As more and more people get vaccinated against Covid-19, how do you lead your family through this safer but not coronavirus-free new world? Two parents in Israel — a child psychologist and an infectious disease doctor — describe the approach they’ve been taking with their three kids. Because when only one child is old enough to receive the vaccine, making your way out of lockdown is even more of a process.
Guests:
Orit Yafeh is a clinical child psychologist.
Ran Nir-Paz is an infectious disease physician.
Resources:
- “What Will Work-Life Balance Look Like After the Pandemic?” by Bobbi Thomason and Heather Williams
- “A Way Forward for Working Parents,” by Daisy Dowling
- “Leading into the Post-Covid Recovery,” by Merete Wedell-Wedellsborg
- “How to Prepare Yourself for a Return to the Office,” by Ron Carucci
- “Resilience Is About How You Recharge, Not How You Endure,” by Shawn Achor and Michelle Gielan
Give feedback on the series by taking this survey.
Email us: [email protected]
ERICA TRUXLER: Hey, do you remember school? What you used to do at school?
CHILD: Both times, circle time.
ERICA TRUXLER: Circle time. What do you do at circle time?
CHILD: I don’t remember.
ERICA TRUXLER: You don’t remember?
CHILD: No.
ERICA TRUXLER: Yeah. We’ll do it again soon.
KEVIN EVERS: Erica it’s been a pretty long year. You gave birth. You also raised two kids during the pandemic, while also trying to work at the same time. And it seems like we’re moving toward a new normal. So, what does that new normal look like for you?
ERICA TRUXLER: It’s such a big question, right. Part of me is so excited and looking forward to what this new normal could look like. And then the other part of me is also very, I mean to be completely honest, nervous about it. I mean when I think about the positives, what my new normal hopefully will look like is that I will be able to see my parents more. What’s been so hard throughout this process coming back to work with both kids and everything is if our nanny is sick, I don’t have any backup. So, one of the major things that I’m looking forward to, is that I will be able to call my parents. And yes, they’re six hours away. They’re not exactly next door, but at least I will feel like I can have them come stay with us.
KEVIN EVERS: That’s going to be awesome.
ERICA TRUXLER: It’s going to be huge. Huge.
KEVIN EVERS: Yeah, my mom came to visit a few weeks ago, and it was the first time she saw the kids since September. And it was like Taylor Swift or Santa Claus walked through the front door. Maisie was so, so excited.
MAISIE: She’s here now and I’m excited.
KEVIN’s MOTHER: You’re excited.
KEVIN EVERS: It was a great thing to experience.
KEVIN’s MOTHER: Oh, I’m excited too.
ERICA TRUXLER: For us my husband’s family, his parents live out in California. So, they haven’t even met Mark.
KEVIN EVERS: Oh, wow.
ERICA TRUXLER: Yeah, and I mean, I even think about it just in terms of validating that Mark exists in some ways. Like so many times throughout this year I feel like I have the invisible baby that’s just kind of growing behind closed doors. And I just can’t believe his first birthday is in June. I mean that is not far away and he hasn’t met really anybody. So, that is something I’m really looking forward to and hoping that, hoping that we can make happen sooner rather than later.
KEVIN EVERS: How are you feeling about school? Sending your daughter back to school?
ERICA TRUXLER: We are hoping to send Claire back to preschool soon. She is such a happy kid with other kids. For me it’s just deciding when. When do we send her back and how do we make that decision?
KEVIN EVERS: We made that decision in September to send Maisie back to preschool, and it was the most agonizing decision we’ve ever made as parents. Because there’s so many tradeoffs that you have to think about, and we weren’t sure whether we were sending her back because we needed a break and we needed her to go back to school, so we’d have more time to do work. Or, if it was really because Maisie’s also a social butterfly, and she really struggled over the summer without seeing friends. And we didn’t know if going back to school would be really good for her, and it was hard to weigh those risks. And so, there’s been a lot of disruption. There’s been a few school closures because of COVID, but ultimately, it’s been really, really good to see her open up and be so social with her friends. And it seems like that’s continuing to happen. I mean just the other day she asked me, when can I hug my friends, which was really touching.
