Blog 10: A new way of living
Life after Corona
However you may look at the current Corona virus episode that is affecting us all, you cannot escape the fact that it forces us to reflect on our lives and (trusting it will pass shortly) I would urge us to treat it as a wake-up call to see how we can do things better.
Of course there are those who may liken it to some sort of plague sent by a higher force as a punishment for inaction, in relation to how we are treating our planet. After all the youth have been crying for years that we need to take action on climate change and the elders have been slow to act. So when a virus comes that targets the old and seems not to affect the young, a virus that forces people to stop flying, not to travel to the office, but to work from home and to hold video conferences rather than mass gatherings involving travel from further afield, one might see how such an opinion can be formed.
For me I like to look at the positives, however dark the days get. I like the saying that ‘every cloud has a silver lining’. So let us see how these events could make us reflect on how we go about our business and to work on how we can improve things in the future.
I am old enough to have seen 5 very different decades. When I was younger travel was a thing of wonder, including the journey itself, and a very special thing that individuals and families (save for the odd serial intrepid traveler writing his travel memoirs, or mapping remote hideaways) did quite rarely (certainly not more than once a year at tops). They brought back unique presents from unique locations around the world and gave a taste of the exotic to their friends and families through such gifts and the slide show of photos that followed for months afterwards.
On the work front people tended to work in the towns they lived in and certainly the countries in which they were born, with those who flew the nest to work in far flung places few and far between.
Then came the opening up of the airways, mass travel, mass consumerism and globalization. Starting innocently enough and almost imperceptibly building into a giant snowball which absorbed all in its path and connected everything such that boundaries and the sense of identity that came with such became blurred, one thing indistinguishable from the other.
The unique identities of foreign destinations and the experiences they offered were increasingly being lost as each retail street in each location began to look the same with global brands all pervasive and local colour and local crafts faded.
Commutes into the office became ever longer as more and more people worked further from their place of dwelling shrinking quality family time and the drive for ever more things placed mounting pressure on parents to work until they dropped.
So let us see this crisis as an opportunity to take a step back, observe the beauty around us, appreciate our local communities and spend time with our families of all generations, let ‘precious time together’ be what we strive for and let us enjoy the wonder of the world and, as I have said in my earlier blog: ‘’let us be happy knowing that we have all that we need rather than needing to have it all’’.
When normality returns let us not accept yesterday’s norm, let us work towards a better world driven by our relationships and a desire to protect, preserve and embrace the planet that we live on.
For a discussion on how we can ‘build in’ a more sustainable existence through the spaces we occupy contact Matthew Warner
Above text and image: © Matthew C Warner August 20.03.2020. All rights reserved.
PHOTO: by Matthew C Warner








