The Daily - The Sunday Read: ‘The School Where the Pandemic Never Ended’
Episode Date: May 7, 2023Lakishia Fell-Davis is aware that at this point, in 2023, most people are treating the coronavirus pandemic as a thing of the past. For her, though, Covid still poses a real threat: Fell-Davis has Typ...e I diabetes, putting her at higher risk of hospitalization and long-term complications from illness. As such, her experience during the pandemic has shaped how she thinks about her daily life, especially at Ninety-Fifth Street Elementary School, where she has worked on and off for more than a decade as a substitute teacher and teaching assistant.She felt much more comfortable when schools in the Los Angeles Unified School District were online during the first year and a half of the pandemic and her kids, Makayla and Kevin, were attending virtually. Sure, they missed their friends, but they were shy and soft-spoken children who had never really strayed far from home. They didn’t seem to mind the arrangement. And back then, Fell-Davis’s mother, who was paralyzed on her left side after surviving stomach cancer and two strokes, could visit them with relative peace of mind despite her poor health.Fell-Davis cried when she learned that in the fall of 2021, the school district would require students and teachers to return to in-person learning. Her home — a cozy two-bedroom apartment in a calm neighborhood — had become her haven, the place where she had more control over her family’s health than she had anywhere else.This story was recorded by Audm. To hear more audio stories from publications like The New York Times, download Audm for iPhone or Android.
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Hi, my name is Meg Bernhard, and I'm a contributor to the New York Times Magazine.
This is a story about grief, which I write a lot about.
But it's about a particular kind of grief.
Grief of the world moving on from a mass trauma event when you don't feel capable of doing so yourself.
There's been a lot of reporting on how this moment in the pandemic is affecting people with disabilities, for example.
And I was curious about what the experience of moving on from COVID looks like for low-income families.
And in this case, a community composed predominantly of Black and Latino families.
Through previous reporting, I became familiar with a school in South Central Los Angeles called 95th Street Elementary School.
Like in other poor communities in LA, families here have suffered disproportionately
during the pandemic. Vaccination rates are low in part due to government mistrust.
94% of students live in poverty. And so, for the Sunday read you're about to hear, I followed this school community for more than half a year as students, teachers, and parents grappled with the pressure to return to normal while still dealing with the physical and emotional fallout of COVID.
I first visited 95th Street Elementary on a sunny day last October.
It was Dia de los Muertos, and the first floor hallway was filled with paper mache crafts and altars that students had made honoring their dead loved ones.
loved ones. There was a trick-or-treat event where teachers set up their cars on the blacktop and opened up their trunks, and kids would walk around in their costumes, collecting candy.
As I hung around talking with staff members and parents,
I could see that there was just a huge sense of loss in the community.
One woman told me she lost her sister during the pandemic.
Another lost her brother to suicide,
which she attributes in part to the economic stresses of COVID.
Others told me about grandparents dying,
about losing their parents.
There were teachers with underlying health conditions that made them terrified of the physical realities of this virus.
The pandemic, one person told me, just felt like funeral after funeral after funeral.
I thought about the family social scientist, Pauline Boss. Back in 2021, I wrote a profile of Boss, who coined the term ambiguous loss.
It refers to losses in which someone is physically present, but psychologically absent, or the reverse.
Situations of loss that are sort of unclear and defy our ideas of closure, like missing in action fighter pilots or dementia.
With ambiguous loss comes what Boss calls the myth of closure.
This idea that we can follow certain steps of grieving and then we'll go forward into our productive lives.
And then we'll go forward into our productive lives.
And at this point in the pandemic, we're hearing in culture and policy that we've made it through COVID.
So let's go back to how we were in 2019.
But for the community at 95th Street Elementary School, they experienced so much grief and death and illness and trauma.
It's difficult for the people I talk to at the school to map their reality onto this push for a return to normal.
And they're trying to find a way to make their own narrative.
So here's my article.
The School Where the Pandemic Never Ended
Read by Samantha Dez
At 7.30 on a crisp January morning,
Lakeisha Fell Davis was at the wheel of her car driving to Westmont,
a community in the southern part of Los Angeles County.
She was headed to 95th Street Elementary School,
where she is both a substitute teacher and a parent of two students.
Her daughter, Michaela, who was then nine, nibbled on a bagel.
Kevin Jr., her seven-year-old son, looked out the window at the succession of strip
malls, body shops, and liquor stores.
