Mind and Body

4 ways city-dwellers can counter loneliness

by Roger Patulny, Jordan McKenzie, Marlee Bower and Rebecca E. Olson
Portrait of young woman in home isolation standing on a balcony, wearing surgical mask outdoors as p...
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Covid-19 has forced us into social distancing, isolation, and quarantine. These conditions are likely to foster widespread anxiety and loneliness in our cities. However, they’ve also made the need for socially connected, vibrant public spaces obvious to all.

We offer four strategies for rebuilding social connectivity and emotional well-being in our cities, once restrictions are lifted.

Changing the emotional climate — Enforced distancing measures are probably changing not just our work, travel, and family routines, but how we interact with others and how we feel about ourselves and our communities.

Loneliness is bad for your health and is likely on the rise. There is no guarantee the pandemic-driven shift towards more digital communication will compensate for the lost emotional closeness of in-person contact.

As loneliness becomes more common, it creates a change in what sociologists refer to as “emotional climates” – the collective feelings experienced and shared by most people within a given city or society. A “mass emotional event” like Covid-19 can dramatically alter the emotional climate. It’s so disruptive that it leads to a permanent change in everyday emotional states, expressions, and social interactions.

Covid-19 has strong potential to make us not only lonelier but more distrustful, fearful, anxious, and angry. The emerging evidence of this includes panic buying of goods; abuse and stigma of “risky” carers such as health workers; and potential increases in domestic violence and animal cruelty.

It has even been suggested we are collectively processing and moving through the stages of mass grief.

It’s important to remedy negative emotional climates with strategies to reconnect communities, allay fears and better prepare us for any future shutdowns. We can even aim to promote positive emotional climates and “kindness pandemics”.

4 ways to build better communities

Covid-19 is an opportunity to build on what we know and to learn from this situation. It’s possible to promote social and emotional well-being. We suggest four key approaches for building better communities that do this.

1) Design walkable, social, flexible public spaces

Recent work-from-home practices have reduced car traffic by up to 50% on arterial roads. However, they have also prompted cabin fever and a craving for exercise and social contact.

Cities and suburbs should be redesigned to support physical and social activity and mental health. We need a greater emphasis on cycle- and pedestrian-friendly spaces. There should also be renewed focus on building walkable town centers and neighborhood high streets, rather than continuing with car-dependent suburban sprawl.

Recent examples of innovative and flexible use of space by a business are inspiring. Whether cafes become corner stores, pubs sell takeaway cocktails, parks become gyms, or car parks become pop-up businesses, flexible use of space should become commonplace.

2) Integrate public and online spaces

Our new online communication skills can help us develop a better physical-digital interface for bringing people together.

Video conferencing is flexible and can enable long-distance connections and “work from home” hubs. However, social media platforms, such as Facebook, Meetup, WhatsApp or art-based apps like Somebody, are useful for organizing physical meetings too. These can help with community volunteering, socializing, or simply sharing guerrilla-garden herbs for local cooking.

A better physical-digital interface could help new jobs flourish in “interactive” creative industries that virtually connect isolated individuals. New art spaces could be established, putting connective digital infrastructure, such as audio-visual platforms, within physical spaces to help face-to-face and virtual audiences interact.

3) Provide quality housing

Covid-19 has exposed vast variability in the quality of Australian housing. Many homes lack the space to accommodate work, study, relaxation, exercise and socializing, or spaces where people can seek privacy and quiet. Housing also varies in its access to fresh air, light, temperature control, and healthy green spaces.

Designing future homes with these needs and features in mind should be a priority.

4) Build with different needs and stigma in mind

The impacts of Covid-19 will not be felt equally. Post-Covid-19 cities should take this into account.

Covid-19 has exposed the vulnerability of people experiencing homelessness. It has also greatly increased the risk of loneliness for the one in four Australians who live alone. This applies particularly to older Australians with a mobility impairment.

The pandemic has also highlighted the safety risks of centralized living arrangements like nursing homes.

We must prioritize the creation of housing that reduces isolation and promotes social connection.

Recent positive public conversations on social media and within the arts community on previously stigmatized emotions like loneliness and anxiety will help keep these concerns on the public agenda.

This article was originally published on The Conversation by Roger Patulny and Jordan McKenzie at the University of Wollongong, Marlee Bower at the University of Sydney and Rebecca E. Olson at the University of Queensland. Read the original article here.

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