Waikato Times

Now’s the time to be getting creative

- Grant Stevenson Grant Stevenson ran a communicat­ions and events company in Wellington.

In 1968, the Wahine survivors, plucked from the raging sea, sang together in their liferafts. All in the same boat, they sang the songs they knew. It brought them together.

The Christchur­ch earthquake­s mobilised the student army, the mosque attacks brought people together in large numbers. In such situations, people congregate, hug and get up close and personal.

The opposite is solitary confinemen­t. Forget togetherne­ss, you’re on your own. Solitary is punishment. Isolation is a negative term – except during pandemics.

But strangely, as more and more of us go into self-isolation, the coming months bring exciting opportunit­ies.

We have a choice: we can treat home as confinemen­t or take advantage of it as ‘‘re-definement’’. We can change how we see ourselves from being isolated units into a cohesive community taking action.

The campaigns to ‘‘keep it out’’ and then ‘‘stamp it out’’ are taking shape. Next, we need an additional campaign to maximise the opportunit­ies the on-screen university we all have at home brings us.

Just as we gear up for the health emergency, so too we can gear up for the biggest chance for self-developmen­t and passive recreation since the invention of the internet. Never before in the history of being sick at home has so much been available to so many that’s so new.

Think about the things we did on holiday with the kids in the rain. Out came the cards, the games, the activities. Too tame by today’s standards, but now the whole world has been caught by the net and served up on screen. For some, the period of so-called isolation would require entertainm­ent only. Downton

Abbey every day, perhaps?

Others could learn French, start that novel, teach their children origami. The music we never made time for can reverberat­e through suburbia. Meditation anyone? No? Then how about the best movies ever to woo the alone-crowd. And we can do much more than that.

When commerce emptied out of Christchur­ch after the quakes, the artists moved in. Now, as markets teeter and businesses fail, we need our creative people to colonise our paused lives with fresh ideas. We need to avoid feeling like victims, and take control of time at home.

The Government has a role to kick this off. Campaigns such as Dig For Victory and Keep Calm and Carry On were government-initiated but were quickly adopted by the community.

So Jacinda, bring the best brains from the creative and broadcasti­ng sectors together. We need their ideas and we need screen time to communicat­e them to every home in the country.

We need everyone to think creatively about using their time in self-isolation so they gain power and ownership over the situation they find themselves in. Instead of feeling down, they can be empowered to redefine how they want to be, what they value and how they want to treat others. Clarity could begin at home.

The coming months will be frightenin­g and confusing, with the prospect of living day to day with no work or social contact to distract us from our own thoughts. Creative use of the broadcasti­ng media to build meaningful daily living during selfisolat­ion will be as important as the other steps we are taking to stamp on the bug.

Can we achieve that? Well, the chance is upon us now.

 ?? ABIGAIL DOUGHERTY/STUFF ?? There’s no need to be bored in self-isolation. We could be using the time for selfimprov­ement.
ABIGAIL DOUGHERTY/STUFF There’s no need to be bored in self-isolation. We could be using the time for selfimprov­ement.

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