Surgical masks were tucked next to their seats, and disinfectant wipes sat in the central
console.
Glancing at her children in the rearview mirror, Fel Davis began a prayer for her
children's safety. But she couldn't help picturing the classrooms, the cafeteria, the schoolyard.
All those kids, all those teachers, any one of them potentially carrying COVID-19
and breathing the same air as she and her children.
COVID-19 and breathing the same air as she and her children.
Fel Davis was aware that at this point in 2023, most people treated the pandemic as a thing of the past. For her, though, COVID still poses a real threat. Fel Davis has type 1 diabetes,
putting her at higher risk of hospitalization and long-term complications
from illness. As such, her experience during the pandemic has shaped how she thinks about
her daily life, especially at 95th Street, where she has worked on and off for more than a decade
as a substitute teacher and teaching assistant. A COVID diagnosis has potentially disastrous physical, emotional,
and financial ramifications for her family. She felt much more comfortable when schools in the
Los Angeles Unified District were online during the first year and a half of the pandemic,
and her kids were attending virtually. Sure, they missed their friends, but Michaela and Kevin were both shy and soft-spoken
children who had never really strayed far from home. They didn't seem to mind the arrangement.
And back then, Fel Davis's mother, who was paralyzed on her left side after surviving
stomach cancer and two strokes, could visit them with relative peace of mind despite her poor health.
Her fears were confirmed in the winter of 2021, when her husband, Kevin, caught COVID. He was out
of his security guard job for over a week, with only partial sick pay, plunging them into a brief
period of financial stress. Credit card bills were due, as was her husband's life insurance payment.
The entire family got sick. Am I going to die? Kevin Jr. asked. The pandemic had overshadowed
most of his young life and took its toll on his psyche. He would become agitated, sometimes crying
if he saw someone who wasn't wearing a mask. Even as Fel Davis assured him that he wouldn't die,
her bout with the virus confined her to her bedroom for three days with body aches and a fever.
Horrified that his mother couldn't get out of bed, the boy asked instead if she was going to die.
Fel Davis cried when she learned that in the fall of 2021, LAUSD would require students
and teachers to return to in-person learning. Her home, a cozy two-bedroom apartment in a
calm neighborhood, had become her haven, the place where she had more control over her family's
health than she had anywhere else. She was stressed about whether she might get sick,
but she was also nervous about the vaccines,
which the district had mandated for most employees.
What was in them, she wondered, and how were they made so quickly?
But she decided that she had to go back.
Her husband couldn't handle the bills himself,
and while she preferred that her children
learn remotely for as long as the pandemic lasted, she also wanted them to know how to carry
themselves among other people. To her son, anything outside the apartment was scary.
If he didn't have a mask on in public, he'd put his shirt over his mouth, as if hiding.
She didn't want to raise him to fear the world.
As Fell Davis turned down 96th Street,
parents and grandparents and aunts and uncles
walked kids to the school fence.
The families at 95th Street Elementary
were mostly Black and Latino.
Except, teachers like to point out,
for the Russian family that enrolled a few years back. Looking once more at her children through
the rearview mirror, Belle Davis reminded them of her rules. Wash your hands, wear your masks,
don't share snacks.
Don't share snacks.
At 95th Street, 94% of students live in poverty.
Many parents work essential jobs and suffer from chronic illness.
The school and other poor communities in Los Angeles have suffered disproportionately during the pandemic.
In California, where the earnings gap between high- and low-income families is among the widest in the country, the pandemic has clarified inequality's consequences.
The life expectancy for Latinos in California has decreased by approximately six years.
For Black Californians, four years. In Los Angeles County, where Latinos make up nearly half the population,
their overall mortality rate has increased more than any other racial or ethnic group.
Among the hardest-hit areas have been East and South Los Angeles,
which are home to lower-income Latino and Black families who work essential jobs,
may live in multi-generational houses without room
to distance, and suffer higher rates of chronic illnesses, like asthma and diabetes. In Westmont,
384 of every 100,000 residents have died of COVID, compared with 113 in the affluent
Westside neighborhood of Brentwood, near UCLA. But elsewhere in Los Angeles
and the rest of the country, most people have embraced the return to normal so central to the
nation's idea of COVID recovery. Before the start of the new school year, LAUSD rolled back most of its remaining COVID protocols, doing away with
mandatory masking and testing. In an interview that aired in September, President Biden declared
the pandemic over. At the end of February, California's Governor Gavin Newsom retired the
state's pandemic emergency declaration, and in May, the federal government
is anticipated to do the same for the country at large. Earlier this year, after protracted
debate and delays, conversation about California's adding COVID-19 to its list of mandatory vaccines
for schoolchildren died down. The burden of navigating COVID's risks now falls on the
individual, and what post-pandemic means for one person or community, like 95th Street Elementary,
looks wildly different than it does for others. In the United States, more than 200 people are still dying of COVID every day,
and thousands are still being hospitalized for the disease.
