100% Locally Owned, Independent and Free

100% Locally Owned, Independent and Free

Jane Stephens: How the pandemic brought us all closer to home

Do you have a news tip? Click here to send to our news team.

Ashley Robinson: footy should decide daylight saving debate

I notice my fellow columnist Jane Stephens wrote about supporting daylight saving in Queensland. She suggests that we split the time zone so the More

Jane Stephens: clocking up time in the sun

Time is money. Time flies. Lost time is never found again. Time is a thief. Our obsession and our master, time has reared its head More

Ashley Robinson: let’s just agree to disagree

As the great Kamahl said, “Why are people so unkind?” Right now, we are in a very fragile place with people’s differing opinions and social More

Jane Stephens: embracing the natural remedy

They are called green and blue prescriptions: medical advice to get back in contact with rural or coastal environments to improve our health. And this More

Ashley Robinson: why straight shooting can be a handicap

If you watch the TV comedy Seinfeld, you will probably know who Kramer is. If you aren’t a Seinfeld tragic like me, Kramer is a More

Sami Muirhead: Finding love is no pie in the sky

Paris truly is the ‘City of Love’. I just came home after a rare solo sojourn to celebrate the end of my radio show More

2020 has become akin to a swear word for some, a term that means the worst of years because it brought loss, isolation and knocked many people’s lives off-axis.

Good riddance to bad rubbish, people may say: 2020 is like a great grey cloud – once it’s gone, it will be a blue-sky day.

Bring on 2021.

But at risk of sounding ridiculously sunny, many good things piggybacked the COVID-19 pandemic, particularly on the Sunshine Coast.

It is healthy to look for the good in any bad situation, and it is not a long search around here.

For starters, COVID-19 hardly darkened the doorstep of the Sunshine Coast, making it a virus that affected us, but barely infected us. Above all, we must feel grateful to have escaped the waves of sickness and death that engulf the world.

When COVID-19 began its smoke-like spread and we were only allowed out in public for a specific purposes (remember that? Shopping for essential food and going to the doctor were the main ones), inactive people began moving.

We were allowed to exercise with one other outside and at a social distance. Footpaths, trails and pathways became thoroughfares of the cautious and careful and the pressure relief was palpable.

Like independent news and opinion? Get it direct to your inbox by subscribing to our free daily news feed: Go to SUBSCRIBE at top of this article to register

Technology became a lifeline and we connected with each other, checking in on those we may have drifted from. The digital divide narrowed as grandma showed she could Zoom, WhatsApp and House Party like a pro.

We became champions of our local businesses and services in their modified modes and offerings. Sunshine Coasters were also reminded we perch not on the edge of a delicious smorgasbord, but with our snouts buried right into the bounty of fresh food made and grown right here.

We learnt to love our patch, to holiday at home, to feel blessed that even when we weren’t allowed to roam far, we had ocean and rivers, mountains and green spaces to play in. The environment got a bit of a breather as homes became both havens and worksites.

Medical staff and law enforcers became the heroes of the year, as they worked to keep us safe and our border sealed. Science was lauded and it put pedal to metal in conjuring vaccines as we paused, crouching in wait.

As 2020 collects its things and heads for the door, we will not mourn it.

But the Coast ends the year with consumer confidence at a 10-year high, tourism thriving while nationwide one in three young people are jobless or need more hours, here we have hospitality and retail outlets crying out for helping hands.

Hindsight is 20/20, the idiom goes, but the true meaning has been corrupted. In the Snellen fraction, 20/20 vision means having average eyesight, so let’s aim for something better.

We can never foresee the future, but we have learnt to be clear-eyed about now – and there are so many gifts in the present.

Jane Stephens is a USC journalism lecturer, media commentator and writer.

Subscribe to SCN’s free daily news email

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
This field is hidden when viewing the form
[scn_go_back_button] Return Home
Share