WESTLAKE VILLAGE, Calif. – After nearly a year of being trapped in pandemic isolation, some people just want to pick up a sledgehammer and smash something to smithereens. “That felt good,” sweating insurance executive Josh Elohim said after reducing a computer printer and other stuff to piles of rubble.
It reminded him of the workout he used to get chopping wood when he lived in Upstate New York. Since last winter, Elohim and his wife, Michelle, have been isolated at home with four kids ranging in age from 4 to 17.
They needed an outlet, and so they headed to the office of marriage and family therapist Yashica Budde, who outfitted them with protective gloves, full body suits and face coverings that resemble fencing masks.