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Changing Ireland Podcast hosted by Editor Allen Meagher

The latest episode is a conversation with Tammy D’Arcy, CEO of Social Enterprise Republic of Ireland (SERI) a new representative body for the Social Enterprise Sector in Ireland. She is also CEO of the Shona Project.

 

 

Social enterprise sector has a new representative body from today

Heavy hitters in the world of social enterprise have put their back into setting up a new membership association to represent the sector in the Republic, REPORTS ALLEN MEAGHER. The new organisation – headed up by interim CEO, Tammy Darcy – was officially launched today.

“My uppermost ambition is that the sector is recognised as a distinct sector and has a united voice in Ireland,” she told us in an interview this morning.

Seri will represent the Republic at the next Enterprise World Forum.

Asked why they are launching a new association in the midst of a pandemic, Tammy – founder of the Shona Project in Waterford – said: “During the pandemic, we’ve seen the need for representation for social enterprises at national level. In a crisis, social enterprises are more resilient. For example, we’ve just advertised a new job in the Shona project. Social enterprises are able to create impact and solve societal problems… Our jobs are more resilient.”

·      Tammy Darcy, interim CEO of Seri and founder and CEO of the Shona Project based in Waterford.

She said that social enterprises have “never been more needed than now”. In an earlier press statement, Darcy also predicted, “The sector will play a leading and powerful role as we move through the current crisis and into recovery.”

Seri’s founders include community leaders from around the country – from Padraig Casey in Ballyhoura Development to Larry O’Neill and John Murphy in Dublin, and author Senan Cooke in Dunhill.

Lending his support in a voluntary capacity as chairperson of the new body is former Barnardos chief, Fergus Finlay, who said: “We will forge a new beginning for social enterprise and will grow this sector to benefit all our people and communities throughout the Republic of Ireland.”

Other founding members include:

  • Brendan Whelan: CEO Social Finance Foundation
  • Lorraine Corcoran CEO: Afanite.
  • Michele Fogarty: Co-Founder Peptalk.
  • John Kearns: CEO Partas.
  • Karen Leigh: CEO and Founder, Sensational Kids
  • Darren Ryan : CEO Social Entrepreneurs Ireland

Welcoming SERI, MyMind CEO Krystian Fikert said, “We are living in challenging economic times during COVID-19. Social enterprises will flourish in response to society’s needs by making services accessible and affordable. This will help the Irish economy to grow faster in a sustainable way. Now is the time for Government to recognise the social enterprise sector as a solution to building a better future in Ireland.”

Seri membership is free for now, until Seri’s founders feel the organisation is proving its worth. Community-based social enterprises are encouraged to sign up and supporters can also join as individuals.

You can contact or call on Seri for support anytime. For more general queries, ask Siri!

W: www.socialenterprise.ie

One Minister, two Departments: Community in Cabinet

ONE MINISTER – TWO DEPARTMENTS

There are 17 departments in the Irish Government. The constitution states that there can be no more than 15 senior ministers as members of the cabinet.

In effect, Minister Heather Humphreys is responsible for two in one: Social Protection on the one hand; Community, Rural and Islands development on the other.

Her official title is “Minister for Social Protection, Community and Rural Development and the Islands”.

“I’m taking charge of two departments,” she confirmed on national radio. “Two departments. Two secretary generals.”

She said she was up for the challenge and that the responsibilities were a good match.

Tonight, the cabinet appointed 17 new junior ministers. Among them is Joe O’Brien (Green Party, Fingal) who was named by the Government as Minister of State with responsibility for “Community Development and Charities”. (We do not yet know if “Rural” comes under his remit).

Originally from Cork, junior minister Joe O’Brien has worked with Youthreach,  homeless agency Crosscare and as a migrant rights  campaigner with the Immigrant Council of Ireland. His senior minister also has a professional community background having been a Credit Union manager (see profile below).

There had been speculation that the Department of Rural and Community Development would be abolished. The media got it wrong. As they did when they wrote off an aspiring TD in a by-election in 1994 – one Michael Ring. People in the West knew he would be elected.

From 2017 until the new government was formed, Ring served as Minister for Rural and Community Development and, while it was the smallest of the government departments in terms of budget, it grew in stature.

During the same period, Regina Doherty* served as the Minister for Employment Affairs and Social Protection – that department remains one of the largest in terms of budget.

COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT

The departments are familiar with working together. The smaller department collaborated with the larger one to deliver the Social Inclusion and Community Activation Programme. It linked people in communities with vital income support provided through the Back to Work Enterprise Allowance (BTWEA).

In responding to the impact of Covid, we can expect to see more of this kind of work. Reskilling and retraining is necessary. However, most important is solid community work where the most vulnerable people know they are being heard and are encouraged to take action individually and collectively.

While one of the departments is bigger than the other, they are used to working together.

THE ISLANDS

The line-up with islands has historic precedence. Community, rural and islands’ development were under the same roof from 2002 to 2010. While islands were not overtly named, providing support for them became the responsibility of the then Department of Community, Rural and Gaeltacht Affairs (DCRGA).

Under Éamon Ó Cuív, that Department was fondly known as “Craggy” – due to its acronym, the Minister’s western base and, indeed, its popularity. It was abolished after the country went bankrupt.

In recent years, government responsibility for supporting offshore islands rested with the Department of Culture, Heritage and the Gaeltacht.

Of note, offshore islands are represented by Comhdháil Oileáin na hÉireann (the Irish Islands Federation). The federation’s office is based on Inis Oírr – you can connect online here: https://www.facebook.com/oileain/

Finally, islanders can be assured that Minister Humphreys has sea legs. While she comes from a landlocked county, she visited Clare Island last year and heard first hand of the challenges facing offshore islands.

Inis Oirr in 2018. Photo: A. Meagher.

* Doherty – who lost her seat in the General Election – has been appointed a senator by An Taoiseach.

Humphrey’s radio interview: https://bit.ly/Humphreys2depts

 

PROFILE: MINISTER HEATHER HUMPHREYS from MONAGHAN

With two departments under her remit, Heather Humphreys (57) is likely to be one of the busiest of all ministers.

She does, however, have considerable ministerial experience in regional and rural affairs, in arts, heritage, An Gaeltacht, and promoting business, enterprise and innovation. On her website, she expresses pride in having introduced the Town and Village Renewal Scheme.

Now, her focus is “to see that no person or community is left behind”, as she said shortly after being appointed to her new role. This phrase is borrowed from the new Programme for Government.

She is one of the minority of four women serving as senior ministers. She sits alongside Helen McEntee (Justice), Norma Foley (Education) and Catherine Martin (Media, Tourism, Arts, Culture, Sport and the Gaeltacht).

The National Women’s Council expressed the disappointment of many over the cabinet’s gender imbalance – saying the government will have to work harder on women’s rights and call-ing for it to introduce a gender quota for elections.

Humphreys lives in Aghabog, a rural area near Monaghan and, before entering politics, she worked as manager of Cootehill Credit Union. She was the only Presbyterian in the last Oireachtas.

 

‘COMMUNITY’ IN CABINET

In 1997, “Community” became a named function of a government department for the first time. It has remained in usage ever since.

For a long stretch, from 2002 to 2010, it was a central plank of a high-profile department. Then came the banking-led crash, austerity policies and harsh cuts to the community sector. During this time, “community” almost disappeared from view in department titles.

And then came the turnaround – in 2017 a new department was established and ‘community’ was brought to the fore once more. The new department proved to be a success and, if this government runs its full term, “Community” will be closing on three decades of prominence.

This is important: If you’re not named you’re less visible. At present, many are annoyed that “Youth” was dropped in name and are calling for it to be reinstated in the appropriate department’s name.

While “Community” was moved between different departments, the Community Unit and its staff often moved and changed, disrupting the growth of a corporate knowledge and memory.

This time – 2020 –  the Department stay intact. It will grow, not diminish, and the inside knowledge gained through years of contact with vulnerable communities and grassroot organisations should survive. That’s especially important at a time when the country may look again to communities to rise to a Covid-19 challenge.

 

1997 – 2002

Department of Social, Community & Family Affairs (DSCFA)

(under Dermot Ahern)

2002 – 2010

Department of Community, Rural & Gaeltacht Affairs (DCRGA)

(Éamon Ó Cuív)

Éamon Ó Cuív in Furbo, Co. Galway, in 2004, for an interview with ‘Changing Ireland’. Photo: A. Meagher.

2010 – 2011

Department of Community, Equality & Gaeltacht Affairs (DCEGA)

(Pat Carey)

An era of austerity: Community workers and SIPTU activists marched in protest repeatedly a decade ago over Governments cutbacks that hit the poorest communities.

2011-2016

Department of the Environment, Community & Local Government (DECLG).

(2011 – 2014 – Phil Hogan / 2014 –2016 – Alan Kelly)

2016 – 2017

Department of Housing, Planning, Community & Local Government (DHPCLG).

(Simon Coveney)

2017 – 2020

Historic moment in July as it marked the establishment of the Department of Rural & Community Development (DRCD)

(Michael Ring)

2020

Two Departments have come under the responsibility of one cabinet minister, namely Minister Heather Humphreys who has become the Minister for Social Protection, Community and Rural Development and the Islands.

Tomorrow we’ll know if this is monumental, or an historic footnote

– By Allen Meagher

CAPTION: Community seems to get more recognition today than it did a decade ago and this is reflected in the many pledges made in the proposed Programme for Government. Above: Protesters in 2009 march on the Dail. Austerity hit communities hard. Despite many protests, they were seen as an easy target. Photo: A. Meagher

INTRODUCTION

The proposed Programme for Government (PfG) from the Greens, Fianna Fail and Fine Gael talks up community development and social inclusion. By tomorrow, we’ll know if it is to be accepted or rejected. Even if rejected, the 126-page document is an eye-opener; it shows what negotiations produced after weeks of back and forth between three of the four biggest parties in the country. A link to the full document is provided below this summary/analysis.

OPPORTUNITIES FOR COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT

The aspirational document includes 131 mentions of “community”, 12 of which relate to “community development”. Taken at face value, the document can be seen as encouraging for people working, volunteering and campaigning at community level.

There is talk of re-establishing much-valued Community Development Projects. There were once 180 such local projects and despite a hard-fought campaign against austerity a decade ago only a few survived (most were forcibly merged; some defunded).

The document also, for example, talks up the possibility of making it illegal to discriminate against someone based on their socio-economic status. This would be added to the current 9 grounds on which discrimination is illegal.

CRITICISM

The PfG has attracted criticism. Youth does not get the emphasis it should at a time when youth unemployment hovers around 50% with fewer opportunities than normal on the immediate horizon. Covid’s impact on young people has not been properly reckoned with. Capitalism’s greed also goes largely unchecked (white collar crime is barely covered) and many have found the document is insufficiently convincing on homelessness, inequality and healthcare.

On the environment, while most Greens appear to support it, some say it doesn’t go for enough to tackle climate change (two-thirds of GP members must vote in favour if the PfG is to be approved). And then there are those who view climate change activists as anti-business.

However, for the record, here’s what it has to say on social inclusion, community development and topics that will interest everyone dedicated to seeing Ireland’s communities grow stronger.

 

ADVISORY NOTE

The focus here is on social inclusion and community development. For relative brevity, even though they have direct and indirect impacts on communities, pledges (and omissions) on the following have been largely left aside from analysis: the Good Friday Agreement and all-island initiatives, Brexit, agriculture, business, transport, defence, health and climate action.

 

‘BOTTOM-UP’ & ‘NOBODY LEFT BEHIND’

Nobody but those who profited from austerity want to see it again – and the coalition is conscious of this. Four times the document says we must ensure that nobody is left behind (including during the transition to a lower-carbon future).

For communities specifically, the PfG promises “bottom-up mechanisms to ensure that local and national policymaking addresses community needs so that nobody is left behind.”

If formed, the government will seek “regular open engagement with all sectors of society”.

The section titled ‘Community Development, Social Inclusion and Public Participation’ is of particular interest.

 

CLIMATE ACTION AND A JUST TRANSITION

Actions to reduce emissions and make the transition to a low carbon economy are listed throughout the document and particularly in the chapter titled ‘A Green New Deal’ (pages 31-43). It is recommended you read this chapter in full. For example, every government department will within six months make climate action a core pillar of their work.

The social inclusion element to the coming changes are covered by what is called “a just transition”, a term made popular by former President Mary Robinson, among others. Climate action must be underpinned by a just transition. This ensures that the most vulnerable people whose lives will change in the transition are adequately compensated. Climate justice is about preventing poverty arising from the fight with polluters and carbon-heavy industries.

As the PfG says, “A just transition approach should insulate those most vulnerable to the changes envisaged… This will mean creating fresh opportunities for those sectors most exposed by the transition and supporting those in our community who are least equipped to make the changes.”

 

HOUSING AND HOMELESSNESS

Housing was one of the biggest issues raised during the election. The PfG says “local authorities are central to delivering housing” and pledges to increase the social housing stock “by over 50,000 over the next five-years.”

Furthermore, a referendum on the right to housing is likely to be held. A dedicated section details the plans on housing and homelessness (pages 53-58).

Elsewhere, the PfG also promises “to ensure that the housing needs of the Traveller Community are met by local authorities and ensure that existing funding is fully drawn down and utilised”. This has been talked about for some years without action being taken.

Also, students who are homeless, or live in emergency accommodation, or in direct provision will receive additional educational support.

Given past performance, campaigner Fr Peter McVerry told RTÉ he felt “very cynical” about the pledges made, much as he would like to see them come to pass (Link: https://bit.ly/McVerryPFG2020).