ERICA TRUXLER: Yeah, I can’t wait for that. I can’t wait to see Claire play with her friends. That is just exactly. Like when can they hug their friends again?
KEVIN EVERS: Yeah, yeah. I mean the thing with having kids is they can’t articulate quite what’s happening, but I can tell with Maisie, she’s really opened up even more. She’s hugging my wife and I all the time, telling us that she loves us just randomly, which she never really did before. And it’s been like this ever since she learned that my wife and I were going to get vaccinated, which we did last weekend.
WOMAN: I got vaccinated.
KEVIN EVERS: Ooh, vaccine time.
WOMAN: [SINGING] Vaccine, vaccine dancing.
KEVIN AND WOMAN: [SINGING] Vaccine dancing, dance, dance.
KEVIN EVERS: And seeing her reaction and seeing how much energy she has now, I can start to see what my life will be like as we return to work, and life returns back to normal. I’m looking forward to feeling more vitality, feeling recharged, getting some rest.
ERICA TRUXLER: So, that’s where we’re at, envisioning the near future. But there are a ton of different situations and emotions and decisions out there. Here’s how other parents expect their lives to change and how they’re feeling about it.
NICTA: My name is [Nicta Canooka. I work at a large tech company, and I live in Canada. So, as more people get vaccinated, I am just so looking forward to setting up playdates. My two-year-old, she’s super extraverted, and it’s been tough asking her to keep her distance, or not encouraging her to run over and play with the neighborhood kids at the park. One thing I will say though is it’s been good to get to know our neighbors better during the pandemic. Like seeing the same dad walk with a stroller at the same time every day, or the couple that walks their dog every evening and like kind of waving at them from across the street. I just feel like there’s more of a sense of community directly around me, in my neighborhood, and I’m getting really excited to get to know my neighbors better this summer.
LOUISE: Hi. My name’s Louise, and I’m from Flagstaff, Arizona. And I’m the chef and owner of Just Delivered, a meal delivery service for post-partum mothers and new parents. I am just starting to launch my business here, so I’m expecting my life to change quite a bit as I won’t be home 24/7 anymore with my two year old. And we’ve been really privileged throughout the pandemic. We’ve been able to keep our kid home, but I think in a few months we’ll have to send them back to daycare and that really frightens me. With no scene available for kids their age, I’m extremely worried about sending them back to an environment where they’re going to interact with other children and increase their risk of catching COVID. So, I would say I’m actually going to be a bit more stressed than I was during all our lockdowns over the past year.
ERICA TRUXLER: In Israel, Orit Yafeh and Ran Nir-Paz are again trying to decide what is safe for them and their three kids. Where to go, who to see, and what they can do.
KEVIN EVERS: Right now, the country leads the world in the percentage of people fully vaccinated against COVID-19. And these two parents are in the middle of leading their family out of a crisis. It’s a welcomed transition they say, but a complicated and challenging one.
ERICA TRUXLER: Orit is the Chief Psychologist at an Emergency Care Center that provides housing and counseling to children who’ve suffered trauma. Ran is an Infectious Disease Physician at Hadassah Hebrew University Medical Center in Jerusalem. Thank you so much for taking the time. I know you’re both very busy given your work and your family. It sounds like you have your hands full for sure right now.
ORIT YAFEH: We’re happy to talk with you.
ERICA TRUXLER: Thank you. Can you take us back to the height of the pandemic and what did your work and family life look like?
ORIT YAFEH: Yeah. I think we didn’t understand what’s happening. Maybe Ran understood more because the professional part of it, but we didn’t understand what’s going on. And I think for me it was mainly scary because we were both going to work and we were continuing to see lots of people, and we were leaving three kids at home. So, OK the 16-year-old was 15 then and she’s very responsible and everything, but still going day after day to work and leaving them at home, that didn’t feel so good. It made me feel guilty. What I was most scared of was that maybe both of us are going to get COVID-19 and would have to be hospitalized or sent to some place where patients are supposed to be, and the kids would have to stay and take care of themselves. And no one could come and help because they will have to be quarantined. So, that was the main thing that sat up here in my head all that time.
