The cineplex may be irreversibly dead, but the drive-in with its retro charm and fresh air may have found a way back into our hearts.
Open your windows, step out on your balconies and porches, and cheer with appreciation and love for the dedicated and brave Canadian health care workers, every night at 7 p.m.
The lack of face-to-face communication, social isolation, fear, and anxiety are taking their toll on our emotional health and putting a strain on our relationships.
My children and I may be stuck in semi-permanent staycation mode, while their father holds down his job from a messy kitchen office, taking conference calls in the master bedroom.
Gather around the screens, everyone, here are some great ways to leave home and see new things without actually breaking that shelter-in-place order.
During recent press conferences, Trump has said that handshakes may be a thing of the past. It behooves us to find some alternatives.
After my daughter was exposed to a person with a confirmed case of COVID-19, my doctor instructed me to keep a six-foot distance from my little girl at all times.
Even though it's so hard to look forward, we can still look back. Keep up the quality family time by revisiting these 90s classics.
Catching up with an old friend who is sheltering-in-place on an Army base in Fort Rucker, Alabama.
As hospitals in North America are either overwhelmed or on the brink of it, pregnant women are taking note of the shortage of facilities and trying to make alternative birth plans.
For the parents of the 1.1 million school children in New York City, home school has officially begun this week. But is it feasible?
As it ravages our society and wrecks havoc on the global economy, here are a few ways that the virus will change our contemporary lives for good.
As we look to new methods, medicines, and techniques to contain the pervasive coronavirus pandemic, we should reconsider past practices.
While some areas experience shortages, others go on as normal. Will things stay this way or are there more changes to come?
California is a weird and wonderful place. But it’s changed significantly since the coronavirus started dictating all of our public policy.