 

KEY NATIONAL COMMUNITY PROGRAMMES

The PfG pledges to continue with community-focused, anti-poverty programmes. It pledges to: “refine and build on a range of programmes to support communities, including CLÁR, the Social Inclusion and Community Activation Programme (SICAP), the Community Service Programme (CSP) and the Community Enhancement Programme (CEP).”

 

COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT LINKED TO UN GOALS

The PfG commits to fully implement the current strategy, launched last year, by the Department of Rural and Community Development with the aim of supporting the Community and Voluntary Sector in Ireland to build “Sustainable, Inclusive and Empowered Communities”. That runs until 2024.

Looking beyond that, the new government would “initiate a new Anti-poverty, Social Inclusion and Community Development Action Plan framed around the 17 UN Sustainable Development Goals, underpinning sound community development practices, and reflecting a response to the COVID-19 pandemic and its impact on poverty and social inclusion.”

 

SHEDS, INNOVATION, EXPANDED FUND & CDPs

It will ensure that Men’s Sheds (approx. 400) and Women’s Sheds (new) are “properly resourced”.

The Social Innovation Fund Ireland programme will be continue to be supported – and enhanced “to help secure additional philanthropic funding sources specifically for community-based programmes and projects in the areas of climate justice, rural and community development”.

It will change the rules for applying to the Dormant Accounts Fund to include projects and programmes focused on biodiversity, environmental awareness and climate change.

It will introduce “on a phased basis, a number of projects similar in approach to Community Development Projects (CDPs)”.

An annual small capital grants programme administered through local authorities would be introduced (there have been similar such programmes previously) to help fund the maintenance, improvement, and upkeep of community centres.

 

LEADER TO HELP POST-COVID

The PfG will seek a loosening of the rules through which LEADER grants are provided to help “communities and small business” with the fallout from Covid-19. It says it will “apply to the EU for exemption from State Aid rules constraining the potential of the LEADER Programme to help communities and small business, particularly in the context of COVID-19.”

The PfG pledges to reduce bureaucracy for rural-based Local Development Companies (LDCs) that deliver LEADER on the ground. It promises to: “simplify and reduce bureaucracy and promote the role” of the the Local Development Companies delivering LEADER. Strong accountability and transparency mechanisms will remain key.

It will also:

– Review capital funding restrictions under the LEADER Programme for broadband.

– Increase grant aid available to private enterprise through LEADER from 50% to 75% for capital projects.

LDCs performing as independent Local Action Groups (an EU term) will continue to be supported by and report to Local Community Development Committees.

Ireland will also seek to make more use of EU support for Community-led Local Development (CCLD). The PfG pledges to: “Prioritise national and local government support to pursue extra EU funding opportunities through CLLD.”

The PfG also envisages a new “state-led Rural Development Programme to bridge the gap between the wind-up of the existing LEADER Programme and implementation of the new programme”.

Note: While key in the delivery of programmes nationally and while there is focus on their work, neither the agency Pobal nor Local Development Companies (LDCs) are specifically named in the PfG. Over 20 Government and EU funding programmes work with LDCs to connect with ordinary people and groups in communities. The work includes social inclusion, rural development, employment support, social enterprise to climate action. Nationally, as LDCs point out, they employ 2,100 people whose work helps support around 15,000 community groups and 173,000 individuals.

 

VOLUNTEERS / COMMUNITY CALL / REFUGEES

On Volunteering, the PfG promises to start measuring the value of volunteering through new wellbeing indices. It will publish a detailed new strategy “to support volunteering, including the development of a comprehensive supporting infrastructure and measures to disseminate best practice”. This was close to completion when the election was called in February and would need to be reviewed by a new government, particularly in light of our generally well-regarded response so far to the pandemic.

The new government would examine how it could build on the public goodwill evident in response to the Covid-19 ‘Community Call’. Elsewhere in the document, it says: “The COVID-19 pandemic illustrated the strength and depth of community life in Ireland.”

In an example of how refugees could be better supported, the PfG commits to better integration through the fledgling Community Sponsorship Ireland programme.

 

EARLY YEARS EDUCATION & CHILDCARE WORKERS’ PAY

Childcare provision is not being nationalised or anything near it, despite glaring problems that led tens of thousands of childcare workers and community volunteers to march in protest early this year. However, pay and conditions should improve.

Though too late for demoralised workers who quit the sector, a pay increase would be a partial win for campaigners. The PfG promises (by setting up a committee) to determine minimum pay rates, terms and conditions for childcare workers.

Meanwhile, a new agency called ‘Childcare Ireland’ will be set up to focus on quality, leadership, best practice, and professional development in community and private sector facilities. The regulatory burden on providers will be reduced (the regulations became so ridiculous that Joe Duffy was getting calls on it). Long-term career paths are also promised.

As with most pledges in the PfG, no timeline is provided.

 

FAMILY RESOURCE CENTRES

There are over 100 Family Resource Centres (FRCs) in the country. Though not named, the PfG pledges to “continue to invest in community and voluntary family support services and youth work, recognising their value in preventing harm and in responding to the needs of vulnerable families”.

 

AFTER-SCHOOLS SERVICES

One pledge that should see more work for FRCs, youth workers and volunteers reads: “We will increase the range of after-school services in schools or community hubs, to offer a range of education and family-focused measures.”

 

EDUCATION GENERALLY

Access to quality education is key to tackling poverty. The PfG commits to a range of education measures not detailed here. See pages 93-103.

 

HEALTH

For details on health see pages 43-53 in the PfG. With Covid-19, the health budget is expected to run over €20billion for this year. To mention just one proposal from a community perspective, the PfG commits – as previous governments did without fully following through – to implementing ‘Sláintecare’, a community-based primary healthcare service.

 

PUBLIC PARTICIPATION NETWORKS

The coalition will “carry out a comprehensive review of Public Participatory Networks and Local Economic and Community Plans, to ensure that they are fit for purpose for climate action and community development.”

Support will be continued for the Social Inclusion Forum.

 

DISABILITY

The PfG goes into considerable detail on disability (pages 77-79). Among the pledges are to “enshrine disability rights by finalising the legislation required following Ireland’s recent ratification of the UN Convention on the Rights of People with Disabilities (UNCRPD).” It will develop an implementation plan to put the law into practise.

Among many proposed measures, the coalition would, for example, increase “home support and Personal Assistance hours” and provide “additional respite nights for people with disabilities”.

Such commitments will be challenging and are complicated by the pandemic. Family Carers Ireland pointed out that 11,300 vulnerable people had their home care service suspended by the HSE because of Covid-19 challenges. Staff were reallocated to nursing homes, while some families were reluctant to have care staff visit as they were cocooning. By mid-June, 45% of families were waiting to have their care support restored.

 

LIBRARIES

On Libraries – where Ireland is setting a lead internationally – the PfG is short and sweet, committing to implementing the current public libraries strategy called ‘Our Public Libraries 2022 – Inspiring, Connecting and Empowering Communities’.

Meanwhile, while late in the day for many communities, An Post is being potentially seen as “a central hub for a wide variety of valuable community-focused services.”

 

SOCIAL ENTERPRISE

Similarly, on Social Enterprise, the PfG is brief but thorough in backing the unveiled national plan last year, saying, We will build on Ireland’s first ever National Social Enterprise Policy.” The policy adoption was an historic breakthrough for the ROI, allowing us to start to catch up with Northern Ireland.

 

CHARITIES

On charities, the PfG is to the point, promising to “update legislative provisions with the Charities Regulator”, the aim being to “increase trust and confidence in the management and administration of charities”.

 

COMMUNITY ARTS

On community arts – notwithstanding various pledge on supporting the arts – the PfG will “develop innovative support schemes for small local festivals, amateur dramatics, and musicals”, introduce new bursaries for young artists and expand the ‘Creative Schools’ programme.

 

CLASS DISCRIMINATION

There are currently nine legal grounds for fighting discrimination and a tenth is tentatively proposed: “We will examine the introduction of a new ground of discrimination, based on socio-economic disadvantaged status to the Employment Equality and Equal Status Acts.”

 

LITERACY

The PfG pledges to publish a new 10-year literacy, numeracy, and digital skills strategy within the first year of government. It will also seek to “increase digital literacy among citizens and businesses”.

 

CREDIT UNIONS

Under the heading ‘National Economic Plan – Business Financing’, the PfG pledges to “Enable the Credit Union movement to grow as a key provider of community banking in the country.” It commits to “support Credit Unions in the expansion of services, to encourage community development.”

The new government would “review the policy framework within which Credit Unions operate”.

 

SENIOR ALERTS SCHEME

The PfG envisages continuing with the popular Senior Alerts Scheme, taking into account changing demographics and technological advancements.

 

NATIONAL BROADBAND

The multi-billion euro “rapid roll-out” of the National Broadband Plan will connect rural Ireland and support remote working, says the PfG.

 

OFFSHORE ISLANDS

There is little said about Islands specifically, bar that the Islands’ Action Plan (due) will be published this year.

 

DOMESTIC VIOLENCE

An updated National Preventative Strategy will be adopted and the government will implement “a plan for future refuge space on the publication of a review of domestic violence accommodation provision”.

Overall, there are ten measures planned to deal with the “an epidemic” of domestic violence and sex crimes.

 

POLICING & COMMUNITIES

The PfG pledges generally to build “stronger and safer communities”. It speaks of more community policing, use of CCTV, reform of the courts, and the creation of a new dedicated family courts system.

It talks of increasing the age limit to 24 years for recommending people to the Garda Youth Diversion Programme and implementing a new Youth Justice Strategy – drawing on learnings from an Icelandic model emphasising prevention, early intervention, and inter-agency collaboration.

It envisages an expansion of restorative justice and giving Gardai powers to deal with anti-social behavior from people on scramblers and quadbikes.

 

HATE CRIME, DRUGS MISUSE, GAMBLING

New legislation will be introduced on hate crime within a year of the new government’s formation and the existing, weak Incitement to Hatred Act 1989 will be strengthened.

The new government will “legislate against the coercion and use of minors in the sale and supply of drugs”. Other details are outlined under ‘Health’ (pages 43-53).

Online gambling online be regulated.

 

DIRECT PROVISION

Asylum-seekers are among the most vulnerable groups in society and the new government will abolish Direct Provision accommodation system and replace it with a new not-for-profit approach with human rights at its core.

The PfG states: “We are committed to ensuring that Ireland provides protection to those seeking refuge from conflict and persecution, as is required under international law.”

In the short term, conditions for asylum seekers currently in the system should improve: “This includes vulnerability assessments, the right to work, the ability to apply for driver licences and bank accounts, an independent inspection process, measures to reduce the length of time in processing decisions, mental health services, and the training of managers of Direct Provision Centres.”

The acceptance in the proposed PfG that DP must and will finally be replaced by a more humane, non-profit-driven system is a major win for all activists involved in campaigning over the years.

 

EQUALITY, MENTAL HEALTH, CARERS AND ADDICTION

The PfG’s authors deserves credit for going into detail on Equality, Mental Health, Family Carers and Drug Misuse. While not going into detail here on those subjects, the PfG pledges, for example, to implement the National LGBTI+ and the LGBTI+ Youth Strategy.

It promises to implement a National Traveller Health Action Plan. A “comprehensive” training, employment and enterprise support plan is promised for Travellers and Roma.

The new government will take “a zero-tolerance approach to racism” in amateur and professional sport.

It will re-establish the Galway City Community Based Alcohol Treatment Service.

These are but examples of the ambitious plans under those headings.

Elsewhere – in a section on ‘Defence’  – and in a levelling of the field, it promises that “all enlisted members of the Defence Forces have the same access to health care as officers currently do”.

 

YOUTH

It is fair to say that young people voted for more change than is promised in the PfG. Here we focus in detail on youth – a huge segment of the population. We look at what’s promised as an opportunity lost to pledge more for youth, given Covid-19’s turbocharged impact on their life-chances.

First, what’s promised:

The programme promises to encourage youth political participation (p7). Youth get specific mentions under climate action, mental health (implemention of the ‘Pathfinder’ interdepartmental unit on youth mental health), homelessness (a pledge to develop a strategy on national youth homelessness, participation (e.g. a National Youth Assembly will include rural and urban youth modules).

Under ‘Young People and Rural Ireland’, it promises to:

(1) “Increase funding for the national network of Comhairle na nÓg”.

(2) Encourage young people’s participation “in community development initiatives through special awards for youth-led involvement, e.g. the Tidy Towns Youth Award.”

(3) Continue to support the work of Young Social Innovators “to assist young people in responding to the COVID-19 pandemic and its aftermath in Ireland”. It also promises to “expand access to social innovation programmes to all post primary schools”.

Further commitments are made under the heading ‘Early intervention and Family Support’ and there will be a new youth strategy (it does not say when).

Much of this is a continuation of what’s already there, in the pipeline, or to be expected under a carry-on-as-you-are style of government.

Encouragingly, the PfG commits to “improve jobseeker supports for people aged under 24 over the lifetime of the Government” and to “increase the availability of activation schemes, including those run by local employment services”.

But is this enough, given Covid-19’s tsunami-like thrashing of sectors that normally provide employment for young people? eg tourism, hospitality, low-pay work.

James Doorley of the National Youth Council of Ireland says there is no real focus on youth unemployment in the PfG: “At a time when we have 51% youth unemployment and over 148,000 young people out of work this omission is hard to understand or justify.”

The PfG vaguely pledges to pay “particular attention” to “refugees and asylum seekers, the homeless and people living on low incomes.”

“We need the incoming Government to develop a youth employment plan in the first 30 days to assist young people get back to work,” says Doorley.

The sheer number of young people whose lives have been disrupted by the pandemic – something that could mark them for life – deserves focus. Opportunities lost need to be matched by new opportunities.

