Creating the Sacred Hour
The Scott family home in St. Clair was a postcard of uptown affluence. Bougainvillea cascaded over high white walls, and the wide veranda, with its view of the Northern Range, had once been the stage for endless family dramas. Elliot and Minerva Scott, both successful, he in finance, she in corporate law. They had envisioned a life there of polished chaos, filled with the laughter of their two daughters, Lily (9) and Zoe (7). The change was osmotic. It began with necessity: Elliot’s international clients demanded constant attention; Minerva’s cases required late-night reviews. The sleek devices were tools, then lifelines. The family’s shared spaces became a quiet symphony of notifications. Dinner on the veranda, once sacred, transformed. Elliot’s eyes flickered between his daughters and the financial ticker. Minerva, nodding at a story about school, discreetly cleared emails under the table. Lily, seeking a reaction to a painted picture, would find only the top of her mother’s hea...