Certs for me can be a net negative - if you have one, I expect you to know shit. An answer of “I don’t know, but here’s my take on it” is a good answer in my book, because we can’t all know everything and I’m generally more interested in attitude and thought process than pure knowledge. But that changes when you are certified and brag about it on your resume. That bar goes higher, for no apparent gain to be honest. Example: if you have “certified AWS Foo Bar” and you don’t know what a vpc is, that’s a red flag for me. It wouldn’t be otherwise, even if you had AWS experience listed, because maybe you were just working with ECS and didn’t need to know jack shit about vpcs.
About the only situation in which a cert is a plus is when you have close to zero relevant experience. But all of the above still applies.
Not OP, but same situation. I usually don’t, but my mother who lives far from us does every day. We take a lot of photos and videos, she gets to watch them and she’s up to speed on our kids’ lives, can talk to them about stuff they did today, etc. We feel like it lets her be a part of their lives in a way.
Then you have that Google Photos feature where you get automatically created mini albums like “they grow up so fast” or “now vs then”, it will compile a couple of photos from 7, 6, 5, … Years ago and we watch those religiously, often coming back to the particular event from which some photo is. We can spend an entire evening going through older photos like that.