'I miss knowing when I will see our children and friends in the UK.' Photo: by Linda Holman on Unsplash.

Sisters of mercy: changes to family life under lockdown have much to teach us, says psychologist Val Parker

‘Has being faced with our vulnerability made us recognise the importance of our families?’

Sisters of mercy: changes to family life under lockdown have much to teach us, says psychologist Val Parker

by Val Parker 23rd October 2020

During these strange and surreal times, as we all try to adjust to a world in which life as we knew it has been turned upside down, I have been observing families closely. Through my work as a psychotherapist I know something about the considerable strain and desperation experienced by many – not just coping with regular sibling quarrels and sulky teenagers, but literally feeling on the edge of managing. I have spoken to parents at the end of their tether trying to work and parent and teach their children. I have spoken to parents who fear the future – who have lost their jobs, who don’t know how they will survive – and to parents who are desperately unhappy, who feel imprisoned and forgotten, or who are being abused or harmed.