CORONA This lockdown seems different': second time around, Melbourne is on edge

abby normal

insert appropriate adjective here
Long read, but good for knowing what will be coming our way soon.

Melbourne residents will be locked down from midnight on Wednesday. It is both easier and much harder this time around.

Easier because remote working routines have already been established and because, this time, we know what to expect. And harder, because we know what to expect.

Gone is the optimism that powered the first Australia-wide lockdown in March, where people spoke of flattening the curve and experimented with baking sourdough and bought jigsaw puzzles for their children after the prime minister declared them “absolutely essential”.

The curve has flattened, bent, and bounced back up. The jigsaw puzzles have all been completed, and children who were prepared to go along with the first seven-week lockdown being a fun adventure are now anxious. Holidays were cancelled, again.

The return to lockdown, announced after Victoria recorded its highest daily increase in cases of the pandemic so far, was met with a mixture of resignation and relief; fury and sadness.

The stage three stay-at-home orders that will apply across greater Melbourne and the Mitchell shire ban anyone from leaving their home except for essential shopping, work or school that cannot be done remotely, caregiving and medical appointments, and exercise.

It’s tough, but much less tough than the hard lockdown conditions imposed on the 3,000 people living in nine public housing blocks in inner Melbourne. Many who spoke to Guardian Australia about their own anxieties mentioned the towers first: if they can survive that, we can survive this.

A city on edge

There is a nastiness to the public discourse that was absent in March. A desire to apportion blame – to the Andrews government for infection control failures in hotel quarantine; to Black Lives Matter protesters despite repeated confirmation that no transmissions have been traced back to the march; and to poor and migrant communities who have been blamed for the spike in family to family transmission.
That nastiness is driven in part by frustration, but also by fear. Australia did not have community transmission on this scale when the cases peaked in March. The risk is more pronounced.

“I guess this time it feels closer, it feels claustrophobic,” one person tells Guardian Australia. “Not the lockdown, but the thought that this outbreak, if it continues on, could see us tipping over into what we always saw as another country’s experience ... I’m scared the safety barrier is broken.”

Jordan Janssen recently lost his grandfather and says not being able to spend time with his grieving Nana under the lockdown is “extremely challenging”.

Janssen identifies as a “massive Dan Andrews fan” but the bungling of hotel quarantine makes it feel as if this outbreak – and therefore this lockdown – may have been preventable.

“This lockdown seems different,” he says. “I’m still completely comfortable that this is the right decision, but having a little taste of freedom and having to take that away is definitely harder.”

For some, supports that were in place last time have dissolved.

One woman will be experiencing this lockdown as a single parent, her relationship a casualty of the first lockdown.

Another woman lost her beloved 14-year-old cat in May. As a single person who lives alone, it was her primary companion. She is, like many single people, now facing another six weeks with no meaningful contact with another human being.

Ellen Sowersby is facing her second lockdown as a single parent to four-year-old twins. She says having to explain again that they can’t see family or go to the playground is “really upsetting”.

“Parenting on my own through a pandemic is hard,” she says. “I have a wonderful partner but he lives separately. So it can feel rather lonely at times, when all the pressure of needing to keep your children safe and happy all falls on your shoulders. It’s relentless.”

The kids are not alright

Bec Blakeney says her seven-year-old daughter “thrived” during the first lockdown, but is not doing well now.

“Recently I checked her worry jar and found her worries are: ‘having coronavirus’ and ‘not seeing my friends again’,” she says.

Jen Askhams’ son coped well with remote learning last time but he’s “really sad and anxious” this time. Socialising over Zoom, not ideal at the best of times, is very difficult when you’re seven.

“I heard him crying quietly in his room this morning and it was heartbreaking,” she says. “We’ve had to explain that we just don’t know what’s happening with school yet – it could be remote learning or it could be school, or some other combination. “

Older children are also struggling. Mel’s daughter is in year 12, and stressed by the prospect of remaining in face-to-face classes after some coronavirus cases were confirmed at her high school. She did well under lockdown, Mel says, and found it “incredibly stressful” to go back to school. They have been told that because VCE students are able to remain at school, she will fail attendance requirements if she studies at home.

“The coverage seems to focus on how much these students miss their friends and benefit from being back at school, but actually there is a group of kids who are really worried about being there in person and would rather work from home, where they are calmer,” Mel says.

Patrick Stafford, whose child attends a specialist school, says the decision to keep specialist schools open during this lockdown has been described by some parents as a “lifesaver”.

“Balancing work and him was incredibly difficult,” he says. “So having the specialist schools open makes this lockdown so, so, so much easier.”

Other children are mourning the loss of winter sports. Jane says her eight-year-old son is more upset about his football season ending before he got to play a game than he is returning to remote learning.

Jobkeeping and jobseeking

Meanwhile, Jane, a freelance writer whose main client is a university, and her husband, an academic, have felt the impact of job cuts in the university sector. Others tell Guardian Australia they are worried that the slow drip of work which has sustained them since March will dry up.

Those who lost their job when the economy first shut down in March are struggling through the return of mutual obligations on jobseeker payments, and terrified of the prospect of payments being reduced from $1,100 to $565 a fortnight in September.

It is unclear whether the increased jobseeker payment, or the $1,500 fortnightly jobkeeper payment, will be extended beyond the end of September in response to the Melbourne outbreak.

“If jobseeker is reduced by any amount, I’m screwed,” says Jay Coonan. “I can’t make up the difference in income.”

Coonan says he has become used to staying in, and can’t really afford to go out, but will miss being able to visit friends. He’s also frustrated at the “blatant partisan politicisation of poor people from both the ALP and Liberal parties”.

One man, aged 21, says he dreads losing jobkeeper payments.