 

FAMILY FARMS, LOW INCOME AND ‘FORGOTTEN FARMERS’

The importance of supporting family farming, protecting those on low income and seeking justice for the ‘Forgotten Farmers’ are all highlighted in the PfG.

 

LOCAL FOOD / LOCAL LABOUR

While the PfG recognises the importance of food exports to Ireland, there will be a greater emphasis on supporting local food producers and local channels for sale and distribution. It envisages every town having a community-owned food market.

Local authorities will provide more support for community gardens, allotments, farmers’ markets and for living more locally and sustainably. Schools will be encouraged to buy more food locally.

A successor to ‘Foodwise 2025’ will be published within six months of government formation with an extra focus on biodiversity and developing local food markets.

Under ‘Housing’ where 50,000 homes are promised, the PfG says “local labour should be used to increase community gain”.

Under the PfG, the originally local but increasingly regionalised ‘Local Link’ transport service would see its passenger numbers triple. The service’s mini-buses connect people across rural Ireland.

 

PROCUREMENT

The PfG will make “community benefit and “sustainability” key features of government contracts that are put out to public tender.

New guidelines will aim to “optimise the community benefit of products and services procured” while minimising environmental impact and getting value for money.

“We are committed to evaluating and managing the environmental, economic, and social impacts of procurement strategies within the State”, it says.

In terms of timing, while it commits to some changes within “the next three years” the overall switch to sustainability in procurement is promised within “the lifetime of this Government”.

 

INSURANCE – COSTS & CARTELS

Even the officially-supported volunteer response to Covid-19 was slowed up initially by insurance concerns. This is the new norm. In recent years, fast-rising insurance premiums drove community groups to abandon plans or ideas they would otherwise have pursued to develop or boost their communities. Nationwide, community groups are waiting years for action to be taken on rising insurance costs.

Now, as communities seek new ways to express themselves and support each other while reopening after the pandemic struck, they could do much more if they did not have to worry about risk and rising insurance premiums.

The insurance industry – accused of cartel-like behavior – points the finger at fraudulent claims for higher costs. Thankfully, the  PfG incidates that the proposed new government coalition isn’t buying it as the major issue.

“Insurance costs are a hugely significant issue for… a range of sporting, community, and voluntary groups,” the PfG states. It says that addressing anti-competitive practise is “critical” and a cabinet-led Committee on Economic Recovery and Investment “will prioritise the issue of insurance reform”.

The PfG promises to “punish and deter anti-competitive conduct” and to “tackle anti-competitive behavior” among insurance providers.

Overall, the PfG makes 21 commitments to tackle insurance costs.

Of interest to community endeavours, it will “consider” making changes to the Occupiers Liability Act and the Civil Liability Act (duty of care) “to strengthen waivers and notices to increase protections for consumers, businesses, sporting clubs and community groups”.

 

URBAN HORSE PROJECTS

The urban horse has been a feature of life in some areas for decades and, in a handful of instances, it has been creatively supported as an intervention in support of youth and intergenerational activity. However, legislation effectively banning the horse ownership in urban areas, a lack of support from some local authorities, and recent rises in insurance costs, have held back development of urban horse projects.

The PfG – under the heading ‘animal welfare’ – says it will: “Develop additional urban horse-welfare programmes, working with local authorities, charities, and community stakeholders to provide stabling facilities and educational programmes.”

Under ‘Sports’, the PfG pledges to “explore the potential development of the harness racing sector”. In urban areas, harness racing is called sulkie racing.

 

DEVELOPMENT AID

With Ireland taking up a temporary seat on the UN’s Security Council, the State will not want to be found lacking here.

The PfG pledges “to make annual, sustainable progress, ultimately achieving the UN target of 0.7% of Gross National Income by 2030”. This relates to the amount of State funding for overseas aid – every rich country is supposed to give 0.7% of its annual income to poor countries.

Ireland will continue to ensure that Irish aid remains untied to trade.

 

NET NEUTRALITY

Most people use and rely on daily, if not hourly, internet access. Of note, the new government will be committed to supporting the internet’s neutrality (i.e. opposing privatisation of what currently is a public resource).

 

TOWN CENTRES FIRST APPROACH

Local authorities will lead and collaborate on a ‘Town Centres First’ type approach to regenerate our towns and villages. Based on a tried and tested Scottish model, it will encourage more people to live in town centres.

The current Town and Village Renewal Scheme will be expanded.

 

LOCAL GOVERNMENT

Local authorities will be “incentivised” to bring forward pilot participatory budgeting projects – an approach already tried, tested and given the thumbs up in Dublin.

Future planning must be in line with the 17 UN Sustainable Development Goals when drafting development plans.

Every local authority will establish a climate action special policy committees.

Local authorities nationwide will provide public drinking water fountains.

All local authorities/Local Community Development Committees (LCDCs) will be asked to develop “a County Integration Strategy to promote, through a participative process, the inclusion of minorities”.

 

NATIONAL GOVERNMENT

A few notes:

At government level, cabinet sub-committees on health, education, housing, social affairs and equality, economic recovery, Europe, Brexit and Northern Ireland, and climate change will meet every four weeks.

At least half the Taoiseach’s nominees to the Seanad must be female.

Government departments will be reconfigured.

 

THE PfG’s PROMISES IN SUMMARY

“The actions taken over the next five years will define this nation’s future direction for decades to come,” predicts the proposed PfG.

Time will tell. It is not clear how much of what is promised is deliverable or will be truly different to what went before, apart obviously from climate change measures. However, It does stand out for having a strong focus on individual and community wellbeing (which will be measured) and it will not rely solely on economic data to measure achievement.

The PfG can be downloaded in full here: https://bit.ly/FFFGGPprog2020

By Friday, the country should know if the programme will be adopted, or if this is just a little footnote in history.

#ChangingIreland – Ciara’s Community Diary

My community Diary – some reflection

First of all, I would like to thank Allen Meagher for the opportunity to write about my experience through this community diary for 50 days.  It is something I found great solace in doing and to have this platform to share my own ups and downs was extremely cathartic for me. So now what? Well, continuing to journal this lockdown experience is definitely what I am doing albeit on a more personal basis! Life is changing, ebbing and flowing and we are all adapting to things as best we can. That’s not to say there are difficult days, I think it’s safe to say there will be more difficult days ahead but what I have learned from this time is that taking things day by the day is the only way to live life at the moment.

Writing a diary is for everyone, whether you think you can write or not. It is not about the quality of how you write, it is about trying to articulate in your own way what you are going through on a day to basis. I like to write in short form but writing in more detail can really help to get into the nitty-gritty of what you are trying to convey and express. One thing that I sometimes do is morning pages, which is an exercise that is included in The Artist’s Way book and allows you to write stream of consciousness, just getting words on the pages. It is a way to clear away the clutter before you start the day. The Artist’s Way is a great programme for anyone who wants to explore their creative sides – it was written in the 1970s and offers great exercises and tools to tap into creative energy.

My own life working as a community coordinator with asylum seekers has taken a new approach and while we don’t meet in person, I am still offering support when I can. Only yesterday, I got asked to help a man to organise references for his upcoming interview to determine his future in Ireland. Deportation orders are still a very real prospect, even in the midst of the pandemic. There needs to be a major restructuring on how this is done. My hope also is that we begin the process to end Direct provision and replace it with a more humane, dignified alternative that allows for own door accommodation and kitchen facilities. Imagine not having these? Not being able to cook. Food is nourishment not just for the body but for the soul – we have to do better. I will continue to campaign and support my friends in Direct Provision and hope that one day they can invite me to their home for a meal.

Day 50, May 1st

Day 50 and after my diary entry about the incredible weather we have been having (for most if not all of this crazy pandemic /lockdown period) it is now pissing from the heavens. But it’s needed. The plants and gardens need a good dose of rain to revive growth.

I feel different these days. More present in myself. I completed a 21-day meditation challenge yesterday and feel it has vastly improved my overall outlook. There is a lot to be said for connecting more inwardly (not too much though – naval gazing as my nana used to call it) and being mindful of how to take each day as it comes.

There is a sort of spiritual awakening happening for people I know, myself included. It’s not something profound or otherworldly, it’s actually to be found in the simplest of ways. Nature, meditation, music and daydreaming. For me, not having access to my friends or colleagues is not easy. I miss human connections and being in the company of another person ( that I am not related to). I miss the feeling of discovering something about myself when someone says something that might irk me and how I might respond either through body language or directly. So, I guess what I have been doing is finding out more about myself during this time and sitting with the more difficult reactions a bit more than I normally would. Anyway. Today is Bealtaine – the start of summer and a time for hope, growth and health. Here’s a John O’Donohue poem:

A Blessing of Solitude by John O’Donohue 
May you recognize in your life the presence, 
Power and light of your soul.
May you realize that you are never alone, 
That your soul in its brightness and belonging 
Connects you intimately with the universe.
May you have respect for your individuality and difference.
May you realize that the shape of your soul is unique,
That you have a special destiny here,
That behind the facade of your life there is something beautiful and eternal happening.
May you learn to see your self
With the same delight,
Pride and expectation
With which God sees you in every moment.
(from Anam Cara)

Day 49, April 30th

How do we re-imagine the world as we used to know it? A few years back, I did an amazing course run by UCD, which was around innovation in entrepreneurship. This was entirely practical with everyone working in teams on various projects, but the main thrust of the work was around coming up with innovative solutions to problems.

For example, coming up with a new prototype for umbrellas so they don’t turn inside out during windy conditions. Or using a prototype to help solve putting back a child’s pram in two easy steps.

I see they are working remotely now and I would love to be a fly on the wall to see how they might be using creative thinking approaches and strategies to solve the many different and wide-ranging problems this crisis presents for people. The technology was a very key component in this, but actually, I think we need to move beyond always relying on this as a tool to our survival. If I was still doing the course I would focus on these:

  • How to come up with a solution to the over-70s being entirely cut off from their friends and family. Mental health issues are beginning to emerge – what can be done here? Can small gatherings of five people, socially-distanced, happen? Also, how can we combat the loneliness and isolation that is now so prevalent for this cohort?
  • For single people: What does dating look like now? Can there be a solution to finding love when social distancing is now normal? Discuss!
  • Socialising: No pubs, festivals or gigs. Could back garden events become a reality? Mini festivals for the local community with a maximum of 20 people in attendance. *Genuinely think this could be worth exploring!
  • What alternatives are there to handshaking, hand-holding, high-fiving?
  • For children who don’t understand this, can a programme be developed to essentially train a mind to understand without fear and confusion?

I would love to be part of this and actually might contact the course supervisors and check-in with how they are doing. Anyway, as Fleetwood Mac plays in the background, I am having a good day so far. Some days are better than others!

 

Day 48, April 29th

I came across a hilarious, yet tragic, Time Magazine article about how Coronavirus could permanently affect the dating world. As a single person, all I can do is laugh because it’s comedy gold, let’s face it!

I decided to leave all dating apps recently as some of the messages I was getting were just farcical. Wanna meet up? Can you call over? Let’s meet for coffee? The standard questions asked on dating sites are now utterly ludicrous.

The safest thing in this era, according to the New York Health Board, is to avoid sexual hookups and instead become “your safest sex partner”. This made me laugh heartily because if you didn’t laugh you’d cry.

The article goes on to say that video dating may well become the new normal:

“Bumble reports a 21% increase in messages sent in Seattle, 23% increase in New York City and 26% increase in San Francisco since March 12, a day after the World Health Organization labelled Coronavirus (Covid-19) a global pandemic. The use of in-app video chatting on Bumble – a feature many users didn’t even know existed before Coronavirus spread – increased 93% across the country between March 13—the day President Donald Trump declared a national emergency—and March 27, with in-app calls and video chats averaging 29 minutes.”

So where does this leave me? Love in the time of Coronavirus. Who knows. Anything is possible, so they say.

 

Day 47, April 28th

Today’s entry might well be a stream of consciousness as I am trying to articulate what to write about, what to highlight, what to ponder. So far since the start of all of this -not to get too mundane – is that the weather has been unbelievable. Every morning when I get up, the light is pouring through my skylights and the skies have nearly always been blue. What is all the more strange (to me anyway) is that directly prior to this crisis, we were experiencing a very long spell of really awful storms and bad weather. Remember those weather warnings?

Speaking of the sky, looking up there recently, I am stunned to see very few planes if any passing through our air space. So the lessons we are now learning regarding air travel, will they be learned? We cannot sustain the pressure we are putting on the environment for much longer so hopefully, this crisis will be the start of new attitudes towards this.

Climatologist Prof John Sweeney of Maynooth University says the circumstances are “not the way we would like to tackle climate change” – it is likely to buy some time but proves to be a temporary respite. Irish Times article here.

I will probably ponder this some more this afternoon as I continue to dig up soil for my very first vegetable patch, which I will begin to plant soon. Strange days are also productive days for a more self-sufficient future.

Day 46, April 27th

It would be remiss of me not to express my outrage today about the recent reports of money spent by the government towards Direct Provision service providers. The Department of Justice paid more than €131 million last year to accommodation providers and hotel owners to house asylum seekers in direct provision. This money goes directly into these private owners, who for the most part, are providing substandard living conditions, food that is often not fit for consumption and – in some cases – abuses of power, intimidation and threatening behaviours.

My work as an activist and community volunteer does not stop due to this virus. I am still very much connected, not only to the asylum seekers who I am now friends with, but also to campaigns against the many injustices and abhorrent conditions they endure. As a support group, our regularly keeping in touch with them is hugely important, especially on these days when the threat of the Coronavirus looms over them just as strongly as a deportation order. I stand with them and often take stock of how resilient they are in the face of this crisis.

Being stuck in quarantine often magnifies my response to these reports and, today, I want to scream in disgust at  how we as a country have failed these good people miserably.

