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Elena's avatar

We had evening plans and our sitter had a family emergency and needed to cancel. Instead of telling my husband to go without me (my first instinct), I texted my sister-in-law for help. She and her 7yo came over and had movie night at our house while we went out.

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Sam Elder's avatar

I picked up my daughter from preschool on Friday and let her hang out on the playground for an hour while some of her friends' parents came to pick their own kids up. Those that also lingered on the playground I awkwardly sidled up to and mentioned that my daughter has been wanting to have "my friends come my house" and exchanged numbers. We're now in the process of figuring out a good day for playdates with three separate classmates, having already lined up one with a fourth for this coming weekend.

"How do you coordinate all of that?" people ask. Google Calendar, a sprawling spreadsheet, apps script automations, and Remember the Milk for task management, in short. One tab of our giant spreadsheet gives me several handy lists of available meals I can copy-paste into WhatsApp, for instance. A Google form allows me to automatically process the decision to schedule a meal and set all the appropriate reminders for myself in Remember the Milk. And it's fairly straightforward to vibe-code any additional improvements I need using AI.

I know a longing for mutual dependence and deeper relationships can often be backwards-looking, nostalgically recalling or imagining a time when life was more communal. But it doesn't have to be! I personally want my kids to have a more connected life than I had growing up, and sometimes that involves using tools that my parents never could have.

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