Barbara Ferrer, director of the county's Department of Public Health,
has frequently acknowledged that inequality in experience
and warned that broad rollbacks of safety measures do not signify that COVID has vanished.
For people who are at higher risk, COVID remains a potentially dangerous virus, she says.
There is a worrisome myth that we know is circulating,
that COVID is like a cold or, you know, like the flu,
and people don't really need to worry about it.
That may be true for many people, but for some people,
it's absolutely not true. I began visiting 95th Street Elementary School last fall,
and found that the collective psyche of the community had shifted from crisis to a quieter
grieving. By comparison, loss was acute during the pandemic's first year.
A lot of families lost not just one or two, but four or five, six people, says Kiston O'Brien,
one of 95th Street's psychiatric social workers. Teachers were de facto grief counselors for
students, and sometimes even parents.
Many of them set learning standards aside.
Most classroom time was spent making sure their students were safe and stable.
Los Angeles parents fell into two camps on the issue of school reopening.
It was obvious that the school closures LAUSD ordered on March 16, 2020, set students back academically and socially. And some parents protested and even tried suing the district to force reopening, while others preferred not to send their children back.
The two camps often reflected socioeconomic divisions.
camps often reflected socioeconomic divisions. Many families, often from white, affluent neighborhoods, wanted their kids back in person, according to a parent survey the district sent
out in the spring 2021 semester. But families in low-income neighborhoods, where death rates were
high and vaccination rates were low, were hesitant. When students did return fully in
person in the fall of 2021, the district imposed fairly strong safety precautions.
Anyone entering campus had to complete a form attesting that they were not symptomatic for
COVID, and all students and staff were required to wear masks and take weekly PCR tests.
Laura Crespo, a fifth-grade teacher at 95th Street, told me that for many of her students'
apprehensive parents, even if the weekly testing did not make them feel totally comfortable,
it at least prepared them to acquiesce to in-person instruction.
But once students were back, the depth of their loss was
palpable. That October, the hallways brimmed with photos, sugar skulls, and pandulce,
Dia de los Muertos offerings meant to commemorate deceased loved ones.
In February 2022, Alberto Carvalho, the former Miami-Dade School District Superintendent,
took the helm of LAUSD. Just after he started the job, the state retired its mask mandate.
In the fall of 2022, the beginning of the current school year, LAUSD stripped back most of its
preventive measures and replaced them with the honor system,
requesting that only those experiencing COVID symptoms or who reported exposures to COVID test themselves. To the consternation of some teachers and parents at 95th Street,
gone were masks, distancing, and now weekly tests. Some parents still sent their kids to school with masks and prohibited them
from partaking in activities like field trips. Others, though, told me they weren't very concerned.
In this new phase of COVID, what constituted safety was still up for debate, leading to a
vague sense of disquiet among the teachers. But Crespo, who has asthma and a combination of other undiagnosed conditions
that limit her respiratory capacity, felt adamant that COVID was still serious.
In fact, I'd met her through a parent at another school
whose campaign to make and distribute air filters across the district she had supported.
to make and distribute air filters across the district she had supported.
Crespo was a popular campus figure who often served as an intermediary between the school administration and parents, especially Spanish speakers. She was born and raised in central
Los Angeles. Her parents were Salvadorans who fled civil war. Accordingly, she was sympathetic to her students' stories.
Like most of them, she grew up poor and frequently changed homes.
When she was a child in Los Angeles public schools,
she felt that some of her teachers couldn't relate to
or even understand their students' hunger or financial struggles.
She wanted to be the kind of teacher she needed as a child.
So she noticed when a student seemed morose or agitated,
and she'd pull them aside to ask what was going on at home.
At the beginning of the pandemic,
when her students' relatives were sick and dying
and they could hardly even log on to virtual school.
