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âWe feel lost in timeâ: COVID-19 transforms teen milestones
Kids have had to turn their losses into opportunities, forging new traditions with friends.
(Rich-Joseph Facun | The New York Times) Julia Weber, 18, is photographed in her room in Athens, Ohio, on April 23, 2021. Weber, who had spent much of high school looking forward to senior year, joins other kids who have turned their losses of missed Sweet Sixteens, proms and graduation ceremonies into opportunities for new traditions with friends.
By Taylor Trudon | The New York Times
  | May 9, 2021, 4:20 p.m.
Growing up, Carley Ebbenga was used to not having big birthday parties. Since her birthday falls right in the middle of winter break, most kids were out of town so she stuck to small celebrations. But for her Sweet Sixteen, Ebbenga, who lives in Romeoville, Illinois, a suburb of Chicago, wanted to do something special. She envisioned a trip into the city with a few friends where they would eat a nice dinne
‘We Feel Lost in Time’: Covid Transforms Teen Milestones
As Sweet Sixteens, proms and graduation ceremonies were disrupted or canceled, kids turned their losses into opportunities for new traditions with friends.
Julia Weber, 18, of Athens, Ohio, had spent much of high school looking forward to senior year. “Now we’re doing school from our bedrooms with none of the fun,” she said. Credit.Rich-Joseph Facun for The New York Times
By Taylor Trudon
May 3, 2021
Growing up, Carley Ebbenga was used to not having big birthday parties. Since her birthday falls right in the middle of winter break, most kids were out of town so she stuck to small celebrations. But for her Sweet Sixteen, Ms. Ebbenga, who lives in Romeoville, Ill., a suburb of Chicago, wanted to do something special. She envisioned a trip into the city with a few friends where they would eat a nice dinner and stay up late dancing in their hotel rooms.