Andrey. Polina Soyref, portrait photographer
Andrey. Polina Soyref, portrait photographer

At first, it was difficult: they closed the daycare center, the kid’s at home, my wife is working from home, I’m working from home. My daughter’s five, she’s used to spending her energy at the daycare. At home, she can’t, there’s not enough entertainment, we’re busy, we need to work, she’s crying every half an hour; by evening, you’re almost going mad. We lived this way for about a month; after that, it somehow settled, or we got used to it.

When you live for many years in one particular rhythm, and then it breaks, you need to find new things to lean on, you need to understand what you do in the mornings and what—in the evenings. It was unusual; it’s not a vacation when you take time off—no, you need to build up again all of your daily routine life.

Small things: you need to cook at home, it takes time; you need to be cleaning all the time—because there are three people at home; you need to do something for sport because you can’t gain so many kilos. All in all, a month isn’t that bad; we got into this rhythm and felt that we could live like this.

Andrey. Polina Soyref, portrait photographer

Of course, personal space disappeared completely. I compensated by saying in the evening: “That’s it. Bye! I’m going for a walk. I’ll be back in an hour or two”. You need to be alone, to change your surroundings, you always need some personal space and time. But you cannot go far in one hour, the paths for walks start repeating, so I started looking for new music and podcasts. The sameness at home demands variety somewhere else, some change in surroundings.

I always thought I was a very home-loving person who handled routine easily, but even I found my limits.

Andrey. Polina Soyref, portrait photographer

I thought that the quarantine would underline and enhance what already was before: good relationships can become better, bad ones—worse. In our family, I guess, they’re average: everything remained as it was.

When the lockdown ends, I want to keep our evening movie sessions, our morning walks, and bike rides. But there are more things that I want to change: I want to spend more quality time with my daughter; when the quarantine ends, it should be easier to fix, to go to a museum or somewhere else.

Andrey. Polina Soyref, portrait photographer
Andrey. Polina Soyref, portrait photographer

“Tell me your story”, virtual exhibition

Andrey. Polina Soyref, portrait photographer

Arvo

41, engineer
Andrey. Polina Soyref, portrait photographer

Pjotr

34, sound engineer
Andrey. Polina Soyref, portrait photographer

Maria

31, choreographer, teacher, performer, research fellow
Andrey. Polina Soyref, portrait photographer

Vasilina

31, mother of two
Andrey. Polina Soyref, portrait photographer

Marina

37, scientist, geneticist
Andrey. Polina Soyref, portrait photographer

Dmitry

32, engineer
Andrey. Polina Soyref, portrait photographer

Roman

31, software engineer
Andrey. Polina Soyref, portrait photographer

Nastya

28, actress
Andrey. Polina Soyref, portrait photographer

Tanya

23
Andrey. Polina Soyref, portrait photographer

Kate

29, food photographer, podcaster
Andrey. Polina Soyref, portrait photographer

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Andrey. Polina Soyref, portrait photographer

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Andrey. Polina Soyref, portrait photographer

Teet

50, engineer, Master of Science
Andrey. Polina Soyref, portrait photographer

Mattis

28, software engineer
Andrey. Polina Soyref, portrait photographer

Raimi

27, 3D artist
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