It was clear that the children needed to know they were not alone.
Many parents were still stressed about COVID, Crespo told me,
and asked her to make sure their kids were wearing masks.
She texted and called frequently to check in on their home lives
or update them on campus events.
Parents were grateful.
Almost weekly, a mother sends her child to school
with homemade baleadas.
Others send tamales.
When I was at the school,
a chatty girl or two often trailed behind her
as she walked campus during recess.
A gaggle usually ate lunch in her classroom.
In December, Crespo brought me to her desk, which was strewn with hot chocolate packets
from the class's winter party earlier that morning. She wanted to show me a Google form
she'd had students fill out so she could get a better sense of their mental health ahead of the holiday break. Crespo herself had never much liked Christmas because she associated the holiday with
stress. Growing up, she couldn't understand why people would spend precious rent money on a dead
pine tree. On the form, she asked what the fifth graders found enjoyable and difficult about the season,
and six said they missed dead loved ones.
Crespo started sending mental health surveys to students at the beginning of the pandemic,
and the results spoke to the immensity of suffering in their community.
In total, 17 of her students had a loved one die during the pandemic's first year.
Later that day, she learned that a student had acted up during recess,
and she sat with him in the back corner of the classroom while his classmates were working independently.
As they talked quietly, he revealed that his parents had died when he was young.
The loss became especially haunting during the holidays.
Crespo sent him to the classroom of O'Brien, the psychiatric social worker, where printouts of
candles meant to honor loved ones who had died were stapled to a board. Scrawled children's
handwriting on some candles read, Granddad, Cousins, My Rabbit. O'Brien told me she noticed that children had become extremely vulnerable to
emotional triggers in the wake of the pandemic.
A teacher would be talking about, say, a hamburger,
maybe in the context of a counting lesson.
And suddenly, a kid would burst into tears at the memory of someone in their life
who used to cook hamburgers.
Once the student left, Crespo told the rest of the class to notify her if a peer seemed upset.
As you're going through your day, she said,
please remember to treat everyone with respect, to be patient with everyone.
Just remember, you don't know what somebody's going through.
That same day, when Crespo was introducing
a lesson on water and rivers to a separate class of English language learners, a girl confided that
she had lost five people to COVID. Crespo and the girl spoke in Spanish at the side of the room
as classmates worked on their own. The girl unspooled a complex story
about not just the pandemic,
but also the violence she witnessed in Honduras
before moving to Los Angeles.
Crespo told me that kids came to her
because they felt they had no one else to turn to.
This year, though, Crespo resolved
to be more mindful of the toll all this grief,
including her own, took on her.
Her uncle, aunt, and grandmother had all recently died, and she wanted to focus on her own mental
health. She had recently taken up guitar and liked to strum along with her brother in their apartment.
My grief is very much connected to my students' grief, she says.
It's very much connected to my school community.
But I've needed time to just let my grief be its own thing.
The week before holiday break, the school's principal, Manuel Nava,
decided to hold the students' winter performance outside as a precaution against rising levels of COVID, RSV, and flu.
And kids sang and danced to Christmas songs under a cloudy Los Angeles sky.
But the next day, the faculty had its holiday luncheon inside a small
auditorium. To his staff, the principal acknowledged he should be wearing a mask,
though he wore one only intermittently. Sixty or so fatigued yet talkative staff members piled
lasagna and salad onto their plates and ate at long folding tables underneath white
string lights. Crespo, one of the few teachers to wear a mask, filled Tupperware with food and
ducked out early. The only time she'd caught COVID was in that very auditorium last June.
It was bad. She was bedridden for three weeks. But it could have been worse had she not
already been taking steroids to strengthen her lungs. She sensed that district administrators
considered concerns like hers inconvenient. And as she saw it, LAUSD was more interested
in academic achievement and perfect attendance than in health. She took COVID safety into her own hands by
constantly wearing a KN95 mask and encouraging students to mask as well. Crespo's modeling
seemed to work. Most times I visited, at least half of her students wore masks the entire school day.
Her thinking underscored the complex reality at 95th Street and in the district
at large. The school was as safe as it could be, given its limited tools to mitigate COVID.
Administrators gave out masks and tests when requested, and the custodial staff continued
to sanitize every day. But they didn't have the power to mandate anything. As
state and federal emergency relief funding has dwindled, LAUSD has pulled money for COVID.