 

 

Days 44/45, April 25th & 26th

The zoom calls are getting a bit tiresome these days and losing their initial novelty of being able to see family, friends and loved ones on screen. On recent family calls, it’s clear that everyone is starting to strain under this whole way of living at the moment. And we all miss each other hugely. That is until the kids appear. Recently as a family, we are all a bit downbeat, a bit fed up with it all and then our niece and nephew appeared on a screen and immediately the dynamic changed for the better. Having a 1-year-old and 3 year old, no doubt has to be exhausting but to see their faces light up in clapping and waving did everyone’s heart good. We all got in the spirit of cheering and yays and ooh’s at the 3-year-old’s storytelling skills. In these moments, we forget for a while just how hard things have been. We all savoured in the innocence and joy that was coming our way.

 

 

Recently, I started to wear a mask on my Sunday hours caring for my brother. This makes me feel protected both for him and me and I am a lot more relaxed around him as a result. We often watch TV together, usually a comedy like Friends or Only Fools and Horses. Sometimes I will stick on a CD of relaxing music as he drifts off to sleep in the afternoon. When I first started taking over from this Sunday duty, I was dreading it as everything felt amplified and my anxiety levels were high. These Sundays I have started to look forward to them and to be in a different four walls, having a bit of space to myself and just being in the calm presence of my brother.

 

 

Day 43, April 24th

The end of another week in the lockdown and no doubt but as the days creep on, the strangeness of this time does not wane. Talk of complacency is starting to happen – with stories of local people venturing out further than their 2km, “cocooners” sneaking off for the rebellious stroll on the beach, and gangs of young fellas drinking cans at sports pitches. Normality is a term that is not ever going to be replicated to what we used to know, but we are all at this stage craving it.

Then we have Greta Thunberg refer to normality in relation to Climate change, which of course is another massive crisis that we are all facing, whether we like it or not.

So the new normal? What might this look like? Communities all trying to grapple with social distancing laws when putting on events and gigs, with people having to stand far apart from one another in a very stifling, unnatural way. If we are to get all dystopian about it, perhaps like the film Contagion, people will have to walk around wearing wristbands indicating if they have already been infected with the virus.

What does the future look like? What is normal? And in the words of Ben Stiller in that hilarious puddle reflection scene in Zoolander:

“Who am I?” This pandemic brings existentialism to its very core and maybe in some ways, this is a good thing.

Day 42, April 23rd

I am sure like a lot of people things are feeling strained and frustrating. One of the biggest stumbling blocks for me living rurally and being a city dweller most of my life is not driving. Since moving back West from a long stint in Dublin, I have been faced with relying on lifts to get around. I have had countless driving lessons and was making good progress until around November time and gradually, as the winter months set in, my motivation waned and I settled into complacency about driving.

My promise to myself was – once the nice weather comes in, I could get back into the swing of things and work towards my goal of getting my licence for once and for all. And now? Well, now my goal feels as further away as is possible! I guess it adds to the frustrating feeling of being stuck, which I was already experiencing to a much lesser degree before the lockdown. Hopefully, once restrictions get eased I can start this process again. Here’s hoping.

So, that’s the feeling for today, but I mustn’t wallow. I have my health and so does my family. I am safe and I am living in a beautiful place. Life is not so bad!

Day 41, April 22nd

Bonnie Tyler plays Electric Picnic, 2019.

This time of year, I usually start looking into getting tickets for the many festivals and outdoor gigs on offer over the summer months. Myself and my best friend of 25 years have been going to gigs and festivals since we were both in our early 20’s. We have been to Slane, Oxygen, Electric Picnic, ATN, Féile among countless other outdoor gigs, including any on at the Iveagh Gardens, which is such a special setting to see a live band.

Yesterday, I went into such a bad mood when I heard about the new announcement not allowing gatherings of crowds over 5,000 until the end of August. It’s such a heavy blow for the industry, the artists, the promoters and for us the punters.

For me, these gigs and festivals are pretty much integral to my social life – they’re where I meet friends, run into people, dance, soak in the atmosphere, queue for the portaloos! I realised yesterday just how much I love the shared experience of gatherings of people listening to music, dancing, singing along – it is like this life-affirming collective of like-minded music-loving people.

And so now – the summer ahead? The word tumbleweed comes to mind. Ireland during the summer with no festivals or community events of any kind? No Tidy Towns or beach cleanups? While I appreciate that this is all to do with this crisis and how we all need to keep safe, this particular news has hit me a bit hard.

So today, I am indulging in some festival nostalgia.

The Body & Soul arena at Electric Picnic.

Video: Sons of Kermit Instrumental Brass Band play Electric Picnic 2019.

Queuing to use the toilet!

 

Day 40 (40?!), April 21st

Aside from the daily death toll from COVID-19, one of the most shocking stories to emerge in recent days is how local businesses in Cahirciveen reacted to the fact that asylum seekers have now tested positive in the newly opened Direct Provision centre there.  The residents effectively are not being served at local shops and pharmacies instead deliveries are their only option. Since when have we as a society become like this? I feel so enraged that we are allowing this to happen. Firstly, Direct Provision is the system that is putting the lives of asylum seekers at great risk and now they have to deal with this kind of prejudice.

As someone who works closely with asylum seekers, I can tell you that the level of stress and fear they experience far exceeds what we are going through. These people are not receiving any duty of care that we should be showing them now more than ever.

I fear for humanity when I read these articles and how cases of the virus is beginning to spread in Direct Provision centres. I fear for how we are continuing to deny them basic human rights, basic decency in the face of one of the biggest crisis the world has ever known. I can’t do much but I can write about it and I will continue to do so on the basis that the people caught up in a broken system deserve compassion, empathy and nothing else.

Day 39, April 20th

There is a lot of emphasis on nostalgia at the moment – lots of online challenges, like putting up photos on Facebook of when you were 20.

One that I’m surprising myself by taking part in is the ’10 Albums From Your Younger Days’ challenge. I find it a really nice thing to do on these days when one can feel overwhelmed or just weary from the way life now is – taking trips down memory lane can really take the mind off this.

When I was growing up in the ’80s and ’90s, listening to albums on CDs, cassettes and records was the only way we could hear our favourite bands or singers. We would buy NME or Hot Press (magazines) and read the reviews and then buy them in Golden Discs, HMV or your local record store. And, then if we were lucky enough to see them live, we would buy a t-shirt at the gig.

And that’s how the industry worked. These days, it’s a lot different and streaming services are completely annihilating the music industry by not paying musicians enough and essentially their work is being accessed for free, more or less.

If we think about it, music is what is getting a lot of us through these days. I am spending a lot of my time listening to music on Spotify and I am really starting to question this now.

We see musicians putting on their online gigs, asking people to donate a few quid because their livelihoods are now in serious question. I think we need to put much, much more value on how we source our music – buy straight from the artists themselves and definitely when this is over – go and see them play live. I for one, cannot wait to get to a gig again. Bring it on.

Some good ways are listed here on how to support Irish artists and musicians.

Days 37/38, April 18th & 19th

I planted trees.

These are at the very start of their growth and I planted them in small pots before I transfer them into our back piece of wildland. I am 99% sure they are ash trees (given to me by my neighbour) and this is a project I have been wanting to do for a long time. It got me thinking how the Climate Emergency has now fallen away into the background.

However, what I have noticed is that nature is breathing again and is thriving. The skies are empty of endless flight paths clogging up our environment and exasperating the air quality. The talk at the moment is about the ‘new normal’.

I am talking a lot these days to friends and family about how we are now in a position to actually create our own normality. By growing our own vegetables (I am eagerly awaiting my free seeds from GIY – an amazing initiative to encourage people to grow their own veg) and become less reliant on big corporates to sustain ourselves – could this be the new normal?

Despite how difficult this lockdown has been, it has also been a time for exploring possibilities in life and how we don’t always have to bow down to what we are being told is the only way to live. We have a choice to create a new way to live.

I firmly believe that mass consumerism is a type of mental illness! We are told that if you buy X product, your life will change.

We are told that the fashion industry –  one of the biggest sources of waste of any industry – can make you feel younger, thinner, more attractive. We are fed lies and continue to feed into these and thus add untold damage to the earth’s precious environments. Yet, online shopping during this time must surely be skyrocketing, a sign that this need for us to seek out happiness through material goods is still strong.

Back to my trees and this morning – I was thinking about the people who have died from COVID-19 in Ireland. The numbers come in every day as just that – numbers. For every tree I plant, I will use these trees as symbols to remember those who have died and give more meaning than just statistics. Maybe it’s something more people could do too, just a small symbolic gesture to honour the loved ones of those who have died.e

Day 36, April 17th

When I first started this community diary, the initial focus was to be on my volunteer role working with asylum seekers who live in a DP centre locally. I was to talk about the many activities we have on a weekly basis and how having them in our town has rejuvenated and enhanced our community hugely.

I still want to do this, albeit in a retrospective way.

These days, while the lockdown has put everything on hold, we still keep in contact with them via our WhatsApp group. I also speak to several of them individually and offer support, friendship and an ear for them – as whatever stress we might be experiencing, this is nothing in comparison. What always surprises me is their resilience and their ability to stay positive and retain have their humour, their spirit and their lust for life.

So – this time aside – here’s what has happened since their arrival last summer (almost a year ago): We held weekly dance classes, drumming, English conversation meetups, cultural dinners hosted by locals, carpooling – with lots more planned. We held monthly coffee mornings – this is always a really lively, vibrant occasion. The residents get to meet the locals, have tea with them and new friendships form. There is always music and singing and a really happy atmosphere and these are the times I miss the most.

But I know we will have them again and meet them all again down the line. Our bond remains unbroken. They are continuously expressing gratitude and appreciation  they have for us locals. They call us family.

When this is all over, while I want to continue our voluntary work, I am also campaigning for the end of Direct Provision in Ireland. In light of how badly the government responded to the crisis in relation to health care workers and protecting DP residents, it is crucial that the DP system ends and a more humane and dignified approach takes priority.

Who lives here, belongs here. And with that, a home has to be provided for everyone. Empty houses that are fit for purpose have to be options for everyone – the homeless included – who need a home. It is after all a human right.

 

Day 35, April 16th

The exact point where my 2km walk ends brings me back to my childhood home by the sea in the West of Ireland. So I find myself back where I spent my days hanging out as a child watching the sea and during the times when we were lucky enough to see school’s of dolphins, this would be one of the biggest thrills to witness. The dolphins or porpoises would jump and swim all across the length of the bay as we would all watch in wonderment. I spend time there now trying to scan the ocean to see if any dolphins are lurking about but not yet anyway.

This was also the spot when as a child I would watch the now grass-covered over natural spring well trickle down water and it was where my imagination would run. One day, I swore I saw a fairy there. A tiny miniature magical spec of a being. On other days it was the place I would escape to whenever I needed space. So it is a space of contemplation, reflection and yesterday I was literally the only person along the stretch of strand, dunes, pebbles and sand. It felt like such a privilege.

A few weeks ago I wrote about being at that spot and how there were throngs of people out, too many to feel in any way protected from the virus. I couldn’t wait to get home. Yesterday, as I sat on the edge of the cliff with my feet on the warm grass – I wanted to stay there all day. The temptation to go home. pack a lunch and a flask with my book was very strong. But I knew that leaving was the right thing to do. Maybe give someone else the opportunity to be the only person around. It is a unique and wonderful thing to experience so hopefully someone else had that too.

Day 34, April 15th

I sit down to write this and I don’t actually know what I am going to say. I find the process of keeping this diary going very therapeutic and healing even, at times. It’s a way for me to really check in with what this experience is like both personally and on a societal level – both I am gaining huge insight into. I haven’t been sleeping well recently and put this down to the remnants of the day’s stresses that don’t always leave me. I was listening to Max Richter’s 8-hour long album aptly called, Sleep. It’s a deeply relaxing, symphony of soft orchestral medley’s and although it didn’t send me off to a deep slumber, it really was very soothing.

I do wonder though. what is life going to be like when this is all over. I am hyper-vigilant to the point of paranoia when I am in the company of people – socially distant apart or not. Whenever there is a visitor I am anxiously watching their every move – are they far apart from my parents? Could they be putting them at risk? And then I wonder why my sleep gets affected.

But what is happening for me is I am tapping back into my creative side and painting on canvas, helps me to calm my mind and focus on the artistic process. This is a huge outlet for me and one that gives me immense solace and grounding in. As I write this the voice of Neil Young sings in the background:

“Come a little bit closer, hear what I have to say. Just like children sleeping, we can dream this night away. But there’s a full moon rising, let’s go dancing in the light.” Looking forward to dancing again. In the moonlight, maybe. Who knows!

 

Day 33, April 14th

A good friend of mine tested positive for the virus –  he is recovering but still has a way to go. Hearing this has given me some perspective and has brought it home to me just how precarious things are. He hasn’t been able to get out of his house in over 3 weeks. It makes me feel all the more thankful that I live where I live. I don’t know if I’ve ever known gratitude like it before. When I lived in Dublin in a turbulent house-sharing situation, I find perspective on my life now and how living in my own place with oodles of space in the back garden makes things feel safe, secure and somewhat reassured.

The talk of “when this is all over” feels weighted in unknowns, as if we have a much longer road ahead than any of us are willing to admit. But what this does do is bring hope and something to look forward to. That first hug, seeing friends again, going out for a meal, going to a gig or a festival, visiting an art gallery, going on holiday, having a spa day, having a massage, being with people again! Human contact is the vital energy in our lives and having it ripped away from us feels really devastating in some ways. I had an interesting moment with my counsellor recently as we finished our session on Zoom, we joked about how this would normally be the point when we talk about getting out, meeting friends, reaching out to people. While we can still do this online, not having the human connection in person can feel like such a strange void. It’s emotional writing this. Never needed a hug as much as I do now. Maybe a virtual one will do for now.

