Ayesha Gallion and her two children (Courtesy photo)
Ayesha Gallion and her two children (Courtesy photo)

While the coronavirus pandemic has been a nightmare for just about everyone, it hasnโ€™t yet spoiled the summer dreams of one Morgan State University alum.

โ€œI donโ€™t know if or when New Jersey, Philadelphia, and New York museums will be open anytime soon,โ€ said Ayesha Gallion, who works as a senior communications editor for a firm in New Jersey. โ€œI have always taken my children to experience culture โ€” picking fruit on farms, exhibits, performances.โ€

However, โ€œitโ€™s all virtual now โ€” thus my strong desire to take a drive to Maine,โ€ she said. โ€œBut who knows โ€” a lot of other people may have the same idea.โ€

A divorced mom, Gallionโ€™s struggle coping is real not just for her, but for her 16-year-old daughter Imaara, who is going into her senior year of high school, and her 11-year-old son Adam, who will enter middle school in September.

โ€œMy son had a camping trip as part of his send-off with the school โ€” itโ€™s a tradition where we live,โ€ Gallion said. โ€œOf course, this was canceled, and, to go along with that, my daughter really went through a difficult time of missing her friends.โ€

To help compensate for the letdown, Gallion said she allows her daughter to phone and FaceTime a lot later than usual. She sometimes takes both her children grocery shopping, but following the stateโ€™s best practices, she usually shops alone.

โ€œI take them so that they can see what the shelves looked like when the pandemic really hit hard โ€” so empty,โ€ Gallion said. โ€œThey are now seeing toilet paper return to the shelves โ€” slowly but surely.โ€

At Morgan State, Gallion said she found an alumni page that reminds her of a playground.

โ€œWe share photos and even our comments on the [Instagram] โ€˜Verzuzโ€™ battles,โ€

However, as the pandemic continued, Gallion said she sees the need to take a break from social media and focus on her physical well-being, which, like millions of others, was interrupted because of the quarantine.

โ€œFor a while, our circadian rhythms were really wacky,โ€ Gallion said. โ€œTo a degree, it has not normalized. I do try to get to bed whenever I can at a decent hour. Iโ€™ve also ordered several great books to keep my mind stimulated like Toni Morrisonโ€™s โ€˜Source of Self Regard,โ€™ and NAACP Award-nominated book of my fellow Morgan State friend, Dr. Damaris Hillโ€™s, โ€˜A Bound Woman Is a Dangerous Thing.’โ€

Gallion has even started writing letters and sending them via the postal service, a practice that mostly disappeared since the advent of email and social media.

Gallion also hosts a podcast about communication, which she records from home. She said her children are coming through the pandemic healthy, but it hasnโ€™t been easy.

โ€œAt first I was very strict with my daughter about the amount of time she was spending on the phone in group chats,โ€ she said. โ€œIt would be 1:30 a.m., and she would have โ€˜virtual schoolโ€™ in the morning, and I would give her a lecture about being more responsible. After a while, I did ease up and allow some flexibility as long as she was getting her work done.

โ€œMy son refuses to let me try cutting his hair,โ€ she said. โ€œHis fade is now some kind of beautiful black cloud just growing out of this purple baseball cap that he wears all the time now โ€” even inside.

โ€œI let the kids relax when they need to,โ€ Gallion said. โ€œBut they do have chores. I find that we are still trying to catch up with housework. This is my daughterโ€™s last summer to just really be a kid โ€” next summer, and she will have graduated from high school.

โ€œI am trying to figure out how to make this summer special,โ€ she said. โ€œI was thinking of maybe taking her and her brother to hike Mt. Katahdin in Maine. We would drive.โ€

Stacy M. Brown is a senior writer for The Washington Informer and the senior national correspondent for the Black Press of America. Stacy has more than 25 years of journalism experience and has authored...

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