Our home is a physical and perhaps emotional comfort zone where we can heal and recover enough to address all our problems the next morning.
But when problems never change and every new morning reminds us of the dangerous situation we are facing, home becomes a place where we should feel secure and comfortable.
We shouldn't feel frustrated for our temporary lack of mobility.
It seems to me wiser to take advantage of this circumstance to develop an even deeper and more positive relationship with our home, its spaces and everything it can offer to us.
If we cannot take trips, we may travel inside ourselves and communicate better with the person or the people who share our everyday life.