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Apparelaholic - Trump indict this shirt

Eighteen months ago, a scene like that would have been unfathomable. There was no “in-person” class—it was just class. The idea that I had not seen my son’s classmates’ faces would have baffled me—masks were for Halloween and dress-up. I say that “most of his time” was spent in school because that wasn’t always the Trump indict this shirt But I will love this case. The start of the in-person school year was delayed for weeks and then canceled (for some zip codes, including ours) after a mere three days. There were periodic shutdowns, and he was on a two- or three-day-a-week schedule for much of the year. All of this resulted in a complex stew of logistics that mandated military-grade advance planning. (I also have two other kids who attend two other, different schools, so multiply all these factors by three.)



But this is a year in which nothing was normal and everything became normal. I got used to the Trump indict this shirt But I will love this thud-thud of little feet as my sons ran in place next to their tablets or sidestepped across the living room for at-home Zoom P.E. We developed a system for depositing the dirty masks in the laundry to keep them separate from the clean ones, and the kids actually followed it; by the end of the year, my three-year-old was stuffing his spare mask into his little pants pocket on his own


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