Sep 01, 2020

Lockdown: for many it’s a lot more than boredom and fatigue

The sky is blue outside my office window today. It’s slightly obscured by the airconditioning unit that sits on the roof of our house but I like that I can see it. A reminder of a world beyond these four walls.

It’s 30 days since we began Stage 4 lockdowns. It’s been 53 days since we slipped back into Stage 3 lockdowns. It’s been a season for numbers, counting cases, deaths, community transmission. But I also find myself counting the things that I wouldn’t normally care to count during a usual year. Dinner dates with my husband – one. Swim lessons for my son – two.

The days slip into each other. It seems cliched to call it a hamster wheel but that’s how it feels. Unpunctuated by the events that normally break the monotony of our day-to-day – coffee with a girlfriend, a birthday celebration, a short trip away – time begins to blur.

We are all looking a little shabby too. Hair that needs dying, nails that need filing, and slippers on my feet for the upteenth day in a row. Even my son who normally has short back and sides has grown his hair out. It suits him.

I try to take joy in the little things. A cherry blossom branch, blown down in last week’s storm that now sits in a vase on my dining table. Takeaway meals from fancy restaurants that wouldn’t normally deliver. Not taking for granted that I live with my husband and son, people I actually enjoy spending time with.

I am fortunate. I know that. I get to work from home, live in a little bubble in my little home protected from the coronavirus that has infected so many of our aged care community. 

I’m not concerned about dying, whether I will be moved to a hospital if I’m infected. I don’t have to worry if I’ll bring COVID-19 home from work to my family. Or if I’ll be unwittingly turning up to care for someone who is sick.

As we feel the aches and pains of lockdown, let’s take a moment to remember those who live and work in aged care. Those who are dealing with more than just boredom and fatigue.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  1. I found a project that kept me occupied artistically & mentally alert for several months & that was digging out a complete dolls house kit that I have had in a box for nearly 10 years. I had also bought quite a bit of second hand dolls house furniture over the years for when I got around to doing the project. Well, this was the best time, I made a terrible mess with painting, wallpapering & gluing etc. but it didn’t matter because no-one was visiting. I decorated & furnished it in the late Victorian period & have learnt a lot about antique furniture styles & furnishings. I dressed up plain chandeliers into lovely crystal ones using old jewellery & shopping at Spotlight for crystal beads. I still have a lot of work to go, but I love it & I know it would never have happened if there was no Covid virus around & I would have sold the dolls house eventually, having never completed it. I am a retired RN & am 75 years of age.

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

Chief Medical Officer writes to aged care providers about coronavirus

Dear colleagues, I am writing to update you on the Coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak and to outline the Commonwealth’s current and future support for the central role you are playing in our national response. I thank you for your efforts so far and encourage you to maintain your vigilance in assisting to prevent further transmission of... Read More

Window Therapy: Proving Laughter Is The Best Medicine For Lockdown

As a child growing up in Sydney’s inner west, the country values of Maurie Voisey-Barlin’s father would have more influence on his life than he could ever have imagined. “My dad was from the country. He grew up in Taree and he used to just stop and talk to everybody, so I guess when I... Read More

Soon you’ll need to be vaccinated to enjoy shops, cafes and events – but what about the staff?

The New South Wales and Victorian governments have released detailed roadmaps outlining how they’ll ease restrictions across Sydney and Melbourne. Read More
Advertisement
Exit mobile version