 

 

Day 32, April 13th

Bank Holiday Monday never felt so underwhelming. No waking up with that sense of “ahh no work today” or that “I can finally get that lie-in that I so clearly deserve” novelty. This year, a bank holiday blends in with all the days that have gone before where our new normality is still not feeling quite real. I feel like I am in some sort of parallel universe. The birds sound louder, the people all stay indoors and the beaches are empty.

I often revisit the writing of the late John O’Donohue who was a deeply spiritual man who wrote many books about Celtic spirituality and his own interpretations of ancient Irish wisdom. One of my favourites that bring solace during difficult times is below:

Solitude is one of the most precious things in the human spirit. It is different from loneliness. When you are lonely, you become acutely conscious of your own separation. Solitude can be a homecoming to your own deepest belonging. One of the lovely things about us as individuals is incommensurable in us. In each person, there is a point of absolute non-connection with everything else and with everyone. This is fascinating and frightening. It means that we cannot continue to seek outside ourselves for things we need from within. The blessings for which we hunger are not to be found in other places or people. These gifts can only be given to you by yourself. They are at home at the hearth of your soul.

JOHN O’DONOHUE

Excerpt from the book, Anam Cara

 

Days 30/31, April 11th & 12th

With another three weeks of lockdown ahead, things feel like they have entered into a new phase – one where we will have to dig deep to keep going, try not to falter and keep our mental health going through these extraordinary times. I feel very fortunate to have access to my therapist on zoom every week and counselling has been keeping me grounded and helping me to filter through quite complex feelings and emotions that have been coming up.

Coincidentally, as I write this there is a song on the radio with the lyrics  “some people suffer in silence” and while not everyone has the luxury of accessing counselling online -there are things we can all do to help ourselves get through. These don’t need to be anything complicated or contrived – simplicity is the key for me getting through things.

I wanted to write my own shortlist of ways in which I have been minding my mental health – not always easy, far from it but on the days when I get overwhelmed – some of these are a total blessing in my life.

  1. Breathe in for 4, hold for 4 and breathe out for 7. If you can do this outside in nature, all the better
  2. Write 5 positive things that happened in your day
  3. Put on music from your past, music that might evoke a happy memory. Take a trip down memory lane!
  4. Listen to a podcast for your 2km walk
  5. If you’re cocooning – keep in regular touch with your family and friends. If this is not an option, reach out to Alone. Their support line will be open seven days a week, 8am-8pm, by calling 0818 222 024

I am now my brother’s Sunday carer. During this time, I am taking over from my father and while initially, this was daunting, I am now feeling really thankful I am able to not only share time with him and keep him safe but knowing I can do this while my father can’t is really a blessing. We had a nice day – he was much more alert than usual and managed to smile and laugh a bit. These are the moments that I relish in and feel so grateful for.

 

Day 29th, April 10th

There seems to be a plethora of online challenges and nominations for people to get busy with during this time. It’s all about getting motivated, feeling positive and this very glib “we will get through this together” narrative. I really feel like this is a lot of pressure on people who are already struggling with the day to day tasks of life in this abnormal time. If you are getting up, doing your thing, getting on with things as best you can then, I think that is more than enough.

Having said all that, I think it’s fitting in this bizarre and confusing time that I will, of course, contradict all of the above! I have been asked by a very good friend of mine who practices a lot of personal growth work and has studied psychology to take part in a 21-day Abundance challenge, devised by Deepak Chopra. I only just started and it has given me a sense of calm already. I spent about an hour coming up with 50 people who have influenced me in my life and after this task, I did a short meditation, which was soothing and grounding. Thinking about all the people made me feel a wave of gratitude that was so refreshing and it eased my anxiety hugely. I am not new to meditation but I have found it very difficult to engage with it these days, apart from short breaks to do some mindful breathing. So this is welcome and I hope I can engage with it over the course of the coming days and weeks. Another meditation I regularly do, which is very doable, is a short 10-minute meditation by Mark Williams, who has one of the most relaxing voice I have ever heard. Worth listening for this alone!

There’s a stillness to the day that feels very calming – when this all first started there were a couple of days like this but they had a more eerie, ominous quality, not at all like today. I have recently started picking branches and sticks from the small woods next door as kindling and firewood for my stove and it is probably one of the most satisfying parts of my day now – my connection to nature just keeps getting stronger each day.

 

Day 28th, April 9th

As the numbers of cases rise here at a steady pace and the death rates are increasing, it’s hard not to feel overwhelmed. I want to know how other countries are dealing with this and as Vietnam is a country very close to my heart – my focus is there. To date, the country has surprisingly low numbers of cases for a country with such a huge population of 45 million and only 251 cases nationwide.

Speaking to friends there, the key measure for anyone travelling back to Vietnam is compulsory quarantine . Tens of thousands of people have to stay in these camps for 14 days after arriving back into the country. An extreme measure for an extreme situation.

 

Imagine if we did this here? Imagine if those travelling back from Cheltenham were marched as a group into a designated quarantine camp – might this have reduced the cases?

The fact that people are still travelling into Ireland is just staggeringly reckless. Ferry companies are still operating as normal. Holidaymakers in deep denial as they make their way to their holiday homes in the west. The sense of entitlement is breathtaking.

The other point that I am hearing time and time again is the use of wearing masks in Vietnam is a huge factor for reduced cases. Social distancing in Vietnam is near impossible so mask-wearing is compulsory. I am finding it very hard to fully comprehend why we are not doing this on a more urgent level here. I know there is a shortage of PPE for our frontline workers and people are now being resourceful and making their own but if this was a mandatory practice like it is in Austria, we might have a stronger chance of beating this. I need to take a deep breath after this diary entry. Breathing mindfully in a time of deep anxiety is something I do regularly these days.

Anyway, I could go further into this rabbit hole but for now, I will leave it. Back to Lyric Fm and a great book I’ve started called Where the Crawdads Sing by Delia Owen. The day is bright, the birds are still keeping me cheerful and most of all I have my health.

 

Day 27, April 8th

Coming up to a month of this life-changing experience – there are some things I have learned that have been an invaluable lesson. Appreciating the moments in time – the feeling of the ground beneath my feet as I wander the back land, which is overgrown and delightfully wild. Accompanying this is the bird song, which feels like it’s the main soundtrack of my life at the moment. Some days I turn off the music and just sit and listen to this, trying to identify what bird is singing. I found this fantastic website recently, which allows you to do just that – it’s a great little resource and such a nice distraction.

Know your birdsong! Click through our quick guide to the calls of common Irish birds

Of course, keeping up to date with the news is also part of the day, although, for my mental health, I try to keep this to a minimum. Today on RTE 1 Sean O’Rourke show, the ongoing situation in Direct Provision centres is still not being properly managed by the government. The issue for health care workers who are living in these centres is particularly concerning with no chance to self-isolate. This is a ticking time bomb and if urgent measures to move these people out does not happen soon, we are in trouble.

And then the stigma attached to the residents who have the COVID-19 virus is such an added strain for these asylum seekers and so easily avoided. If the government took the right steps to protect these people in the same way they are for others in our society, we might actually have social justice and equality. However, this is not the case at the moment. My friends who are in this situation are living in fear, which I cannot imagine. All over the news is about the new legislation to stop people from travelling to their holiday homes and caravans in the west over Easter. These empty residential buildings not to mention the countless number of empty hotels that could be utilised to accommodate the vulnerable in our community during this crisis – is this the failure of society that we cannot put our own privilege and pass it on to another who’s very life could depend on it?

Day 26, April 7th

Some days are better than others. Some days, the opportunity to be in nature and notice the wildlife burst open at the start of Spring can often overtake the anxiety and anxious feeling that this pandemic brings. Then there are days like today. When no matter how hard you try to snap out of it, it’s not happening. The unsettling feeling is sticking and there’s no point in fighting it. So what can help? Music is always a leveller so this is usually the time I will blast the volume on some of my favourite albums or in these modern times, Spotify playlists.

Cooking also helps and I find I am being more creative in the kitchen these days. Today for lunch is pearl couscous with rocket, almonds/hazelnuts, cherry tomatoes, hummus and a boiled egg. It’s a simple dish but very tasty with balsamic vinegar to make it a bit punchier.

Reading a book takes the edge off, house cleaning, laundry normal stuff help.

I suppose all these distractions help with the loneliness. Today I feel lonely and although I get to see close family members, I haven’t seen my friends for longer than is the norm. I miss them. I miss a hug. I miss going to gigs. Maybe this is the grieving process of what life used to be like. My friend who lost her mother last year reminded me that this feeling a lot of us are going through is like grief.

I stood outside drinking tea watching my neighbour’s 2-year-old twins, playing together. Oblivious to what is going on and it was lovely to just watch them interact with each other, it gave me hope on a day when I needed it the most. The other day I saw a fox wandering through the fields and it was the highlight of my day to see this usually nocturnal animal out and about in daylight. These are the moments to get us through.

Day 25, April 6th

I want to highlight the efforts of the Irish community and social enterprise efforts around the country. I am in awe of how well we are doing in this country – we are all finding it tough but it is starting to make a difference. There is a palpable feeling that through these efforts, we will get through this and come out the other end. We are not there yet though and until then, here are just some of the many amazing initiatives happening that are making a difference.

  1. Irish Men’s Sheds launched #CallThemforACuppa campaign.Speaking on the launch of the campaign, CEO of IMSA Barry Sheridan said:“We always say that the ‘kettle is the most important tool in the shed’, a key part of any day in a shed is gathering around the table, having a cup of tea and a chat. While you can’t call in, you can call. The next time you’re sitting down for a cuppa, think of someone who is at risk of social isolation and give them a call.
  2. Alone has launched a national support line and additional supports for older people who have concerns or are facing difficulties relating to the outbreak of COVID-19 (Coronavirus) in Ireland. The support line will be open seven days a week, 8am-8pm, by calling 0818 222 024

  1. Foodcloud, the social enterprise that redistributes surplus food to communities in need, is launching an emergency food and funding appeal to aid their charity partners in distributing food parcels.

“Our emergency response efforts will be in addition to our day-to-day activities and we are now appealing for food and funding support to meet the growing demand.  We are preparing to meet the additional demand for food parcels by establishing new strategic partnerships with community organisations that will support the ever-changing needs of individual communities across Ireland.  Through these partnerships, we are accelerating our support of families whose children normally get free school meals, the elderly with underlying health conditions and those who need to self-isolate.”

 

Day 23/24, 4th & 5th April

What is wonderful about this 2km limit is finding new byways and laneways and backroads and streams to explore nearby. There is something delightful about noticing something in a field – today I saw a green bike laying on the grass as if waiting for its owner to take it off for a spin. I love seeing old baths in fields or even just fading paintwork on a bridge – I find I am noticing things more acutely.

 

 

Sadly, I am also noticing a depressing amount of people’s rubbish trapped within brambles and bushes along all of my walks locally. The most recent common sight is of disposable gloves carelessly strewn on the road. When our medical frontline staff could do with PPE, this is just appalling lack of respect.

 

To pass time on the rainier days, I, like most people, am online a lot. Sometimes seeking out the more positive content I can find and I am loving this new phenomenon of wild animals venturing out of their habitats and roaming the empty urban streets. As international governments stepping up lockdown effort to limit the spread of coronavirus, wild animals have been spotted exploring the empty streets of some of the world’s largest urban areas. One of my favourites is an unnamed endangered mammal not seen until 1990 resurfaces for the first time in India during a lockdown

 

 

 

Also loving this one of a fox spotted at Ha’penny Bridge in Dublin

Yesterday, on a nature walk with my cocooning father, we ventured out the back wilderness, which is half an acre of divine wilderness. We listened to the birds and he showed me where a badger had been digging – wonder might we see him wandering around curiously like these animals? Hope so!

Day 22, 3rd April

It doesn’t feel that long ago when I was watching reports from Wuhan and how quickly the virus escalated into a full lockdown there. I was following it, thinking how weird it must be for people “over there”. Even watching a video blog from a young Irish English teacher there who gave a daily video account of the weekly shopping and how everyone had their temperature checked before going into supermarkets. Watching this with a sort of morbid fascination as something that would never happen here – the thoughts of it never even entered my mind or if they did they were fleeting. And so here we are.

I was speaking to a friend in the US recently telling her about how this situation is making us all pull together and that community efforts and volunteering was the thing that is linking and supporting the vulnerable especially. I could tell that she felt a pang of envy hearing this as she used to live here and it was probably that very aspect of Irish life that she misses the most.

Nationwide, the volunteering efforts are truly amazing. There are offers of PPE, people making masks, offers of shopping deliveries, An Post now are checking in on elderly people living in isolated areas – the list goes on. It still feels like such an odd concept to be in this together yet staying apart but for now, it is working – let’s keep flattening the curve.

 

If you want to volunteer you can sign up at www.i-vol.ie, download their smartphone app I-VOL (Apple Store or Google Play) or contact your local Volunteer Centre

Day 21, 2nd April

“Direct Provision operators will always put profits above everything. Solidarity with people in overcrowded accommodation at this time,” says the Movement of Asylum Seekers in Ireland, which published this photo in March.

Zoom calls with our asylum seeker friends can at times be sombre. Last night, we spoke to a few of them and while the tone is upbeat mostly, there are these lulls in the conversation where none of us is speaking.

There is a palpable feeling of stress and fear for them. We found out that finally the government are taking measures to move Direct Provision residents out into safer living environments and nine of our friends move to Galway on Saturday.

What is always a surprise to me is how sad they are, leaving our little town.

What our community has been giving them is unwavering support and solidarity, particularly now. As a volunteer, I don’t take stock of this enough. How our efforts are impacting these people goes very deep; to feel that sense of belonging, of welcome and compassion during a time of turmoil must boost morale hugely.

These men never complain, or at least rarely. They accept their situation with tenacity, resilience and grace and it amazes me.

A few days ago, I met one of them from across the eerily empty street of our town. He was deep in thought, but I shouted over to him asking how he was doing. “We survive, we have to” was his answer.

I wanted to go over to him and offer a hug, but, of course, I couldn’t.

 

Day 20, 1st April 

One of the biggest challenges these days is being in the middle of the three most vulnerable members of my family. The burden of responsibility can sometimes weigh heavy, particularly in relation to my parents.

Both are 70 and sometimes the role reversal of my new found position in the family can be a bit daunting. There are a lot of similar accounts from people in the same boat as me, describing their parents like “elderly teenagers who can’t stop complaining about how the rules are so unfair and don’t really apply to them”.

The conversations these days are to do with too much screentime and not enough fresh air and exercise, which I am pretty certain are the types of arguments going on for parents with teenagers! I never imagined I would be in this scenario, but I am one of many.

My brother, in the latter stages of MS, is being cared for at home lovingly by his devoted and dedicated team of carers who are like his second family. We would be totally lost without them.

 

 

Day 19, 31st March 

I’ve been reflecting on escapism and my own experiences of travelling. Now that the only travelling I am doing these days is walking within a 2 km radius, it is nice to remember a time when I was living and working in Vietnam and what life was like for me at that time.

One of the things that struck me about the people there was their resilience and their ability to innovate and overcome challenges by digging deep, finding new ways to earn money, finding new ways to survive.

When I read how well the country is dealing with the COVID-19 crisis, I wasn’t surprised: A recent Financial Times article describes how the government there took radical early measures for its 96 million population. You can read the article here.

It got me thinking about the children and young people that I used to work with who were all part of an art and music project I managed 10 years ago. When I spoke to my Vietnamese friend who lives in France recently, she gave me updates on how some of these young people are now. Many have their own children now and all of them run their own businesses.

I was delighted to hear how well they’re doing, although I am sure they still all have big challenges to overcome. Saigon is a huge city and has become very westernised in recent years, making it more and more difficult for smaller businesses to flourish. But these young people have strong mindsets, good value systems and are savvy enough to get by. More power to them.

 

Day 18, 30th March 

There was only one thing on my mind over this weekend and that was that I had run out of chocolate. This is not the time to deprive myself of this and I wasn’t going to! It was time to order our weekly shopping and because last time, they forgot my last order. I was not going to let this happen again and so in my desperate plea asking them not to omit this essential from my shopping list, I could not have been clearer (see below: note how I urgently used capital letters for the word please and I highlight in bold the word any). Desperate times call for desperate measures:

3 x lindt bars chocolate – sea salt, orange, hazelnut (near health food shelves)

PLEASE substitute for any 3 bars of choc similar size.

Once again our local community efforts are playing a blinder. Our shopping was delivered (with my chocolate) and we were also treated to homemade soup and cake by the local restaurant. Aren’t we the lucky ones!

Day 16th-17th, 28th & 29th March 

There are many surreal elements to this life in quarantine, but none more so than walking through my home town on a beautiful sunny Sunday afternoon and not a person or a car around.

The streets were empty bar one or two people in the distance and the odd car passing by slowly. We are now in lockdown; although the government doesn’t want to label it that, this is the reality of life now.

Since yesterday, the government has also taken extreme measures for people over 70 who now are not allowed to leave their homes – a very difficult thing for older people to digest. Understandably so.

When we step out of our new “normal” and start to read about what is happening in Spain, Italy and now New York city, it really makes me feel very lucky to live where I live.

There are open spaces galore, beaches, fields and lovely remote back roads to walk on and where you would rarely meet another soul. It is a privilege to have these at our doorsteps.

The government response to this crisis has been swift, empathic and serious – no chances are taken, no measures too far as they are doing their utmost to protect us, the citizens of this country.

The leadership has been impressive and steady and our own president Michael D. Higgins shared his poem ‘Take Care’. When I see Boris Johnson and Donald Trump and the lack of real compassion, leadership or strategy to deal with this crisis, it makes me feel proud to be Irish knowing that our politicians – in the face of adversity – are doing everything in their power to help.

“Take Care”

In the journey to the light,
the dark moments
should not threaten.
Belief
requires
that you hold steady.
Bend, if you will,
with the wind.
The tree is your teacher,
roots at once
more firm
from experience
in the soil
made fragile.

Your gentle dew will come
and a stirring
of power
to go on
towards the space
of sharing.

In the misery of the I,
in rage,
it is easy to cry out
against all others
but to weaken
is to die
in the misery of knowing
the journey abandoned
towards the sharing
of all human hope
and cries
is the loss
of all we know
of the divine
reclaimed
for our shared
humanity.
Hold firm.
Take care.
Come home
together.

 

Day 15, 27th March

At the end of this week, gratitude is a word I keep thinking about and how much it holds weight at this time.

At 8 pm, my parents and I stood outside on a chilly Spring night under the watchful sliver of the new moon and we applauded. We were the only ones on the road doing it but it felt so important to honour our frontline medical workers during this crisis. It felt right.

As news floods in, day after day, we cannot but be aware of the situation we are in. But for frontline staff who are working under unimaginable challenging circumstances… we need to send gratitude their way.

But the government also has its part to play to support them in all aspects of what lies ahead.

I wanted to end this week’s diary entry with humour, which is the one thing that keeps me going on these times. The comedy trio Foil, Arms and Hog have a hilarious video reflecting this era we are in (see below).

Stay safe!

 

Days 13-14, March 25th-26th 

I have to go into the town today to pick up my prescription. Normally, I would be looking forward to the walk there, but on these days venturing away from the confines of my home feels daunting. I no longer do my shopping and, instead, a neighbour picks it up and drops it to our house – she gets out of the car and I take the shopping out from her back seat. She walks a few paces away – a safe distance watching me and we’re chatting away, trying to make normal a very unreal and surreal encounter.

The sunny days are alleviating the strain of what people are going through around the country. More and more are heeding the guidelines and, when out on walks, I notice that the volume of traffic has reduced significantly.

This makes for a lovely calm, peaceful walk in nature and the bird song seems so vibrant on these days. There is such hope in this.

Speaking of Hope – I have started to read a book by Ruairi McKiernan called Hitching for Hope. This is an account of his time hitching around Ireland in a quest to find solace in a very tumultuous time in the country in the middle of a brutal recession with harsh austerity measures.

There is much similarity to what we are now experiencing at this moment and reading his words bring much comfort and a sense of solidarity as we all get through things as best we can. Collectively, we are reaching out and supporting those who most need it and Ruairi’s words soothe immensely. Highly recommend.

You can order Ruairi’s paperback from Eason‘s (best value at €11.24 including delivery)  Kenny’s, Waterstones, O’Mahoney’s and most good bookshops. Deliveries will take place once Covid-19 restrictions are lifted. The Kindle edition is currently available through Amazon.

 

Days 11 – 12, March 24th

Time seems to be in a perpetual state of vagueness and much harder to grasp as it would be in normal life and there is a feeling of being hyper-aware of the time passing by us through this surreal life we are in.

Now that self-isolation is very real and not so much a concept, I have been taking steps to mind my self-care throughout this.

First things first – keep calm. Time on my own can amplify things and feel very overwhelming – time to focus on my breath on these wobbly times.

I ordered seeds to plant and, even though I am not a gardener, I want to learn and no better time than this.

Keeping active and having a routine seem to be the two things that are getting me through things. Reading, listening to music and trying to avoid social media when things feel overwhelming all help immensely.

Meditation is something that can really ground me too, even just taking a quiet moment to focus on my breath for a couple of minutes. All help.

“We are all in this together” is the phrase the government is using a lot at the moment. Are we really though?

Not a day goes by when I don’t think of my asylum seeker friends who are living in cramped conditions with no chance to self-isolate. My community’s (voluntary) work with them has been the biggest source of joy and fulfilment in recent times and I am missing seeing them on a regular basis.

Despite the dreadfully stressful situation they are in, their resilience in the face of all this is truly inspirational. They send us videos on our WhatsApp group of how they are getting through things and many play music, some even freestyling about life during a pandemic.

Music really does heal. Of that, I am in no doubt.

 

Day 10, March 23rd

Recently, I have been reflecting on my own health. I am a healthy woman in my mid 40’s, I keep active, eat well and I don’t drink or smoke.

I am, however, asthmatic. I take two inhalers to manage this and I haven’t had an asthma attack in well over 5 years. So it is in under control.

I went through a really bad period of severe asthma attacks when I returned home to Ireland after living in SE Asia. This required me to be put on nebulizers to open up my airways as I battled to breathe on my own.

It is an extremely distressing experience not being able to breathe. You go into survival mode as each breath is tight, laboured and gasping to get out. Gradually, as the nebulizer takes effect, airways open again and the tightening loosens and breathing returns again.

It is a euphoric feeling to be able to breathe again and the relief is untold.

So, why tell this story?

Because COVID-19, when severe, can overwhelm our respiratory function and this account might help someone to make more informed decisions when it comes to social distancing. We are all in this together and we can as a community reach out to one another and do the right thing – stay at home.

 

Days 7-9, March 21-22nd

Want to start growing your own? Plenty tips here: https://giy.ie

This is not a time to be complacent. With the arrival of the Spring weather and while we are being encouraged to go outdoors, some people are using this as a time to picnic, to be out and about in droves.

Beaches are thronged. Public national parks are being closed due to the volume of day-trippers. I think we have a “sure, it’ll be grand. We’re outside” mentality and there is an absence then of carrying through on social distancing, because the virus is not airborne.

Gardening at home is the next best option for going out there for walks. Getting hands stuck into soil, hearing the birds chatter away and getting back in touch with nature is the best therapeutic approach to what is happening.

We are social animals and so wanting to be outside among people is totally a natural need but we have to contradict this need now more than ever.

Life online is buzzing with many zoom calls to family and friends. Whatsapp messages are flying in and I definitely feel connected to people in this context.

I am pretty much alone these days apart from fleetingly seeing my parents who are 71 and 80. My mother still makes me dinner sometimes and we share short chats on the patio or in their kitchen. But I don’t stay long. I sometimes feel a burden of responsibility not to be around them much and it’s hard.

I made a card for my mother today on mothers day and it was the closest thing in replacement of a hug. When all this is over, we will be hugging our loved ones tighter than usual, this I am sure of.

 

Days 6-8, March 18-20th

The sense of time during the coronavirus pandemic is a curious thing. The days are blurring one day into the other and there is an overall sense now that people,  although anxious,  are starting to get to grips with this new world order.

Relationship dynamics are adjusting, albeit slowly and self-care routines are paramount. Online counselling sessions, zoom calls with spiritual healers, mediation online, yoga – it’s all happening through a screen. Social interaction is down to the bare minimum and we are all taking guidelines seriously.

Then we look right and we look left at the UK and the US and the level of complacency is utterly staggering. What is coming down the tracks doesn’t bear thinking about when you consider the ramifications of not acting fast enough and how Italy is now counting the toll.

It’s a fitting week to feel proud to be Irish. Our government are really taking strong leadership on this and we are now doing our civic duty to protect our loved ones. When I phoned my local supermarket yesterday to give them my shopping list so I could then avoid going inside, the help, support and calm customer service were absolutely incredible. No questions asked, no problem.

When this is all over we all need to do everything we can to acknowledge retail workers, health care workers and anyone who cannot avoid social contact because of this. We owe a lot to them.

 

Day 5, March 17th 

It is hard to ignore the fact that on this day normally we are outside celebrating St Patrick’s Day on the streets the length and breadth of Ireland. Yet, this has not stopped Irish people from getting creative and posting their parade ideas online.

From families with their dogs parading around their kitchens to streets coming alive with Irish ballads (all within recommended social distance); RTE’s virtual parade was an incredible heartwarming effort to bring people together. Some of the more poignant posts also showed grandparents and grandchildren. One photo showed two grandparents inside and their grandchildren on the outside, smiling, arms outstretched to try to replicate an actual hug.

We as a nation are coming together as one and we can only hope that this is what will get us through these times.

As Leo Varadker addressed the nation, it was a truly significant moment in all our lives. He was calm yet stoic as he outlined “the calm before the storm -before the surge” – while also emphasising that we can flatten the curve, we can as a nation do this. His speech was really empathetic and measured and I think it’s clear this government are doing all the right things to get this right.

But here’s the thing. There is an outpouring of people wanting to offer real and practical solutions to this and there has to be solace in that. We are seeing, in this locality especially, the true meaning of community spirit.

Whatsapp groups are a lifeline for so many. We are checking in with asylum seekers living in Direct Provision locally. We want them to know that even though we can’t see them, we have not abandoned them. We are sending them information with HSE guidelines, that everyone by now is adhering to.

Some of the messages are so heartwarming and full of empathy that it would give you faith in humanity. One woman this morning asked them to be kind to each other and be empathetic. I really believe that empathy and a deeper understanding of people’s struggles will be what will get us through this.

Self-isolation can also be a reflective time. A time to take stock on life and getting back in touch with our creative sides or going out into nature.  There is a lot to be said for the birds too. Their bird song has been an immense source of comfort in recent days.

 

Days 3-4, March 15th & 16th 

The local supermarket is normally a standard experience, you go in buy your food – talk to the locals and go about your business. On Saturday, upon entering the car park, it now has huge signs on the way in – “keep 1.5 meters apart from other people”. There is a sanitizing station at the entrance where people hand sanitize and wipe their trolley handles with.

Surreal times but there is also an overriding feeling of solidarity, of community and a sense of us all being in this together. There is comfort in that, at least.

Also, the widely reported social media instances of panic buying and fights over toilet rolls were nowhere to be seen. So all in all – shopping in the west in the middle of a global pandemic was an altogether civilized and dignified experience!

After all the storms, the weather is finally clearing up making way for fresh sunny Spring days along the windswept Atlantic coast. People are being encouraged to get outside and break the monotony of self-isolation. A good idea in theory but what this brings is akin to what you would normally expect on a summer’s day.

Throngs of people out, loads of traffic  – it’s almost like people are just throwing caution to the wind – literally. What would normally be a day when you might encounter four people at the most – today, it was hard to keep that recommended social distance. Even pausing for a few minutes until the people walking ahead were a safe distance away. However, outdoors seems to be a safe bet and people were really making the most of it.

What is clear as we all try to grapple with this is that there are huge levels of empathy and compassion flooding through an anxious time. Nobody can underestimate the potential of this virus and so there is a real sense that we all have our part to play, collectively and individually.

 

Day 2, Friday the 13th of March

Interaction with people is now reduced to online apps, messenger and texting. It is safe to assume that self-isolation measures locally are now well underway and online life will become a lifeline for many of us.

People are only heading out as necessary to the supermarket for food essentials and coming straight back again. Making the most of the dry weather, a few people are out with their children who are now off school. It is clear they are making concerted efforts to keep their distance as they greet neighbours.

Traffic is busy with people presumably not really knowing what to do with their time now that we are in lockdown – apart, that is, from delivery drivers who are very much working business as usual.

Not everyone can work from home and those at the front line of care work, health care and elderly care cannot be praised enough. Home help carers of one local vulnerable man are carrying out their duties amidst a very precarious time and their duty of care towards their client is a true measure of their commitment and dedication to their work.

Local communities need to value their efforts more. Without them, our disabled, vulnerable and elderly people would not be able to cope, particularly now.

Online life presents so many layers of anxiety-inducing challenges. Everyone has an opinion and everyone wants to be heard. So much information to process and not all are helpful or indeed accurate.

People are scared but then the outpouring of goodwill, kindness and generosity is really something to behold. Local shops and businesses are offering delivery services, support and help to those in need. There is a sense that even in this unchartered territory that community will come out the real winners in all this.

We don’t know what lies ahead, how long this will last but one thing is certain: People who show humanity, kindness and real solidarity will be the ones to get us all through this. One day at a time.

 

Day 1, March 11th

The atmosphere in the small rural town in the West of Ireland close to the recent outbreak of COVID-19 has shifted. At the local supermarket, people are cautiously doing their shopping at a quieter yet steadier pace – people are not so eager to stand around and chat.

It’s more about getting in, get what you need and leave again. 

Everyone is talking about the unknown nature of this virus, how soon will we need to self-isolate, how soon will schools close, how soon will this all be over. The concern is primarily on older family members or family who have serious underlying conditions who are most vulnerable. Information is trickling down to us but at a snail’s pace. 

For example, what additional measures, if any, would a man with latter stages MS who is requiring 24/7 care at his home require to help protect him from contracting this virus? No specific information is at hand yet. 

So, it’s business as usual with frequent hand washing, careful sneezing and keeping distance where possible. A lot of this is down to hoping for the best outcome for us all.

The town itself is quieter too. Events, classes and workshops are getting cancelled daily. Fewer people are on the street and on a recent visit to the local doctor not long after the news broke that the virus was now a short distance from us in the local area – it was eerily quiet. 

What is evident though is despite all these challenges and just the strangeness of it all, is that people are looking out for each other. Stories are emerging of cancer patients being driven to appointments by neighbours or having their shopping dropped to them – true to what community spirit is during turbulent times. 

There are 35 asylum seeker men living in emergency Direct Provision in the town who, due to the lack of self-isolation options for them, are in an even more vulnerable situation. Most share a room with up to three other men in small dorm accommodation. 

While there is little that can be done about these circumstances, the local community welcome group offer them support and friendship as they – like everyone else – are trying to grapple with the situation as best they can.

Harry’s Diary – Day 47 (Thurs, April 30, 2020)

What lockdown? Yesterday, I was in Shannon, Florida and Reykjavik (which I couldn’t spell until now). It’s all Zoom, Zoom, Zoom these days.

In yesterday’s Zoom poetry class I attempted to try and write a poem that doesn’t rhyme. Apparently rhyming hasn’t been fashionable since the Victorian era, so I was told. I disagree, having always considered hip-hop poetry.

Anyway, I must be missing something because I just can’t get my heathen, hip-hoppity head around it.

Literally,
I could break a line
Anywhere
and poems I would make.

In fact, the author/poet who gave a talk on his work said he once read out prose from his book at a poetry festival just to see if anyone would notice. None of the literary buffs in attendance did. So, I had to ask:

“What exactly is a poem?”

“I don’t actually know?” he replied.

No wonder,
I thought,
Poets make
no money.

Ah well – lockdown is going to be extended. We all know it. It’s been all but admitted – it’s nice to be let in on Government secrets. It must have been someone’s fault and it wasn’t me. Admit it – which one of you broke the 2km?

Anyway, it means they are going to have to keep handing out free money. Which means we can all become poets. According to said author, “It’s going to be important to document this crisis.”

Imagine being the Wilfred Owen’s or Seigfreid Sassoons (leading British poets from the First World War) of the 21st century! Like them, we live in unusual times and have plenty of time to write.

Not quite the same though is it? For a start, they had something to write about. And they, at least, went to the effort of making it rhyme.

(Read Wilfred Owen’s ‘Anthem for Doomed Youth’ here).

Imagine: By 1918 they were mostly the same age as this generation of lost youth who face the horrors of the Leaving Cert in July.

Poor old Wilfred got killed in the last week of the war. By that stage they knew the armistice had been agreed. The only reason they were firing at each other was to use up their ammo so they didn’t have to carry it home. I’m not making that up.

It’s like a thing that would happen to me. I’ll probably die of a cheese induced cardiac arrest the day Leo announces Ireland has made peace with the virus. At least, I wouldn’t be around for all the inevitable Covid anthologies.

Can you imagine how bloomin’ boring Covid poetry is going to be?

I sat on my ass and watched Netflix and smoked cigarettes.
And went to the fridge and ate some more cheese.
And went on Facebook and got pissed off.
by people posting garden pictures.
I am so bored of lie-ins (not).
And so traumatised.
I’m missing

people

I hate.

Is there a poetry option in the Leaving Cert? How could you fail?

[Ed – Harry was musing on all this when his pager went off].

It was 2.57 am. I came to. I thought, for a split second, should I pretend I didn’t hear it?

Then my heart made an extra large beat as it does when the call sounds and the adrenaline flooded my system. Someone needs help.

Out the door – here we go again.

Car still wouldn’t start. I’d rather hoped the leprechauns might have magically fixed it while I wrote poems. They didn’t.

Run – bunker gear – fire engine – fire.

Harry’s Diary – Day 46 (Wed, April 29, 2020)

I wouldn’t be a great one for looking in the mirror or maintaining my physical appearance. Just ask Ed.* Seeing what I look like is sort of unavoidable though, when I’m constantly on Zoom meetings looking at myself staring back.

The recent sun has bleached my hair blonder than its winter shade and the lack of open barbers means it’s starting to look rather unruly. I’ve also picked up a bit of a suntan on my river strolls.

I’m beginning to look like a Boris Trump hybrid. If I put on any more lockdown weight, the metamorphosis might be complete. What is more frightening is that I might be beginning to think like them too.

I always considered myself a bit of a socialist, sometimes an extreme anarchist in my more imaginative moments. Definitely, certainly, ‘eat the rich’.
Possibly because I’m always poor and always hungry. In retrospect it might actually be more pragmatism than any sense of social justice.

Practicalities aside, I’m a bit worried that I might be lurching to the right in more ways than simply looking like a populist despot.

The good people of the world tell me I should be more worried about life than economic collapse, but my fears seem to be focused on financial implications.
Do I lack something in the morality department? Why am I so concerned about fiscal matters?

Of course I’m concerned about people’s physical condition. I wouldn’t put myself through the anxiety-inducing unknowns of firemanship if I wasn’t. There are far better paid, more consistent ways to earn a crust that require less commitment.
Part of the appeal for me was the very Marxist ideal of being directly connected with the fruits of my labour. In this case, helping people in their most vulnerable times.
Of course I want people to live. I’ve thought it through. Yes, I’d risk myself to help another.

But, I also remember the recession. I did a lot of work around community development and have dipped in and out of social activism. Not as much as others, but without revealing my identity I would be familiar with the sector.

As such, I saw austerity:
I saw the bust after the boom.
I saw what it did to already marginalised communities.
I saw it in my own communities, in my own family.
I know what it did to me. Working hard and then being thrown on the unemployment scrapheap. All these years later, I still haven’t fully recovered my mental health 100%.

I am not interested in the investors and the landlords and the balance books of corporations – so long as it doesn’t lay more hardship on the people who have suffered so much since 2008.
Maybe I’m too disillusioned after the last ten years to hope for much, but I envisage a cruel post-Covid world – one without healthcare systems or State pensions for my generation and below. A world without basic social care.
I’m almost expecting a dog-eat-dog era where we will likely die on the streets the day we’re not strong enough to fend for ourselves. A 1930’s style US depression where the people who missed out on property will shelter in corrugated shanty towns in parks in city centres.
I’m talking neo-liberalism on crack.

I’m basing this on my own experience and the experience of others I have seen. It seems that things have got progressively harder over my adult life. People working two jobs just to pay the rent. Forgoing family time to keep them housed. And now, even that has all gone bang.

Is my lack of imagination the problem? Maybe – after all this – a new and equitable economic system will spring from the Covid ruins. I had hoped that’s what the General Election’s surge to the left would represent.

Maybe, new and revolutionary politics will be conceived by just and imaginative people to help us avoid the quagmire predicted on the front page of my internet browser. I pray that happens.

I don’t know. All I know for sure is that I really need a haircut.

 

* Harry’s a fashion icon – he can wear anything and carry it off. – Ed.

Harry’s Diary – Day 45 (Tues, April 28, 2020)

I had settled in for the night. Right on cue the pager went. I wasn’t feeling well. I was wondering if I had the virus. I ran to the car, it didn’t start. “Balls!” Two workers from Aldi were laughing at me as I sprinted up the hill towards the station. The adrenaline kicked in. Suddenly I felt perfect.

All the fear of anticipation has gone now. I knew I could cope with whatever the call threw at me. “Fire in commercial premises,” the printout read. That means flash-hoods on.

We drove to the incident, two of us in the back of the lead vehicle. “Under air,” ordered our officer as we approached. Facemasks on – turn on air cylinder – flash-hoods over – helmet – gloves. We grabbed the hose reel and entered while other lads started the pump and hooked up hoses to the mains.

The lad I went in with is a joker, like me. 20 years in the Brigade. I’m glad it was him. This was my first time attacking an indoor fire in earnest.

We entered a smoke filled room and felt around. We had no idea where we were going. Everything becomes a maze when it’s dense with hot gas. Chairs were stacked on both walls, squeezing us into a narrow gap. We are trained not to let go of the walls.

No one who hasn’t trained in Self-Contained Breathing Apparatus (BA) can imagine how quickly you can get lost. We feel around. We can’t move. It’s tight. I follow the hose back to the door and drag in more. Someone hands in a thermal imaging camera.

We feel our way into a room. Clambering over obstacles that we can’t see. Training tells me you can’t see a fire in a smoke filled room. We can’t get any further because the way is blocked.

Is that a door? Some plywood? No – it’s a table, move it out of the way. Be careful not to block the way out in case we need a way out. I’ve moved enough furniture, plasterboard scaffolding, in my life. I don’t need to see it.

It’s no good though because there’s a wall behind it. I bang the wall until I feel it shake. “There’s another door, ” I shout. “This way!”

We can see the fire on the camera. We move towards it almost swimming through stacks of chairs manoeuvring our cylinder so as not to get stuck.

Two quick blasts with the hose, set to spray. Too much water turns to steam in a confined space and then it gets hot really quick. Besides, everything we do is with minimal damage in mind. We still can’t see, but the camera tells us we’ve hit it and it’s cooling. We wait with it: Blast – Blast and wait. Blast – Blast and wait.

The flames have gone so the lads outside turn on a powerful fan to start clearing the smoke. We see we are in a laundry room filled with chairs, tables and decorations, dried flowers and linen. There were aerosol cans by the seat of the fire. That could have gone up in a flash. The fire doors did their job and kept out enough oxygen to prevent that.

We set to work emptying the room of fire-load, removing the ashes and doing our best to clean the sooten mess, making absolutely certain nothing can reignite.

Spirits are high, no one is hurt, this is a fun call. Lads arrive from another station but the work is done, we have a chat and a catch up while we clean up and then head back to the station where we wash our BA sets, put in fresh cylinders and make sure everything is operational for the next call. “See you in an hour.” we say as goodbye. I’m pumped up now. I hope that we do.

We don’t. So I get out of bed and type this. I’m stiff in places and bruised in others. I’m coughing my guts up now. Is it the smokes? Or last night’s smoke? Or…

Harry’s Diary – Day 44 (Mon, April 27, 2020)

I had no choice but to come off my cloud of Zen if for no other reason I didn’t have anything else to write about.

Now I’m scared. The Government is gently setting us up for more lockdown. “People breaking the rules should bear in mind the consequences… it could be having to extend the current lockdown for two to three weeks,” said Leo Varadker, sounding like he was chastising a grounded six-year-old.

Lockdown won’t be lifted, tidy bedrooms or otherwise, with a “big bang”, said Simon Harris. We aren’t going anywhere.