Chronic absenteeism continues to plague the district, which affects funding. State dollars
are tied to average daily attendance, and within LAUSD, there are sizable disparities in absenteeism
between neighborhoods. During the 2021-22 school year, just over 45 percent of students were absent
for at least 9 percent of the 180-day academic calendar, qualifying them as chronically absent.
calendar, qualifying them as chronically absent. Carvalho said that over this school year,
attendance rates across the district were slowly improving. A number of factors, including lack of safe transportation, housing instability, and illnesses like the flu, affect students' ability
to get to campus, with the health and economic havoc wrought by the pandemic making
attending school even more difficult. At 95th Street, where more than 55% of students were
chronically absent in the 2021-22 school year, the rate is now 44%, funding can take some time
to come through, and approval for routine updates can be held up by red tape.
At the luncheon, Fel Davis and her kids sat near a few other masked teachers,
Kevin Jr. with a mask and Michaela without. Fel Davis wore an exasperated look.
Why, she lamented, was it so hard for her daughter to put on a mask?
Like Crespo, Fel Davis was unhappy with the lack of safety protocols at work,
but she didn't blame 95th Street. I feel protected, she told me, but at the same time,
she said that she felt completely vulnerable. The most teachers could do was cultivate a culture of caution.
Sometimes, if Belle Davis saw a sniffling child with tired eyes,
she would ask them to put on a mask.
She thought that by now, parents wouldn't send their children to school sick.
But she understood that it was difficult for families
in which both parents often worked and couldn't afford to stay home for a day.
In November, when she was substituting in a fourth grade class
and checking kids' double-digit multiplication work,
a boy told her she didn't have to wear her mask.
COVID is over, he said.
The children around him perked up and leaned in to listen.
he said. The children around him perked up and leaned in to listen. So Fel Davis stood up and explained to the class that she had type 1 diabetes. Just because everyone says COVID is
gone doesn't necessarily mean it's safe for others, she told them. As the kids lobbed question after
question, eager to learn about their teacher's life, she wondered about the boy's parents.
What were they telling him at home?
Some days, Fel Davis was more nervous about COVID, other days less.
Her views were rather capricious.
Though she never changed her safety routine,
her view on the severity of COVID's threat often depended on her mood.
Her view on the severity of COVID's threat often depended on her mood.
For her, this stage of COVID is as much about grappling with trauma as it is with confronting the challenges of the present.
The pandemic's emotional fallout is, to Fel Davis, even more overwhelming than the health risk.
Her mother died of septic shock in July 2021, just before Fel Davis and her kids would return to school.
Instead of returning to work at school as she had planned, she stayed home for a year.
She couldn't bear to face condolences from colleagues, and she preferred to untangle her grief in solitude.
Her mother had been her moral compass, the person she turned to with all of her troubles, no matter how small. Fell Davis fell apart. In the mornings, after dropping her kids
off at school, she'd sit in her garage and weep for her mother. Sometimes she didn't make it far
from the school curb, and her husband would go out looking for her.
This past fall, after a year at home mourning and collecting unemployment to help her husband
with the bills, Fell Davis felt she was ready to return to school, but heartache still follows her.
Earlier in December, she suffered a panic attack at school while she was preparing to teach a reading lesson, and an ambulance took her to a nearby hospital whose hallways were overcrowded with moaning patients, a setting that did not subdue her anxiety.
In February, as she was turning down her street, she saw a parked ambulance, and her mind flashed to the ambulance that took her mother to the hospital where she eventually died.
Another trigger, another day spent weeping.
I just want you to be okay, her husband told her after her panic attack, when she was missing her mother and her anxiety was through the roof.
It's a daily struggle, Val Davis says.
through the roof. It's a daily struggle, Val Davis says. By mid-March, she was feeling more comfortable with the new circumstances around COVID. But often when we talked, the darkness
of memory and stress of the present seemed to wear her down. She'd spent the past three years
entirely devoted to her family, caring for their health and hearts. I'm 41, and I need to do
something that I enjoy, Valdava says. I don't even know what I enjoy.
When I arrived at 95th Street Elementary again in late January,
the hills outside Los Angeles had transformed from brown to green.
White and yellow wildflowers pushed through the soil.
Some of the children were antsy on that balmy Wednesday morning.
Buses would soon take them to Point Furman,
an outdoor education center on the coast,
for a two-night field trip focused on marine science.
