Rocio Rebollar Gomez’s life now might look familiar to those who have been staying at home during the pandemic. She spends most of her time in the Tijuana house, where she rents a room and tries to keep her small business alive through phone calls and social media. She only interacts with her children and grandchildren over video chats and Zoom. She spent her birthday in December on FaceTime. But Rebollar Gomez is not staying at home — at least not in the place she thinks of as home. And her life in 2020 and beyond would likely have looked like this even without the pandemic.