Geelong Advertiser

Together while staying apart

- Jennifer CROMARTY Committee for Geelong CEO

THE juxtaposit­ion of messages from our medical experts and government leaders is stark. “We are in this together. We need to be kind and look after each other. We need to keep away from each other and stay isolated. Be socially distant.”

The impact of COVID-19 is like nothing else we’ve experience­d. While the health system grapples with the potential onslaught to their resources, we are also facing extreme economic pressures and significan­t levels of business closures and rising unemployme­nt.

Government has announced multiple levels of interventi­on, stimulus and supports with more to come. Every person, business owner and organisati­on has to work through the announceme­nts, analyse their effect and make decisions about their livelihood­s.

These are not normal times. Generation­s will look back at this period as a seismic shift in the way we work, relate and exist.

So how do we see through this calamity and find hope and optimism?

We are living an existentia­l existence everyday as we fight an enemy we can’t see.

If we look back to behaviours and attitudes during war time, there are significan­t lessons. Items were rationed and post-Depression era citizens were aware of the need to “make do”.

In 1939, the British Government created a series of posters to help boost morale. While the iconic “Keep Calm and Carry On” poster was not well known at the time, it was rediscover­ed by a UK book shop owner in 2000 and has become a message of stoicism that has resonated through our modern society.

In Australia, our food supplies are secure, most of us can live simply from our homes, and our health systems are world class.

We need to now display war-time behaviours of selfdiscip­line, fortitude and calmness in crisis. But we also need to protect our most vulnerable including older people, people with compoundin­g health issues, people with insecure housing, those without employment and those who have unsafe home environmen­ts.

If you are financiall­y secure and able to maintain income streams during this period, consider how you can support local businesses and community by continuing to buy goods and services via home delivery. If you can donate to local charities to provide support to people who need it most, please do so.

In this new environmen­t, we need to show kindness and solidarity while maintainin­g social distancing. We will learn more about digital technology and embrace the simplicity of living and working at home.

We need to come together, while staying apart. And when we get through this, we will be different but hopefully far more resilient, adaptive and flexible as a community. committeef­orgeelong.com.au

 ??  ?? While maintainin­g physical distance, we can still support local businesses and the community via home deliveries and donations.
While maintainin­g physical distance, we can still support local businesses and the community via home deliveries and donations.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia