Body & Soul0 min ago
Coronavirus: Will You Comply With The Government’s Advice?
271 Answers
Whether you fall into the group classified as ‘at risk’, or are over 70 and advised to remain at home, or younger and fit but requested to abandon your social life, will you comply - and if not why not?
Me? I think we are duty bound.
Me? I think we are duty bound.
Answers
Of course we will comply, as you rightly say Naomi we feel we are ALL duty bound to do so. Chillidoubt must feel like banging his head against the wall with some of the responses here. It’s not much to ask to put your social life on hold for a few months is it? Better that than catch this virus or continue the spread of it. I despair at times...
11:12 Fri 20th Mar 2020
Gromit. The home delivery will be left outside the door for those self isolating. Noone has come into our house except the man that mended our boiler a couple of weeks ago when the virus was not in our county. Even then my husband took the boiler cover off and put bit back on again. Boiler man only touched the inside workings.
I appreciate different sides to this. I am duty bound to be present at work while almost all other staff, and all usually in my office, are working from home. The premises is shut except for GP access by intercom. It's an eerie and sometimes ovetwhelmingly depressing place to be. I try to shop on way home but there has been no fresh and limited other food for days in the all of the 3 supermarkets on tjenearby main road. By the time I get home my adult son I live with has gone to work. So I already feel isolated with the threat if having to be even more isolated hanging over me all the time. Never mind the bigger worries like not making rent, which I'm putting off until I (can't) sleep. I can't visit vulnerable family who are miles away. So I really do get why people may feel the need to go to a pub after work just to see people and share their worries. The elderly chaps that meet in the local spoons in the morning having been up for hours because it is their only social time and they are lonely. Why wouldn't they go? The worst aspect if this situation I have seen is the anxiety, together with isolation it is heartbreaking.
I also understand people saying going out in this way is selfish and putting others at risk, as I have vulnerable friends and family as do most. So yes, it's difficult but please let's not judge others for what, to them, is maybe what keeps them going. We are all different and have very different ways to cope.
I also understand people saying going out in this way is selfish and putting others at risk, as I have vulnerable friends and family as do most. So yes, it's difficult but please let's not judge others for what, to them, is maybe what keeps them going. We are all different and have very different ways to cope.
I totally agree, chelle. Back in the day when I was a poor, lonely single mum before the days of mobile phones I used to sit at the bottom of the stairs and cry at the thought of not seeing or speaking to another person until the next day (No landline either). And I’m an introvert.
Loneliness is a killer.
Loneliness is a killer.
Not many people go in pubs any more. That's why so many have shut down.
Thousands and thousands of people go in supermarkets. That's why they are taking over our communities.
So the Govt tells us to avoid pubs...
And creates a situation where the whole population squash together in the massive checkout queues at supermarkets.
If CoViD-19 spreads widely, I can guess where everyone is catching it.
Thousands and thousands of people go in supermarkets. That's why they are taking over our communities.
So the Govt tells us to avoid pubs...
And creates a situation where the whole population squash together in the massive checkout queues at supermarkets.
If CoViD-19 spreads widely, I can guess where everyone is catching it.
There are still thousands of pubs open and thriving (or there was until CV). There has actually been a reversal in pub closures of late:
https:/ /uk.fin ance.ya hoo.com /news/h ow-many -uk-pub s-closi ng-2019 -every- year-wh ere-bes t-pub-1 0484557 2.html? guccoun ter=1&a mp;guce _referr er=aHR0 cHM6Ly9 3d3cuZ2 9vZ2xlL mNvLnVr Lw& guce_re ferrer_ sig=AQA AAB51Yo SkGfLz8 TQcPCYT WVHbPc5 DsfbOzP O4hqYZs 684Fg2E lq6nVkO Cgjv_HN 6gg0muH UCXPJ_w 5cN6osL GWfMXMZ drsEaJT mN4q0G- xnVnNLT tauP2lq qy2typO FzkufUz QXQiRlw ppAmNyL 1N9NB24 h_7CFhX JfiHmFW EpshM
I’m not sure how closing pubs has any effect on supermarket queues.
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I’m not sure how closing pubs has any effect on supermarket queues.
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