One who has faith in his heart and a candle in his hand does not experience the darkness

As a busy mother, sometimes I wish for some peace and quiet. But you gotta be careful what you wish for — when you get it, it may not be what you expected at all.
At the very beginning when Covid hit, I was directly exposed to someone sick. I needed to go into strict quarantine — alone, in my room, for 14 days.
Until then, I’d never fully understood the torture of solitary confinement. I was running my house via the phone; the kids would come to my window to ask me questions or to say hi. They left me food outside my door (Binyamin makes a great tuna melt), and slid notes and pictures under my door. I hoped they were doing okay. I wasn’t.
Every day I tried to keep busy with a new project for that day. I organized photos, recipes, cleaned my closet for Pesach. (This almost a full year before the next Pesach! I beat everyone!) But as each day ticked by, the loneliness and solitude grew heavier and heavier. I felt like I was in a self-imposed prison and the walls were closing in faster and faster.
Create a free account to keep reading.