ERICA TRUXLER: Yes.
RAN NIR-PAZ: I think that the main perspective for myself is a bit different. As you can imagine we have different perspectives of life. This dark scenarios never came through me. So, but –
ORIT YAFEH: That’s not true actually. I actually told you that. I asked, what’s going to happen if we’re –
RAN NIR-PAZ: And then I told you.
ORIT YAFEH: You just forgot
RAN NIR-PAZ: No. And I told you it’s not going to happen.
KEVIN EVERS: Do you think that’s because of your personality or because of your professional background since you’re an infectious disease expert?
RAN NIR-PAZ: I think it’s both. But I think its way more complicated. I was practically working on a daily basis –
ORIT YAFEH: Out of the house.
RAN NIR-PAZ: Out of the house, going to work and maintaining some kind of normality in life although the work was not that normal, or was completely mad. I think we were the hospital were treated the most patients in Israel, and I was involved with the COVID patients almost since the beginning, except for couple of month of. I think early on with the stress and so forth, you start your day early in the morning like 4 a.m. or something, and it takes time to get back into some kind of normality. But then you start to create with each one of the kids some kind of activity that you do with. Like some kind of stupid iPad game with the young one, or a –
ORIT YAFEH: Bike.
RAN NIR-PAZ: A bike with the middle one. Or something with the older one. So, in a way it created some kind of routines that enables a unique activity with each of the childs, which is kind of an advantage that I don’t think I’ve had before. Oh, so in a way one can think that this pandemic is kind of a jump start or a good base to start from, or to evolve to something new within your family.
KEVIN EVERS: That’s great to hear.
ORIT YAFEH: In a nutshell that’s the difference. He will always see the positive part and will be less stressed, and I’ll keep the worries.
ERICA TRUXLER: I’m the same way.
ORIT YAFEH: Darker part of life.
ERICA TRUXLER: Can you tell us about a day that is seared in your memory for either with some sort of work life conflict or some decision you had to make?
ORIT YAFEH: I have something that comes up to mind. When our youngest son went back to school, after a week of school or something, he had to be quarantined because one of the teachers turned out to be positive. And he’s an eight-year-old boy. And there was like this difficult decision to be taken because I mean if he’s older then he can be just in his room and just give him food and whatever, and he enjoys having some quiet time without his parents. And if he’s a toddler then there’s no question you have to be quarantined with him. But he’s kind of in the middle, and I was just torn because some part of me thought that as a responsible and caring parent I should be quarantined with him. But I knew that I cannot do that in terms of my work because it was very intense and lots of difficult things happening in a center for kids that I’m working with, and kids live there. So, work just goes on, and I can’t just disappear. And I was just torn how to make this decision and what’s the right decision. And he ended up being quarantined in his room by himself. Actually, he really liked it. He got iPad for longer than he ever did, and he got food to his room, and he was just very happy. Actually, still says that he would like to be quarantined again. But it was difficult at nighttime when he wanted to be hugged or kissed, and you’re not supposed to and then I really felt this was the wrong decision. And since he still wants to be quarantined, I guess it was not traumatic. But I think this was a challenging moment, and it happened again and again, three times.
ERICA TRUXLER: Three times?
ORIT YAFEH: He was quarantined three times.
RAN NIR-PAZ: Yeah, but each time he was happier.
ORIT YAFEH: Yeah. Each time he got, he was “Yeah we’re quarantined again.” So –
ERICA TRUXLER: All right, so he got used to it I guess.
