Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - April 13, 2020, Winnipeg, Manitoba
C M Y K PAGE B4
BUSINESS
BUSINESS EDITOR: SHANE MINKIN 204-697-7292 ? CITY.DESK@FREEPRESS.MB.CA ? WINNIPEGFREEPRESS.COM
B4 MONDAY APRIL 13, 2020
Home, hectic, home
In one weekend, couple welcomes daughter, moves in to house on the eve of pandemic lockdown
I T was 11:30 at night on March 26, and Lauren Kroeker-Lee was going into labour.
She and her husband, Geung, ar-
rived at the hospital, where they were
greeted by security guards. They
went through some pre-screening
tests, "which, as you can imagine
with someone in labour, feels a little
unnecessary in the moment," Geung
said.
"It's a weird time to be welcoming a
new human into the world," he said,
referring to the fact that the world is
in a perpetual state of anxiety and
lockdown due to COVID-19.
It's also a weird time to move in to
a new house. For the Kroeker-Lees,
both events arrived with a startling
congruence.
In January, with the new baby on
the way, they decided to look for a
new house to match. The one-bedroom
apartment the couple had lived in
inside a Honeyman Avenue triplex was
already starting to feel small: their
two-year-old daughter, Sula, had grown
up there just fine, but for two children,
the space felt constricting.
Geung, a music teacher and choral
director, and Lauren, a coordinator
with Resource Assistance for Youth,
didn't have to look far. A few blocks
over they found a gem: a century-old
two-and-a-half storey charmer with a
blue and white exterior, a big kitchen, a
large main floor for Sula and the baby
to explore, and lots of natural light.
There was even a room on the top floor
perfect for entertaining out of town
visitors.
The couple put in an offer, and got
the house. They took possession during
the first week of February, and some
key renovations began, like adding a
functioning bathroom, removing knob
and tube wiring, and putting in new
drywall.
"We looked at the calendar, and knew
our moving day would have to be a
weekend," Geung said. The weekend
of Easter would be impossible, so they
circled a date on the week before:
March 29, one day after their baby
daughter was due to arrive. A friend
was also set to move into their apart-
ment April 1, so the 29th would have to
work.
It wasn't too crazy: if Lauren went
into labour, a crew of 20 or so family
members and friends could make the
move a smooth one, Geung recalled
thinking.
Obviously, a few things soon
changed.
As the realities of the pandemic set
in, the couple got in touch with their
personal moving crew: if you don't feel
comfortable doing this, we totally un-
derstand. They reached out to moving
companies, who at that point couldn't
say with certainty if they'd even be
open come the end of the month.
"It's a typical Wolseley house, but it
was not a typical Wolseley move," said
Geung.
Then, Lauren went into labour.
"Thankfully, it went smoothly," she
said. "It was a little stressful at the
time," she added - it turned out their
daughter was breached. But at 12:36
a.m., 36 minutes after she was due,
Lena arrived, weighing seven pounds,
12 ounces.
While the outside world, and even
the outside wards near the women's
hospital, contended with the stress of
COVID-19, the Kroeker-Lees held their
newborn and took the next day in Lau-
ren's room to recover and relax.
"We had this strangely serene ex-
perience," Lauren said. "It was eerily
quiet, and the experience (of being
there) was oddly relaxing."
Then on Sunday, after the big arrival
came the big move.
The Kroeker-Lees drove straight
from the hospital to their new home.
Their original crew of 20 dwindled to
seven or eight, and each person who
helped them move in had preemptively
self-isolated in anticipation of their
need.
During the move, people kept their
distance - a hard thing to do when an
adorable newborn is nearby.
Lauren spent most of the moving day
in bed with Lena on the third floor, in a
little isolated suite her parents had set
up before the big day.
"It shows how important community
and family support is," Lauren said.
"We really do not take for granted that
not everyone has that kind of support
readily available."
After the move, the crew - which
included in-laws and siblings - went
their separate ways, and each began
isolating again. "The move was this
weird little blip where everyone came
together," Lauren said.
Now, the family is riding out the iso-
lation in their humble new abode. Both
Geung and Lauren are on parental
leave, and Sula is home from day-
care, so the bigger stomping grounds
couldn't have come soon enough.
Had the big day arrived a week
later, it could have been a different
story, Geung said. Who knows whether
anyone would have been able to help,
he wonders.
There's still some work to be done,
he said. But rather than tackling every-
thing all at once, the family is setting
small, achievable goals. "Sometimes
we get them done, and sometimes we
don't," he said. 'But that's OK."
"Overall," he said. "We are just very
happy to be home."
ben.waldman@freepress.mb.ca
BEN WALDMAN
'It's a typical Wolseley house, but it was not a typical Wolseley move.'
MIKAELA MACKENZIE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
Lauren and Geung Kroeker-Lee with their two-year-old, Sula, and newborn, Lena, by their new house in Wolseley.
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