COVID 19 they’re calling it – 19 for the year it first raised its
ugly head. But this virus has all but destroyed 2020 – the first half of it at least.
Or has it?
As the world practices self-isolation and social distancing there
are stories of people in Wuhan, we’re it all began, saying that they enjoy
being at home with friends and family and would prefer not to go back to the normal
routine of work and busyness. They say the skies over China haven’t been this
blue for years. An online colleague posted photographs of an unusually smog free Haifa - Israel's main port. A friend in Berlin is enjoying a comparatively pressure free life
with no work commitments and is riding his bike through forests and doing yoga
and feeling physically and spiritually more whole.
Me? I was watching something on the UK on television
and was immediately conscious of the fact that I couldn't just go there if I
wanted to. All my adult life I've had this strange definition of freedom. I
think sometime in my early 20s I realised that all you needed was about $3000
in the bank and you could get to anywhere on the planet at a moment’s notice. I have consequently always had that 3G in the
bank! Now obviously I haven't spent my whole life travelling, but knowing that
I could get to any point on the planet anytime was an integral aspect of how I
felt about being alive. Now for the first time in my adult life that freedom
has been taken away. As some wise person noted, many of us are for the first
time feeling the kind of oppression that many endure every day of their life. Can’t
leave town? Go interstate? First World problems. Situation normal for millions…..
I’ve decided to adopt the Alcoholics
Anonymous mantra of ‘one day at a time’ for as long as this period of societal
shutdown lasts. I do miss getting out of town, jumping on planes, seeing grandchildren
and playing live music together, but there’s no point dwelling on what cannot
be. It is indeed a time to reflect, write, clean the bookshelves, and live a slower
life. Make it a daily quest to recognise something beautiful – easily done if
you live near nature.
On the macro level it's already a cliché
that this pandemic will change the world forever, and it is highly likely that
some things will change forever, and that will be fascinating to track as we
re-emerge back into something like normal life. Will we shake hands less? Will less
people fly? Will there be fewer airlines? Will the forced switch to online
education realise some unexpected advantages that will be preserved in a post-Corona
world? Will many more people work remotely? Will the standard work meeting go online
forever? Will we as a species simply spend less time together socially out of fear
of further infection?
Right now I feel fine. Like a good little frog adjusting to the gradual increase in temperature I have found a new daily routine that occasionally has me smiling as I realise that I’m quite enjoying myself. But I’m fortunate to live in a house with a garden; I have a car and can drive to any number of beautiful places and go for my 'government sanctioned daily walk'; for many years I have sought out interesting places for photo walks where there are few people - social distancing in public has been part of my daily life for a long time. Walking on spacious beaches, expansive parks, riverside tracks and even empty industrial vistas are all within easy reach.
Myponga, Moonta, and Mumbai can all wait
– they’ll all still be there when this is all over. I just hope I will be as
well.
2 comments:
Michael, thank you for your thoughts. Much of it resonated with me. I feel very privileged - a pleasant house and garden, proximity to the beach where I walk at the water's edge each morning, kind neighbours, a facility with online communication, an ability to live in the 'now', one day at a time, a gift from the time when Bill's life was changing so dramatically. So, yes, 'in here' is comfortable. But I also know grim things are happening 'out there'. Many of the reflections people send me see this as a time for reviewing, revising and regenerating. I find them heartening and inspiring. If we believe a new world is possible, how do we get from here to there? What is the best contribution I/we can make?
Ah - you always ask the easy questions Delia :)
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