I think this has been part of what
@noodlehair for instance has been at pains to emphasise, though at times perhaps more forcefully than he intends to.
I feel like lockdown has been lived in a very different manner by different groups. For instance, within my circles of friends (who are obviously all distinguished people...though I think I've butchered that particular joke
), most of them are doctors or nurses, with cast-iron job security or professionals who have jobs they can do quite competently from home. They're people who may go on holidays, eat out yada yada and for them, lockdown has been actually quite easy on their finances, especially those who can work from home. Their salaries are the same, just no longer spending as much so they're actually saving more money than usual currently. Their kids are spending time with their families, watching online lessons on good laptops with good internet connections. Generally, they're in supportive home environments. Etc etc. I suspect that many of the people advocating for the strictest, most indefinite lockdowns etc on here tend to be in this camp themselves.
There are of course many many others in the UK though who aren't living that lifestyle. They may have been let go or furloughed, with severe worry as to whether their job will still exist in a few months time. They may have been worrying about how to feed their children without school vouchers. How they will feed their kids after furlough ends. What if there aren't enough devices to go round for the family for online lessons? What if they have limited internet speeds? What if they don't have their own space to study in and have to share it with 2-3 other loud kids?
There's already evidence that, even moving away from these stark extremes, kids from richer households are doing much more education per day currently than poorer kids.
Then of course we may have the kids who are in abusive households, without their usual outlet from this.
I think it is very important to not forget about these latter groups.
Also, surely if you're supposed to be taking your GCSEs and you're not sure when they'll happen or how months without proper education will impact on your ability to take them, that's quite a big stressor?