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Mother’s Day Weekend in Carmel, CA – A Temporary Return to Normal
Title (Dublin Core)
Mother’s Day Weekend in Carmel, CA – A Temporary Return to Normal
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Description (Dublin Core)
In May 2020, during Mother’s Day weekend, my wife, Jennifer, our son, Evan, and I took a much-needed
trip to Carmel on the coast of Northern California from our home in Sacramento—a roughly three-hour
drive. Evan, a junior at an all-boys Catholic high school, had been doing virtual learning since March, and
the isolation weighed heavily on him and our entire family. Carmel, with its clean and fresh ocean air and
mountain views, was an excellent place to decompress and have a peaceful and relaxing respite from the
turmoil of COVID-19.
We stayed at a small boutique hotel we had visited before, where the staff was relieved to have guests
again, though housekeeping and room service were unavailable. We spent much of our time outdoors,
playing golf at Pebble Beach, relaxing at the beach, and avoiding the non-stop news coverage of COVID-
19. A major highlight was having our first restaurant meal in months at a famous seafood restaurant in
Monterey, dining outdoors in a large tent, socially distanced, with masked servers and sanitization
stations.
Despite the refreshing break, reality set in when we returned home to Sacramento. The school year
ended, and when the new one started remotely in August, it became clear normalcy was still far away.
The high school canceled fall sports, masks remained required in public, and the weight of restrictions
continued. Over the summer, we spent time by the pool, with my son gradually having friends over more
often.
The memories of Carmel faded as the pandemic’s grip continued. The short return to normal was only
temporary, and life remained in limbo for months to come.
trip to Carmel on the coast of Northern California from our home in Sacramento—a roughly three-hour
drive. Evan, a junior at an all-boys Catholic high school, had been doing virtual learning since March, and
the isolation weighed heavily on him and our entire family. Carmel, with its clean and fresh ocean air and
mountain views, was an excellent place to decompress and have a peaceful and relaxing respite from the
turmoil of COVID-19.
We stayed at a small boutique hotel we had visited before, where the staff was relieved to have guests
again, though housekeeping and room service were unavailable. We spent much of our time outdoors,
playing golf at Pebble Beach, relaxing at the beach, and avoiding the non-stop news coverage of COVID-
19. A major highlight was having our first restaurant meal in months at a famous seafood restaurant in
Monterey, dining outdoors in a large tent, socially distanced, with masked servers and sanitization
stations.
Despite the refreshing break, reality set in when we returned home to Sacramento. The school year
ended, and when the new one started remotely in August, it became clear normalcy was still far away.
The high school canceled fall sports, masks remained required in public, and the weight of restrictions
continued. Over the summer, we spent time by the pool, with my son gradually having friends over more
often.
The memories of Carmel faded as the pandemic’s grip continued. The short return to normal was only
temporary, and life remained in limbo for months to come.
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Date Submitted (Dublin Core)
01/29/2025
Date Modified (Dublin Core)
03/31/2025
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This item was submitted on January 29, 2025 by Michael Mayers using the form “Share Your Story” on the site “A Journal of the Plague Year”: https://covid-19archive.org/s/archive
Click here to view the collected data.