For many, this was the longest they'd ever been away from their parents.
The parents were anxious, too.
In the front office, I heard a mother worry that she hadn't packed her child appropriate clothing.
Some were stressed that their children might catch COVID,
but Crespo assured them that the camp and school
were taking as many precautions as possible.
Everyone tested negative before the trip,
and parents were comforted by the fact that she,
someone who still took COVID seriously,
was there to look out for their kids.
They were in the middle of district testing, with more on the way. It was an especially trying time,
even for 95th Street teachers, who were accustomed to working through the educational
challenges associated with poverty. Everyone was exhausted. The pandemic had left kids struggling to perform at grade level.
Zyra Valadez, a second grade teacher,
told me that many of her students were stuck at kindergarten math levels.
There's so much push to have these kids just have good grades.
We forget all that trauma they have gone through.
Everything we have gone through, she said.
With double-digit subtraction, she has tried every trick in the book,
breaking numbers into tens and ones,
drawing visuals of the numbers so students can cross them out.
But nothing works.
Some rely on their fingers,
which is difficult because they can't subtract from any number greater than
10. They become frustrated, she becomes frustrated, and they start over. I get to the point where I've
almost wanted to cry, Valadez said. Am I doing something wrong? Crespo said her students were
making gains, but they were sick of testing and still struggling emotionally.
A lot of these tests aren't made by me, she said.
They're made by people who are not in my classroom.
She was trying to keep up with district demands, but if the pandemic taught her anything about teaching at 95th Street, it was that students needed to take it slow.
about teaching at 95th Street,
it was that students needed to take it slow.
The trip gave Crespo and the kids a welcome reprieve from district testing.
Before the buses arrived at the school,
I sat in Crespo's classroom
as students ate pre-packed cereal
provided through LAUSD's free breakfast program.
The walls were decorated to look like a lush woodland, marigolds and vines
wrapped around an archway, a fake willow tree branched out by her desk, and green wallpaper
created a backdrop to the class library. As I spent time with her, it seemed as if Crespo had
boundless energy. She was also a United Teachers Los Angeles union representative, had recently completed a
master's in science education, and was tasked with writing a new science curriculum for fifth graders.
But privately, she was feeling depleted from doing all the extra work, attending to her
students' emotional needs, and constantly worrying about her health. Most days, when Crespo returned
from school, she didn't leave the house. She was worn down by the accumulation of stress and grief,
grief for herself and for her students. It's similar to a lot of inequality, where I am going
to keep working toward making sure that all the students get what they need, that they're treated fairly.
Crespo said of COVID,
I can only do what I can do. No one is going to come in and give our students everything that we need.
COVID inequality was a structural issue like poverty in the school, a problem that no individual could
hope to tackle alone. The constant anxiety was grating to the spirit, and she was feeling absent
in her own life outside school. I'm starting to get desensitized, she said. There's only so much
worrying I can do. Yet she couldn't stop herself from worrying. There was so much to occupy
her attention. When I talked to her in mid-March, a few weeks after California retired its pandemic
emergency declaration, Crespo and thousands of other teachers walked out of school for three
days in solidarity with striking cafeteria workers, custodians, and bus drivers,
among other low-wage workers seeking a new contract. These workers, most of whom are
part-time employees, were the district's lowest paid, on average earning $25,000 annually.
Last month, their union won a new contract that ensures a new average of $33,000 by 2024.
On the bus, Crespo and the kids rode south for 20 minutes, out of Westmont and toward San Pedro.
After they arrived, the kids spread across the campus, binoculars in hand, for their first assignment.
across the campus, binoculars in hand for their first assignment, identifying aspects of the environment that were similar to and different from their own neighborhood. They giggled and
zoomed in on their friends' faces and looked at the snow on the mountains and a ladybug on a blade
of grass. This is good, Crespo thought. It had been a long time since any of them had been able to do something like this,
to run around unburdened, if only for a few days.
It was yet another experience, that of simply being a child,
that the pandemic had taken from them.
On the second day of the field trip, after a visit to a salt marsh,
the kids trudged up a hill complaining, in the way that homesick children do,
about being thirsty and tired, asking Crespo when the hill would end.
At the top, they stopped and looked with awe.
Before this trip, many kids had never seen the ocean.
They stared at the light on the water, the immensity of the view.
Crespo and the kids fell quiet, taking it all in.