RAN NIR-PAZ: Yeah. I think it’s not a particular moment that made things tougher. It just a whole year that you need to stop a lot of routines that you were used to and to create a new lifestyle in a way. In many ways we posed on ourselves more restrictions that are needed. Practically we haven’t seen friends for a year. We communicated with friends, but it’s a year that other than work, then the person-to-person interaction are hardly existing. You know, before the vaccines then we were very strict, and now after we are vaccinated, our daughter is vaccinated so, we can be more flexible, mainly with her. But for ourselves we still haven’t got to meet our friends. So, in a way this restrictive behavior is what is really tough because when you want to alleviate such restrictions, it comes into a situation that you need to think when, how, should, and what pace. And I think this is like learning to walk again in many, many ways. It’s a complicated situation. It’s a complicated task, but you still need to go through it and to start in a way, a new life.
KEVIN EVERS: You guys are pros at parenting at this point. You have three kids who are older than ours, so would you say that you managed well during the pandemic? It sounds like you did.
ORIT YAFEH: I think you should ask our kids this question.
RAN NIR-PAZ: Come over here and sit down.
KEVIN EVERS: So that’s exactly what we did.
ELIT: Hi. I’m Elit. I’m 16.
ITIMAR: I’m Itimar. I’m 13.
ELIT: And the little one, he’s right here.
ITIMAR: He can’t really speak English though, so.
YAMATAN: I’m Yamatan. I’m eight –
ELIT: Years old.
CHILD: Years old.
KEVIN EVERS: OK, so this question is going to make your parents a little nervous.
ITIMAR: They can hear you, so no problem.
KEVIN EVERS: Oh, that’s OK. That’s OK. So, I’d ask how they thought that they managed during the pandemic and they said well, you’d have to ask our kids that. So, here we are. The pandemic has been really tough for parents. It’s been tough for all of us. I’m sure it’s been tough for you as well. But parents have a lot of responsibilities, and it’s been really hard. So, if I were to ask you to review your parent’s performance during the pandemic, how would you review it? What would you say? Did they do a good job?
ITIMAR: I would actually say they did. Though I don’t think it was a challenge for him. Me and Elit, we’ve been alone at home for four years now. The only thing added is that we need to watch our little brother sometimes.
ELIT: It was fine. I actually liked the time we had alone at home. It was like quality time. Us three, we bonded, didn’t we?
ITIMAR: Yeah.
ELIT: No? Well in my opinion we did, and it was fun. They were a lot more tough on us. Me and my friends we like to drive to Tel Aviv and go to the beach together and on the bus, take a trip. It’s fun. You know, being kids you go away, but obviously I couldn’t go out and do stuff so yeah, we had a lot of like tiny arguments about it. But I think they did a great job being the rock for us. Like telling us what you can do, you can do, and you could talk to them and be sad about it.
KEVIN EVERS: We gave the youngest the last word. His brother and sister interpreted for him.
ELIT: He said they were excellent.
KEVIN EVERS: Wow, rave reviews. Wow.
ORIT YAFEH: Yeah.
RAN NIR-PAZ: Yeah. We know our stuff.
ORIT YAFEH: I think they were polite. Take that into account.
ERICA TRUXLER: Well, it’s so nice to hear their perspective too. I think even just hearing your daughter say what she wanted to do and how normal that would be in normal times just to see your friends and go to the beach even. You know, it really struck me in that she’s really missing that, so.
RAN NIR-PAZ: You know, this year we’ve done less with the kids in many, many aspects. You know, we miss the travel when we stay, going around with the kids, traveling here, and traveling there. Having a vacation here, a vacation there. And vacations have their own dynamics within the family. It brings a different vibe, a different mood into the family, and it’s a lot of fun for the kids and for us. We haven’t went to restaurants, while before we were going to once a month at least, to a restaurant, to dining out with the kids. So, those are some kind of price that we’ve paid during this year. But having this perspective, if somebody will tell you that now for a year you won’t go for traveling, you wouldn’t travel with the kids, you don’t do vacations, no restaurants. You only stay at home and work, and your kids will be schooling at home, you will hear that. You will think oh, that’s going to be a mess, a disaster. But then when you’ve gone through that, then that was fine. That was OK. But then everybody, we were playing those games. Where would you like to go now? So, each kid has its own perspective on where he would like to go, what he would like to do, where he would like to eat.