“I hope we are out of lockdown by then, that’s what really keeps me up at night,” he says.

He says he feels “just really ****ing sad, but I’m not angry – it could be a lot worse. But it does feel like I’ve wasted one of the best years of my youth locked up at home.”

Another woman tells Guardian Australia that she is furious. “It seems like a few careless people have undone all the hard work and suffering we went through,” she says. “I’ve lost my job, and job seeking right now is soul destroying. I’m so worried about my future. I live alone, will have little capacity to see others and will have to mark my birthday alone. I have no confidence in how my mental wellbeing will fare, and I’m one of the lucky ones.”
 

TammyinWI

Talk is cheap
I have had the thought come to mind: what if they are putting it in the water supplies?

After all, the MSM is demonizing Miracle Mineral Solution, when that was used for about 70 years to sanitize water supplies. Christianity is being demonized in these times, as well. Those people in Florida from that church are evidently being charged.

Trump mentioned a couple months ago, about ingesting bleach, and many people got bent out of shape...well, someone at one of the alphabets started calling MMS solution "bleach" to try to make it sound bad, and the name stuck with those in the alphabets talk about it...giving it a negative sound, when it is effective.

The thread is here if you want to review...just putting this out there:

 

China Connection

TB Fanatic
I would say suicides due to loss or jobs and investments and lack of futures would be causing a lot more deaths then the virus .

I feel that if one is going to get this virus then one will have at least three years to be on the safe side from it. All the restrictions can only be successful for a limited time if one is not living on a desert island.

It seems that before this Christmas we will be in depression
 

China Connection

TB Fanatic
As the day unfolded: New restrictions on NSW pubs after Crossroads Hotel outbreak as Victoria records 177 new COVID-19 cases
We have made our live blog of the coronavirus pandemic free for all readers. Please consider supporting our journalism with a subscription.
COVID-19
COVID-19 IN AUSTRALIA
192 New cases (Jul 13)1699 Active cases7728 Recovered108 DeathsView full Australia and global data
Data updated 11.21am on Jul 13, 2020
By Matt Bungard, Marissa Calligeros and Mathew Dunckley
Updated July 13, 2020 — 9.00pmfirst published at 6.51am
Normal text sizeLarger text sizeVery large text size
Summary
  • Victoria has recorded 177 new cases of coronavirus, but Chief Health Officer Brett Sutton warns the state is yet to see the peak of the second surge. The state now has more cases of community transmission than the rest of country put together.
  • NSW has recorded 14 new cases of the virus as the cluster linked to the Crossroads Hotel at Casula grows. An ADF base in NSW has also been linked to the outbreak after personnel attended the hotel.
  • AFL dual premiership player Bachar Houli from the Richmond Tigers has revealed his mother is in intensive care with COVID-19.
  • The Queensland government has announced the commencement of human trials for a COVID-19 vaccine developed out of the University of Queensland.
  • Australians have rushed to put in their tax returns swiftly this year as Treasurer Josh Frydenberg flagged the next round of stimulus payments would arrive in bank accounts this week.
LATEST UPDATES
9.00pm
We are closing the blog for the evening
Thanks for reading. This is Matt Bungard signing off. We'll be back tomorrow with more live, free coverage of the coronavirus pandemic.
This is what you need to know from today:
We'll continue our live coverage of the pandemic early on Tuesday.

8.52pm
Staines one of three stars in isolation as NRL sends stern reminder
By Adam Pengilly and Sam Phillips
The NRL's biosecurity expert will resist tightening COVID-19 restrictions on players and officials despite three of the game's stars being temporarily placed in isolation, including four-try debutant Charlie Staines.
The Panthers teenager was stood down after club officials told the NRL on Monday the 19-year-old had hosted a group of 10 people at his house at once on Saturday night, breaching the code's protocols.
Debutant Panthers centre Charlie Staines has been stood down over a COVID-19 breach.

Debutant Panthers centre Charlie Staines has been stood down over a COVID-19 breach.CREDIT:GETTY IMAGES
It came on the same day 19-year-old Bulldogs rookie Jake Averillo was removed from any contact with Bulldogs players and staff until Sunday after his parents attended Casula's Crossroads Hotel on July 3, the origin of a COVID-19 cluster in Sydney.

 

john70

Veteran Member
I would say suicides due to loss or jobs and investments and lack of futures would be causing a lot more deaths then the virus .

I feel that if one is going to get this virus then one will have at least three years to be on the safe side from it. All the restrictions can only be successful for a limited time if one is not living on a desert island.

It seems that before this Christmas we will be in depression


IT FLORIDA, we have no suicides, not since january, the death rate is down across the charts

only the CCP flu is up
 

WalknTrot

Veteran Member
After a certain amount of oppression and isolation, people are going to default to "Life is for the Living".

For example, you can't screw up a whole crop of kids and their socialization/education because people with one foot on a banana peel or Great Grandma might die. Same for young folks in their prime (courting and breeding years) , or people raising/providing for a family.

It purely ain't natural.
 

ambereyes

Veteran Member
A different sort of fallout from the lock downs, several young married women I know have put having a baby on hold. They don't feel comfortable getting pregnant in the current atmosphere. My niece was telling me that there were quite a few of her internet friends have done the same, they are in a large forum mainly for 20's and up women, mainly cooking, gardening and kids.
 

abby normal

insert appropriate adjective here
My kids really miss being with people their age. My teen is coping... she has a lot of online friends, and occasionally will visit with a friend or have someone over to the house. My little boy though, it's really hard. No other little kids in our neighborhood (very rural and spread out)... & when we see other kids at the grocery store he lights up like it's Christmas. It's a sad thing when your 4 year old tells you, lip quivering, that he's sad because he has no friends. I was going to take him to story time at the local library but they've discontinued it.
 
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