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Daisy Davis was meant to go travelling, but instead made sandwiches in a local cafe. Photograph: David Yeo/The Guardian
âThis isnât how my gap year was meant to beâ: how Covid turned young peopleâs lives upside down
Daisy Davis was meant to go travelling, but instead made sandwiches in a local cafe. Photograph: David Yeo/The Guardian
Some have missed out on adventure, others on university places â but as well as turmoil, the pandemic has thrown up some surprising consolations
Sat 8 May 2021 07.00 EDT
When Daisy Davis imagined her gap year, she pictured global adventure. Building schools as a volunteer in Tanzania or Ghana, perhaps, Interrailing through Europe, or travelling in Thailand. Finally 18 and with a year of blissful freedom before university, Daisy presumed that the world was there to be explored.
The B.C. Supreme Court decision, handed down April 23, but released on Monday, describes three adults, Olivia, Eliza and Bill whose names were anonymized by the court living together in a committed polyamorous relationship since 2017. When Eliza and Bill conceived a child in 2018, it was agreed that Olivia would be involved in the child’s life as a “full parent.” In naming themselves a “triad,” the three adults described themselves as having an equal relationship with one another and the child. “Olivia went as far as inducing lactation so she would also be able to feed Clarke when he was born,” wrote Madam Justice Sandra Wilkinson, referring to the anonymized child. “In fact, Olivia was the first parent to feed Clarke after he was born.”