When We Reunite Again

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We are hugging, laughing, dancing and crying.

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We are mourning — the lost time, the lost people. And many of us are notwithstanding feeling anxious.

But we are doing it together — over champagne and sonatas, in church sanctuaries and school corridors, at family dinners and surprise parties.

Here is a wait at reunions that have taken place across the land as spring unfolded and vaccines became bachelor, creating new possibilities for closeness and joy.

A sound more cute in person

Story by Karin Brulliard. Video by Allie Caren.

Matthew Viator missed Maya Asakura's sound.

Some students who are enrolled at his D.C. piano studio — all adults, and many of them avant-garde pianists — play grandly. Others play technically. Asakura, he says, plays beautifully.

"It'southward her tone. Information technology's her assault. Information technology's her touch," Viator said. But although they had connected lessons during the pandemic, he had heard Asakura play only over the textureless audio of FaceTime.

A congregation comes home once more

Story past Kim Bellware and Brittany Shammas. Photos past Daniel Acker.

The Rev. Keith Thomas was broken-hearted at 6 a.m. on Easter Sunday.

Thomas was about to hold his get-go in-person service in 56 weeks and wanted everything to be perfect. He arranged masks and hand sanitizer on a table, checked a registration sheet and straightened chairs in a makeshift sanctuary filled with box fans and air purifiers.

They endured pregnancies in isolation. Finally, their babies meet.

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(Cassie Thompson)

Story by William Wan.

Vera Guernsey and Cassie Thompson both establish out they were pregnant only as the coronavirus was beginning to spread concluding year. For the ii friends, navigating pregnancy during the pandemic was a harrowing, exhausting, lonely experience. There were no baby showers, merely scary unknowns and warnings to stay as isolated as possible.

The two leaned heavily on each other. They called daily, texted constantly, sent silly memes to go on each others' spirits up.

Toasting luck, laughter and a game that became a 'lifeline'

Story by Karin Brulliard. Video by Jonathan Baran and Allie Caren.

New flowers basked in pots outside Wendy Elliott's Northern California house. The bill of fare table was set up in her sunny great room. Four champagne splits chilled in a bowl of ice on the kitchen counter, a canteen for each of the women who were nearly to gather for their first in-person mah-jongg game in 396 days.

The women, all in their 60s, weren't out of exercise. When the coronavirus shutdowns came shortly after their final get-together on March 12, 2020, they decided to try playing online. Stuck within their homes across the South Bay, each rigged up 2 devices — 1 to play a computerized version of the game to which they all professed a level of addiction, and some other to axle the Zoom coming together that would permit them to see each other and conversation.

'Are yous kidding me?'

Valerie Brachulis was the surprise guest in the back seat of the auto when Emma Rice, her v-yr-old granddaughter, was finished with school on April viii in Prescott Valley, Ariz.

(Jennifer Rice)

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Story by Ariana Eunjung Cha.

Tanya Aguilar had the first-twenty-four hours-of-school nerves. It had been 391 days since Sherwood Loftier School held in-person classes, and Aguilar was so excited to be back she had barely slept.

Food reunites a family unit, merely with a 'missing seat at the table'

Story by Brittany Shammas. Photos past Salwan Georges.

Mo Baydoun arrived at his parents' house about forty minutes before dusk, walking inside to the odor of his mother's cooking wafting through the air.

In the dining room, dishes heaped with Lebanese food covered almost every inch of a long table. Later on a lonely Ramadan a year earlier, Mo and his newly vaccinated relatives were finally together for iftar, the evening meal that breaks a 24-hour interval-long fast during the holy month.

'Do I get to kiss you, too?'

Dave Greenstone, 12, reunited with his grandmother Barbara Rose in San Diego on March 27.

(Paul Greenstone)

After a trying year, feeling the warm embrace of family

Story by Karin Brulliard. Photos by Marking Felix.

Bec Roldan's jitters started on the aeroplane from Michigan. The tears began to flow during what felt similar an unending walk through the Houston airdrome. The running started in a corridor shut to an leave, where Bec's sister, mom and dad were waiting in the distance, arms set up to offer long-awaited hugs.

For months, Bec had gotten a bit weepy fifty-fifty thinking about those hugs. It had been a trying year, one when comforting embraces — the kind that come so easy in Bec'southward close family — had become dangerous because of disease and impossible because of distance.

Catching up on ii years of missed card games and tea parties

Story by Allie Caren. Video by Laura Helseth and Allie Caren.

Laura Helseth last saw her family, including her 88-year-sometime Memaw, 2 years ago. On April 8 she boarded a flight from Orlando to Kansas City, Mo., where she was greeted by her parents and v-yr-sometime nephew. The boy held a sign reading, "Auntie Laura, We've waited a LOOONNNGGGGGG time."

Helseth sneaked into her Memaw'southward new apartment as a surprise and reconnected with her siblings. In that location were birthday donuts, tea parties, early-morning time coffee chats and card games. After four days, Helseth was exhausted — but not ready for the visit to be over.

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An engagement, a closed border and a relationship put to the test

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(Dwight Borden)

Story by Brittany Shammas.

Kristen Hawley pulled up to the drome final, and Dwight Borden leaped into the passenger seat of her Toyota Scion. They threw their arms effectually each other and held on for and then long, people in the cars behind them started honking. Neither of them cared.

"They tin await a 2d; they can bulldoze around us," Borden thought. "This is our minute."

'Happy birthday, little boy!'

Arlo, Vivian and Sebastian Henriksen reunited with their grandparents, Linda and Tom Coughlin, in Littleton, Colo., on March 9.

(Linda Coughlin)

A surprise sixty years in the making

Story past William Wan.

Dan Sievers spent months plotting an epic reunion with his parents, who are celebrating their 60th nuptials ceremony this month: He would fly from Baltimore to Big Bear, Calif., and surprise them.

Dan's father begins every twenty-four hour period with a walk. Sievers idea he would await for his father to come up outside and underplay the moment for comedic consequence, maybe with an offhand comment similar, "What's for breakfast?" Just Sievers made a big miscalculation.

About this story

Project editing past Karin Brulliard, Katie Zezima, Nick Kirkpatrick, Allie Caren, Nicki DeMarco, Dee Swann, Bronwen Latimer, Lucio Villa and Ann Gerhart. Re-create editing by Shannon Croom. Additional production past Kanyakrit Vongkiatkajorn, Sarah Dunton and Courtney Kan. Design and development by Emily Wright. Additional development by Lucio Villa.

Topper visuals by Kymberly Harris, Bonny Blair, Salwan Georges/The Washington Post, Alayna Hayes, Niki Dowell via Storyful, Dwight Borden, Scott McIntyre for The Washington Post, Halle Cho, Cassie Thompson, Daniel Acker for The Washington Mail service, and Jonathan Baran/The Washington Post.

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Source: https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/interactive/2021/reunions-covid/

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