KEVIN EVERS: Did those things seem like they’re close to reality now, or do they still seem like distant dreams?
RAN NIR-PAZ: It’s still complicated, you know. Because they’re regulations for vaccinated people are one and there are regulations for no vaccinated people, meaning kids are different. And it’s kind of a task to go. You need to test the kids for COVID, for practically every activity like this so you can do tests like three times a week if you want to do something. Although everything is practically open, those few things which are a bit more complicated, going abroad is not a realistic thing to do right now. It’s probably a thing that will be more viable in six month or so, because the burden of disease outside of the Israel is different. Dining out, good restaurants are making sure that kids won’t be dining in unless they have a negative test within the last 24, 48 hours. So, you can’t be just spontaneous of going out for dinner. You need to make sure that 40 hours ahead you took the swab, making sure you got the results in time, and so forth and so on. So, there’s too many practicalities that complicate life. So, it’s almost back to normality, but its way better than it was before. It’s a process.
KEVIN EVERS: So, Ran, I don’t know about you, but I’m the least important person in my household. The wife and kids come before me.
RAN NIR-PAZ: Same here.
KEVIN EVERS: Exactly. So, did you get newfound status during the pandemic since you know a lot about COVID? Were the kids asking you more questions? How did they react to you?
RAN NIR-PAZ: So, that depends. COVID-wise obviously they could ask me, I could explain some things. But other than that, I’m just the old guy with the iPad laying with the little one. So, that’s kind of a reduction in my size, in a way.
ORIT YAFEH: Well, the advantage, or maybe the disadvantage of having a doctor at home is that he can test you. You don’t have to go get tested. But the disadvantage is that he’s very, very serious about it.
RAN NIR-PAZ: Meticulous.
ORIT YAFEH: Meticulous, yes, about taking the test. And this is not a very nice and pleasant test. And when you have a dad that does that and very, very, well sticks the swab.
KEVIN EVERS: Was this at the point, did you have to go deep into the nose?
ORIT YAFEH: Yeah, very deep.
KEVIN EVERS: Oh, OK.
ERICA TRUXLER: Yeah, the one that tickles the brain.
ORIT YAFEH: The middle kid actually said he prefers not to leave the house and not to meet people in order not to be, to have to be tested again by his dad.
ERICA TRUXLER: That’s fair. That sounds fair.
KEVIN EVERS: You mentioned that you created new routines as a family during the pandemic. Are there any of those routines or any part of your pandemic lifestyle that you want to keep up when this is all over?
ORIT YAFEH: Yeah. A lot, I think. I would be happy to have lunch with my kids at least a couple of times a week, or going for a walk in the afternoon. We live in the suburbs of Jerusalem in a very village kind of surroundings and walking around with my youngest son and just talking, taking a walk of two hours, that’s amazing and not having to rush all the time. Also, because they don’t have to rush to afterschool activities, so they have time. It’s not only me. So, I would like that and just to spend afternoons, all of us together at home, not just one or two of us. I hope, I hope we can keep some of it.
ERICA TRUXLER: Absolutely. I feel, I mean for all parents it feels like we were forced to do a massive pause with everything that was happening. All of us were so over scheduled. I think that having this forcing function where all activities were wiped off our calendars. I mean I had this thought with my daughter, you know she was in daycare five days a week and then on Saturdays I would literally say, oh no, we’re going to be home for a full day on Saturday. We need to figure out a way to get Claire out of the house. And so we would sign her up for singing, music classes or something. So, this whole idea that we can’t just stay home has been eye opening for me too. And in some ways, I hope that I don’t, like you said, I kind of remember those activities that I did enjoy and try to keep those and try not to overschedule when we do kind of reach some semblance of being able to open up things here as well.
ORIT YAFEH: Yeah, exactly.