Paul Reid of the HSE euphemistically talked of “strategy for the next two years.”

‘The Boy’ is going to be delighted. I’m terrified.

Firstly, I feel – ‘Can we not just pull the plaster off now?’

Secondly, I’m genuinely concerned for all the businesses in my locality, including poor, soon-to-be-poorer families that sunk their savings into fabulous food outlets and other such establishments.

Thirdly, by a Corona revolt and the State response.

Bloomin’ Nora – a week or two ago I wanted it to go on forever so nature could heal; today, I just want the whole thing to stop.

As someone said to me yesterday: “I’m glad you don’t run the country.”

I’m glad too. Luckily I don’t, I’m allowed to be emotional.

Over in England, the Government are stepping in to re-start the Premier league. They are even talking about forcing Sky to show the ‘behind-closed-doors’ matches for free. Which is something at least.

In Global news, the virus has jumped to mink in the Netherlands and cats in New York. How are we supposed to keep cats locked down? I wonder will pet-control become a new essential industry?

There has even been a case of a dog in Hong Kong. Maybe I’ll collect my one today. Just in case. I haven’t seen him in weeks. He must have stopped vomiting by now. (Brave man! – ed)

In South Korea, research has shown people testing positive for the virus a second time, leading to speculation it may reactivate, like herpes, or Kim Un Jong who has been alive, dead and undead over the weekend.

Sounds like a house party in Shannon.

Kim Un Jong – unlike our Health Minister – loves big bangs. If you choose to believe some reports, he celebrated his resurrection by watching a missile launch. Other reports say it was the missile tests that injured him in the first place.

Astronomers looking for a hero may or may not have to look elsewhere as Elon Musk has released more of his space junk, 40 more according to my neighbour, who knows these things.

Last night’s trail of satellites took over an hour to pass by. I was trying to imagine what the heavens would look like by the end of the year and gave up.

I can’t imagine what anything is going to look like at the end of the year.

Harry’s Diary – Day 43 (Sun, April 26, 2020)

I’m reflecting now. I’ve felt an anxiety rise and wonder why. I have had a good run of it forty-something days into ‘the emergency’. I have been luckier than most.

In contrast to that anxiety is a great joy. A love for creation I have not felt in a long, long time. Telling someone about it earlier today almost led me to tears, so joyful was my soul.

Which, ironically, is the source of this most recent bout of fearfulness. Peace has been rare enough (in my life) and I’m scared of losing the life that I have right now.

A symptom of my growing unease was getting involved in an online debate. They are less about listening and more about intellectual brow-beating (inviting in the inequality of ‘who is smarter’).

I’m no different from anyone else. I need my reassurance. But, validating myself with the prowess of convoluted wordplay over a computer is probably the wrong place to look for it. If I want to twist verbs, I can write poems.

“How dare you fear what I don’t fear?” is the crux of every online argument ever. I am not surprised. These are fearful times.

Happy doesn’t fight, happy isn’t abusive. Happy keeps no record of wrongs – Or is that love? I caught myself slipping into old ways, so ‘I tuned in, turned on, and dropped out.’

Kickboxing is a healthier outlet for that type of violence. At least it always ends with a hug.

Back to the old faithfuls seems like the best plan – my moments with nature, a chat with good friends, a hug for my boy. How could I possibly ask for anything more?

I find what I am looking for and I reset the joy: Mating ducks under a tree, swallows frolicking; even the horse chestnut trees have flowered as they look to fuse DNA with another. Bloody hell, the Covid virus is looking for a host. Everything, bar fighting humans, is looking for a connection.

Facebook discord is anti-joy. Nobody needs my input. I’ve done enough this week. Unless my pager goes off, history can carry on without me.

Great Mystery. All around I did not make.

Not choice of shoes nor belly full or pain-free flesh.

Release unease this day of rest.

Harry’s Diary – Day 42 (Sat, April 25, 2020)

I’ve missed two online meetings in as many days, simply because I have lost track of the days.

I try to stay away from the news. I try to avoid glancing at the headlines on the ‘papers when I enter the shop. What’s the point? I stay in my home or in my radius as asked. I respond to emergency calls when asked. What else can I do?

How will bad news bombardment benefit me? What’s coming down the tracks is coming down the tracks. I suspect it won’t be pretty. The price for the sacrifice we have been asked to make will be burdened by the poor and working classes, no doubt. Sure, aren’t we used to that now?

Wow, that’s a lot of rhetorical questions. I’ve obviously a lot on my mind. I have been trying to suppress it though. I can see my anger from earlier entries. I’m trying to hold my peace more nowadays. I have plenty to be grateful for. My boy, a roof above me, a little bit of writing, my lovely river walk.

I took my boy down to the river. “Dad, come look, baby eels.”

Sure enough there were dozens of elvers, maybe three inches long, swimming in a rockpool left by the receding water. They had no idea of the mortal danger they were in. The pool next to them was a translucent turquoise with an oily sheen on the surface.

Storm drains released a trickle of water into it, obviously the source of whatever it was. Inside that pool there was no life. Barely six inches of rock separated the two pools. I hope, if it rains, it rains hard enough to dilute the deadly blue and wash it away from the hatchlings.

Moral of the story I suppose, I can avoid bad news all I want, in this case environmental degradation. Eventually though, it will come to my door.

Pressure is building. I’m struggling to write, to feel much to be honest. There is a lot of heaviness, even in the weather, but I’m refusing to let it take a foothold. Steam will find a way out some way though.

In rural communities, firefighters are often called to fatalities involving friends, neighbours and cousins. I heard of one poor lad who came across his brother. I’ve been trying to push it to the back of my mind. I can’t though. I will be glad to pay my respects.

Soon enough the alerter will beep again, we will kiss our closest and run…

Harry’s Diary – Day 39 (Wed, April 22, 2020)

The future is here. I had an incredible Zoom meeting last night with some brothers and sisters in California. The 24/7 on call roster of the fire brigade had dropped an atom bomb on the remnants of my social life, but Covid has resurrected it and more.

Everything is online now. In a short while, I’ll be taking part in a writing class with a collective down in Shannon and, later on in the week, a poetry class I’ve been wanting to take part in for months, up in Galway.

‘The boy’ has his guitar lessons on Zoom, which means I no longer have to pick him up from his mother’s if I don’t want to. My ‘big boy’ has completed his college semester via the web. “I didn’t think it would work but, once I got used to it, it’s cool,” he said.

I’m not surprised – he no longer has to take two buses into one of our big cities for college. I never understood why colleges didn’t lead the way in using technology. I always thought they were pro- inclusion?

I borrowed a phrase from the fire service to describe people like me: ‘socially non-ambulant’. It’s not just firefighters – single parents, older people, disabled people and people without transport can all end up a bit trapped. I fell into a few of those categories myself over the years.

I wonder how many intelligent non-ambulants see their potential overlooked as a result?

Surely, it’s what we invented the internet for? By the time we are back to full working order the 5g network will be up and running and Elon Musk’s SpaceX network will have blocked out the heavens.

Personally, I would be very sad if this new online way of working was suddenly closed off, disconnecting me from the classes I’m undertaking. It feels like being back at college only I can smoke and drink coffee as I listen.

What of climate change? The necessity for car journeys has plummeted. Oil is now worthless, the papers say. If environmentalists don’t seize on this to lead the way in a new way of operating, well, it’s now or never really. I don’t think anyone died yet from not catching that flight?

We are stuck with galactic communications now, so we had better bloody use it!

Anyway! Here is a little poem I was prompted to write at this morning’s class. I know they say poems don’t have to rhyme, but I’m far too influenced by rap music… I’m sure my teachers hate me.

There are crumbs on the glass table by the couch and more of them over the floor.

It’s driving me mad as I try to type, I ought to be doing the chores.

My mind is as messy as the clothes in my room that the sunshine is begging to dry.

The shit on the bowl of the toilet upstairs is a nice little meal for a fly.

The dust on the blinds is almost alive – its been with me through all four seasons.

Though lockdown is long – I’m struggling to find justification for cleaning reasons

I always have so much to do, like sitting and planning my day.

Like a general I plot my assault with a cloth until the time slips away.

What’s within is without the shrinks tell us, so I’d hate what to see is within.

My toenails are mouldy, my lungs full of phlegm, I wonder what’s under the skin?

The good people are shining the laminate cleansed, the dust all wiped from the shelves

I should have got married when I had the chance, I really can’t live by myself.

Harry’s Diary – Day 38 (Tues, April 21)

I startled two sibling ducklings on my morning walk. They swam across the shallow river as fast as their little legs could paddle, calling for assistance.

On the far bank, a small gathering of mallards and hens paid them scant attention. This stretch of the river was obviously considered safe by the wardens of the duck community.
I waited and watched. Sometimes the ducklings would get caught in a fast-moving flow and end up back where they started, as if they were in a game of snakes and ladders. Still, their elders paid no heed. I wondered if there was anything in the river that could eat them. If there was, would it have made a difference to their parents’ response?

Eventually, the youngsters gave up fighting the current and began to head downstream towards the forest of reeds that had protected them as chicks. The reeds were no longer underwater. No longer safe from foxes or badgers or cats or whatever else it is that eats tasty young duck chicks. A hen split from the raft of gossiping adults and glided effortlessly towards the two hapless siblings who latched onto her wake and followed her back to the group.

I wondered if I’d just witnessed a display of terrible parenting, akin to buying Taytos and Coke and bringing them to the car while a cheeky pint or two was necked at the bar, or was it the mother’s way of teaching them independence from a safe yet appropriate distance? Either way, it struck me, humans aren’t so different.

They say we shouldn’t do that – interpret animal behaviour through human values; maybe, but what about interpreting parental behaviour through parental instincts?

I’ve got used to my daily river walk. I don’t really want to do much else. Luckily for me the firefighters lockdown will stay in place long after the good people of the world return to their traffic jams.
Which shouldn’t be too long now. The Government (is it still interim?) is drawing up plans that will see the economy begin to rouse from sleep, now that the capacity for mass testing is considered adequate. In earlier entries I talked of buying the health care services time. After 40 or 33 days of lockdown, depending on when you start counting, we might have done that. Well done all round!

You’d have to wonder what else could be achieved if everyone worked together as tightly. Enforced socialism is what I called it weeks ago; for that to work, people had to work together, which we did – well done again!

Soon the extraordinary circumstances will be behind us. I wonder will it be as you were. I hope it won’t for me. I learned a bit more about the way my mind works this week. My head’s been a little fried over an issue this week – it’s funny how we can trick ourselves into believing stuff that we know isn’t true without even intending to do it. Self-protection I imagine.

There is a situation in my life that I’m worried about losing. I tried to be sanguine about it. “Maybe it’s for the best?” I told myself. “What’s for you won’t pass you by,” and “One door shuts, another opens.” There’s loads of them to pick from – catchy little sayings that, if you’re not honest with yourself, can be used to rationalise all kinds of nonsense. I wasn’t.
Soon, “maybe it’s for the best” had changed to – “It is for the best.” Before you know it, I had actively started to look for alternatives to the thing I was scared of losing and started acting accordingly. Which would have guaranteed I would have lost the thing. Does that make sense?

If I had not have been writing daily, I might not have copped on to that strange little quirk in my thinking patterns.

Ultimately it boils down to the ego trying to protect itself. It has cost me over the years. If nothing else that would be a nice little lesson from these Covid days.

Harry’s Diary – Day 37 (Mon, April 20, 2020)

Currently he’s concocting a plan to contract the virus in that eventuality: “I’ll have to self-isolate on the couch.”

Which means I’ll have to go live under the stairs.

His team of crack ‘Fortnite’ players, gathered from the four corners of the world are having a right good time at the moment.

“We finished in the top 20% in the world Dad. In The W-O-R-L-D.”

One lad is from Sheffield, he’s particularly close with a lad from South Carolina, and God only knows where the rest of them are from. One has “the covid” which apparently is hilarious.

Online gaming has made social isolation easy for him. They are like proper friends. They laugh and giggle endlessly as boys and girls that age do.

He has his headset on. He forgets I’m in the room and it offers a great snapshot into his social life: “I like aggressive players but sometimes you have to use tactics,” he said to a lad named ‘Gobbo’ – problem-solving and social skills rolled into one. I could never be so diplomatic, even today.
“It’s Ok, I was just frustrated,” he admitted to another, displaying an emotional vocabulary I’d need to see a therapist about first.

Outside of the gamers, May 5th must seem like a little beacon of hope for people desperate to get back to their lives. I can’t see it though. It’s not going to magically all go away.

I wonder how long it’s going to last? If I ran a small business, I’d be worried. As it is, I’m worried myself. I’m still on a probationary contract. There are no guarantees that will be renewed.

My landlord is being very sweet when I pay the rent into the bank. “Thanks – appreciate it – stay safe xxx,” he texts me – he never says things like that.

I read the news today, oh boy! We lurch from one apocalypse to another. The Covid news cycle is moving on. Pandemics aren’t scary enough anymore, we need new fear to keep us tuned in. “It’s the economy, baby.” I don’t know who said that, but it sounded cool. Apparently it’s going to collapse.

According to Facebook, people are getting antsy. The Michigan militia must be itching to use their assault cannons. I wish I was a gamer – far less outrage.

I guess – like many, sad, lonely, middle-aged men – I sometimes wonder if a descent into anarchy, before I’m too old, would be kind of cool? I know the birds and the bees are begging for the economy to take a break.

Now it might happen I’m a little bit scared. I’m curious too because I haven’t got a clue what is going to happen. Does anybody?

Meh, we’re all recession veterans. At my age I might as well surrender to it. Easy if you have nothing. If it happens, I’ll just make sure the next one is all: – “Rollin’ down the street, smokin’ indo, sippin’ on gin and juice. Laid back.”