Harry McAvoy: Meet me in Cincinnati…
It would be a long journey, which I suspected would end badly. The American border had been closed for almost two years due to the pandemic, when the Bride decided she was going home to visit her mother.
Students hopeful semblance of ‘normal’ will return
AnnaMaria Amato is hopeful that a normal graduation ceremony might be possible at the end of the 2021-22 school year.
Glen Argan: Personal liberty, yes, but common good comes first
Today, I phoned to book a haircut only to find that Pat, my stylist of the past two years, had died of the delta variant of COVID. When I last saw him in late August, he looked fit and healthy as ever. I phoned back a month later to set my next haircut appointment but was told Pat was off work because he was having back problems. He died shortly after that call.
Pandemic takes toll on charitable giving
Fewer donors, less money, more demands. Charities of all kinds are caught in a pandemic-powered vice that can only be cured with more giving.
Art project unmasks students’ talents
Hundreds of student-designed masks, photos, drawings and poems were on display through a series of digital projections across Toronto in late October to celebrate art and building community in a time of COVID-19.
Out of the Cold under COVID restrictions
Out of the Cold still isn’t out of the woods as the global pandemic meanders through its fourth wave in Ontario.
Money root of pandemic mental health issues
You don’t have to tell the counsellors and therapists working at Catholic Family Services, Archdiocese of Toronto that money — or the lack of it — can have a severe effect on one’s mental health.
Peter Stockland: Individual conscience a COVID casualty
At the end of a recent long run during which the state of the world is a staple of the conversational smorgasbord, my running partner asked a pressing perspicacious question: When, exactly, was conscience transferred from individual to collective ownership?
Gerry Turcotte: Celebrating the good born from a crisis
Necessity, as they say, is the mother of invention. Actually, it was Plato who argued that “our need will be the real creator,” a comment that eventually morphed into our more familiar adage.
Dealing with grief in changing world
As restaurants, theatres and stadiums open up again, and as daily COVID case counts dwindle across most of the country, the Canadian Grief Alliance estimates that as many as 4.5 million of us are grieving one or more of nearly half-a-million deaths we have experienced in the last 20 months, nearly 29,000 of them directly from COVID.
COVID precaution kills OFSAA dreams
For Sarah Martin, hopes to watch her daughter Kyla compete for a medal at the Ontario high school cross-country championships this fall have been dashed once again due to COVID-19.
Speaking Out: Nuanced approach to mental well-being
I was scrolling through my news feed on Twitter last week when I stumbled upon a quite shocking meme.
ShareLife helps Rosalie Hall through pandemic waves
Reducing service to any significant degree is not an option for Rosalie Hall despite the pandemic threat it has been under with the rest of the world for the past year and a half.
Resiliency tested in third pandemic school year
As students returned to school this month, they were confronted by the challenges of yet another scholastic year marred by the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic.
The need for retreat never greater
Given the mental and emotional impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on society over the past year-and-a-half, for many, spiritual retreat may be more essential than ever.