ERICA TRUXLER: Do you have any advice for parents who are listening from other parts of the world, where we don’t have as much of the population vaccinated and are curious to learn what you have learned going through this transition in terms of phasing more to a place of normalcy? Do you have any advice to share for how to manage this transition?
ORIT YAFEH: I think actually we have to be ready to be surprised. Because not all the reactions of the kids are the ones that we were thinking that these are the reactions we’re going to have. And to be open for the wider spectrum of emotional experiences and reactions from kids and knowing that this is part of the transition, and maybe not getting scared of a child that doesn’t want to go necessarily back to school. And understanding that it is a process. I think we were affected, enormously. Even for us that we were most of the time out there in normal working wise. Not socially. I feel that we’re still kind of learning how to get back. So, everything feels strange. So, I think we have to give ourselves time.
RAN NIR-PAZ: And even when the magic of vaccination comes to your door, there’s still enough people not vaccinated and then the opening of things and the restrictions are still there. So, it’s a process. Even when everything is being open, it’s not that you go back to your previous normality, but you go to some normality that is more open, but it’s still, it’s not as open as it was. So, each time you just get new things you can enjoy, and then another thing and another thing, and another things like starting to explore the world around you and then going a bit further and further, and further. It’s a process. Probably will take two years. I don’t know really how much time, but probably formality will resume around the globe somewhere in 2022, end of 2021. And up until then just enjoy whatever you have.
ORIT YAFEH: And I also think we’re different in the sense that even when things are open and you can do something, you’re not in the same place that you were let’s say a year ago. I think I’m much more conscious when I walk around to the number of people around me suddenly and the space between us. And things that, I don’t think I ever thought about before, so we’re kind of mentally changed in a way and some of it maybe will stay and some of it will gradually just fade out. But I think this takes time.
ERICA TRUXLER: Absolutely. The idea of being in a very small, crowded restaurant, elbow to elbow, when you have all the tables are so close together and you’re eating. I don’t know how I’m ever going to go to those small hole-in-the-wall Italian restaurants again. Yeah, I absolutely agree. It’s just realizing that we’re different people now even if things are slowly opening up.
KEVIN EVERS: Yeah, I think that’s such great perspective, and it’s great for me to hear personally because I keep thinking that once I get that second shot of the vaccine, that my life, it will be like going from black and white into color. And listening to you guys speak, it’s obvious that there’s going to be an in-between state. There’s going to be a transition period, and I think that’s great for everyone to hear. So, thank you so much.
ERICA TRUXLER: Thank you.
ORIT YAFEH: Thank you.
RAN NIR-PAZ: Thank you both. And the magic will happen. No worries.
KEVIN EVERS: I like that.
ERICA TRUXLER: That’s it from us for now.
KEVIN EVERS: It’s been a good run. Four episodes. Should we keep going? Should Family Management the series become Family Management the show?
ERICA TRUXLER: Feedback from you will help us decide. Please take the survey we created. It’s at HBR.org/podcastsurvey.
KEVIN EVERS: We’re grateful to the editorial production team who made this series possible. They’re Amanda Kersey, Maureen Hoch, Tina Tobey Mack, Adam Buchholz, and Rob Eckhardt.
CHILD SINGING: I love you, you love me. We are happy family. With a great big –
ERICA TRUXLER: We’re also grateful to our families. I want to give a special shout out to my husband Rob for listening so attentively to each version of each episode and always giving me so many words of encouragement.
CHILD SINGING: If you’re happy and you know it wave your hands. If you’re happy and you know it wave your hands. If you’re happy and you know it –
KEVIN EVERS: I want to thank my life Julie for being my number one fan and for being so willing to share our family life with other people. You may have noticed that in the show notes for each episode, we link to HBR articles, books, and podcast episodes related to the topic at hand. Find more ideas and advice about work and parenting at HBR.org. including coverage on compassionately leading your family, your team, and your organization out of the crisis. I’m Kevin Evers.
ERICA TRUXLER: I’m Erica Truxler. Write to us at [email protected].
KEVIN EVERS: Thanks for listening and take care.