a singular caregiver. Most times, infants learn that the caregiver would leave and come back after a short period of time,” Dr Geraldine elaborates.
“There is a sense of security and certainty. In cases where there is a prolonged separation, the young child or infant may not understand why his cries are not responded to or where the person has gone,” she adds.
“As adults, we assume that the video calls and audio is good enough, yet the developing brain at that stage may need more concrete tactile feedback. This may explain the confusion in the child when you came back (from isolation),” she says.
Young children look towards the caregiver for stability, so both parents and even grandparents can step in as alternative caregivers.
For children that are slightly older, we can:
-Prepare the child - eg. marking down on a physical calendar that they can see.
-Tactile reminders - using an object to explain.
-After coming back, to spend more time with them.
Mothers can also do or prepare something small for their children every day when they are in isolation. “Video and audio calls can also be paired with the concrete item that is left with the child,” says Dr. Geraldine. Like in the case of my child, his physical object was in the form of a stuffed toy. Older children can also be made to draw or write for the parent that has to leave the child for a short period of time.
Overall, she says that attachment needs consistency and secure attachment needs sincerity.
A short hiatus may bring about an immediate indifferent response but with the constant love and care the mother gives when she is back, the child can learn to understand that their mother will be there from now on and trust can be rebuilt.
Now, all I can hope for is for my son to warm up towards me again and to realise that he doesn't need to fill that void anymore.
Stupid article. Why would you isolate yourself from your own family except for elderly? I’m sure she’s all masked up while driving alone too.
Oh please drama queen.
This ‘story’ sounds like a giant steaming pantload.
Uh, a lot more than Covid going on here.
How about not isolating over ahead cold and letting the toddler get it and be immune?
What a serious Karen over reaction to a cold.
She sounds like an attention whore.
Now THAT'S funny.
Baby juggling is almost as fun as midget tossing.
Ugh, what a load of bs.
Talk about high drama, and crap nobody cares about.
Someone needs to tell this chick, “mama”, that she’d better sleep with one eye open. Ted Kaczynski’s issues have been traced back to an illness-related separation from his parents when he was small. Give her something to whine about.
She was probably a total mess which leads credence that her kid wanted nothing to do with her.
These covid zombies are something else, are they ever going to wake up? Bunch of neurotic nutcases. And if they vaxx their children they are also unfit parents.
Completely normal act of self preservation. The only excuse for isolating from your baby is death. This separation will shape his entire life. YOU KEEP YOUR BABIES WITH YOU even when sick. They will develop antibodies. Especially if they are nursing. You let Fauci ruin your child’s development. Foolish. You would never have done this if you had a flu in 2019. Total shame. I’m sorry.
No it doesn’t.
It’s “Asian parent”.
Sorry, but between oriental/yellow/Asian tendencies to be paranoid about safety, esp. health wherein they mask a lot anyway, and the fear-monger inn over the Greatest Plague Ever, it’s totally believable.
Pathetic, ridiculous, but believable.
What I found oddest is that this just happened! Just last month! After all this time of 2 years, we should have a hold on the REALITY of this disease.
But people still want to be Chicken Little martyrs.
She works for The Asian Parent magazine it looks like. Must have been a sparse issue that needed some filler stories....
https://sg.theasianparent.com/author/sarah
# I’m sure she’s all masked up while driving alone too.
No way would I put any money at all against that.
What a bozo
“Cat Juggling”
.
That’s Entertainment!
If the kid is around just one parent he tends to have more fun with the father than with the mother. LOL
I’m still trying to get over the kid’s dollhouse.
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