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On the front door handle, on the inside, hang the masks. Or they’re on the table beside the keys. Or anywhere they won’t be forgotten. It’s getting hard to remember a time when they weren’t there.
They now have a mood to each of them — the basic black ones, the rainbow fractalish patterned one you got from a 7-11, the vaguely funky olive and brown one you paid too much for. Well they’re all vaguely funky now, you don’t wash them enough.
Time and again you’re out the door and down the street and you think you’ve forgotten something, and pat pockets for your keys, phone, touch your face for your mask and, no, it’s there, of course it’s there.
It’s been weeks since you sailed halfway down the street without it, alerted by arch looks, or a certain freshness of the air on your face. The feeling of forgetting is the relic of that, thinking you don’t have your mask because you can’t remember putting it on. It was simply there when you were out, applied in one smooth motion you can’t recall.
Outside the first days of spring are here, the warmer air and blue skies. Great disjuncture, the weather doesn’t fit the times. Under grey skies and in chill air it seemed natural that the city was empty, a few brave souls walking down wind-whipped streets, turning their mouthless pig-people faces towards you.
Now it seems all wrong. The coats have come off, the bare flesh is there, but the masks remain. There are more people out on the street on the warm days, but the first day of week six, after Dan Andrews announced there would be two more weeks of stage four, and then weeks of stage three, was the quietest you’d ever seen the place, not a soul, from the city back to Prahran.
It was as if people had just given up and stayed home, slumped, all the keep-calm-and-carry-on stuff kicked out of them. There would be no real respite until November. You knew that, but that’s something different to it being announced, confirmed.
Melbourne is some sort of lab for subjectivity now. Everyone seemed angry for a few days, snapping at each other beneath their masks, pigs become muzzled dogs.
In the high streets, empty beyond empty, the shops and cafes are starting to close. Close for good, that is. For a while they were just closed up, with smiley-face signs, furnishings, knick-knacks, what-nots still arrayed, tables and chairs still there, wine racks full behind the counter.
Then there’s black sheeting up, like a mafia hit, then they’re gone and there’s empty space; carpet up, three or four plastic-windowed letters on the ground on the other side of the door. The “for lease” signs one after the other, red-yellow-blue the different liveries down the street. They have a forlorn look from all that crowding, like people in a war zone all trying to sell the same stuff.
Supermarkets, when you go there, dazzle now. They’re like social mixing speakeasies — behind the sliding doors, dozens and dozens of people! The aisles are streets made out of products. It’s Sim-town; you have become an avatar of yourself. You used to race through this — ugh, shopping. Now you linger.
It’s time out of home. You can legally browse! You can buy stuff! You ponder washing powder variants, read labels, buy things for their obscurity like a collector: mackeral sprouts, cochineal, mousetraps.
When supermarkets pall, there’s such newsagents as remain, which have become Aladdin’s caves — vast arrays of obscure stationery, 19-column A6 money books, pulp fiction with yellow deckle, dog-breeding magazines.
You go to a mall because it’s in your radius, just, and the Coles and Woolies are open at the bottom. You go up and down the floors on the empty elevators. It is like nothing you have ever seen. Not even the dead malls of America have prepared you for this, the shops still fully stocked, the floors still polished, a mausoleum of the capitalism that was.
The shops are beginning to look mysterious of origin. Assembly art, the objects pressing against the glass like they had been preserved underneath it. You go down the down elevator, chastened, what had been fun had quickly become its other.
There will be weeks more, mostly like this. This has changed you, but you don’t fully know how yet.
You think about what the streets used to be like and will be again — the crowds, the cheek-by-jowl — and wonder how it will be possible. To sit in a cafe, sit down at a table just to drink coffee? Seems weird. Why not just stand outside? And without your mask?
How strange it will seem not to reach out and slip it on at the door. And people in the open with their whole face there? People just looking at each other and baring their teeth? How will that work? How did it ever?
I think about the generation just recently passed, in blitzed London (did anyone complain about their freedoms being curtailed by black out curtains), bombs falling night after night, for months and years. And I wonder – when did we lose our resilience?
Even in the 60s any vacant lot in Britain was colloquially known as a bomb-site.
As many were, literally.
Victorious but exhausted Britain muddled on post WWII, even introducing bread rationing – for the first time – whilst feeding the displaced in their designated Occupation Zone.
The inevitable decline of the old order coincided with the trickle of early teens Boomers with nothing to do except work in crumbling Victorian era factories (when the Beatles sang “Hard Day’s Night” they knew of which they spoke) and dance till dawn.
The self pity of the monied classes was well shown by a wide spread ad campaign showing bombed cities & obliterated factories with the caption “Germany & Japan had a great industrial advantage!” and it was meant seriously!
That’s where resilience went, on amusing ourselves to death.
It is far from clear that the governance of Victoria is in any way rational. That is the point, it seems to me, Kmart60
We will see how it holds up. A number of countries have declared that a 2nd lock-down will not be an option.
Googling for tales of non compliance and complaints, about that policy specifically, immediately found articles. Apparently in response to assertions like yours. Good stuff, turns out the resilience went where your grasp of history went.
I also ask the question kmart60, but the answer may be that it is still there, but those who have it are quietly sucking it up, while a much smaller number are wailing like banshees about their “freedoms”.
I suspect that most of us ‘get it’, and are carrying on as they can, and facing the episodes of psychological stress, weird dreams and general malaise with the knowledge that this is what a rational government would be doing (although the curfew is both unnecessary and OTT, or could have been until 10 or 11 pm with little difference to outcome)
But it’s hard to say from here, you don’t quite know about the quiet ones, the vast majority, you just hear from the noisy and disaffected, those without much resilience. It was always this way.
DB are you in Melbourne? It is depressing and sickening, and yes most people are taking it silently and stoically on the inside. Hope I’m not wailing like a banshee.
Have you tried going to a park or the river in your 5km zone? You’ll find that’s where the humans are. Kids on bikes with sometimes nary a parent in sight. Kids clambering on the creek getting muddy. Scores of adults and teens walking, running, cycling. It’s busier than Bourke Street at my local park. I’m wondering how the fragile environment will hold up. But the kids are more than alright.
I was out for my walk this afternoon, playgrounds now opened up and buzzing with small children and their parents having a lively time. It was a joy to see. I didn’t know there were so many small children in my local area until the Virus hit and now we see them out running around everywhere. Lots of dads as well, enjoying their children in a way they can’t when they are in an office all day.
Well, that’s great, such a pity the city is decimated. maybe we can spend the rest of our lives going for park walks. Its all worth it suddenly.
I’m already anticipating PTSD from the sound of the ghost trams, thundering down Sydney Road after curfew. Empty trams heading off to an empty city. City as machine, clocking over, without people.
Last October I walked both ways along Chapel Street between Toorak Road and Commercial Road between 11a.m. and 12 m.d.Of the approximately 60 shops I passed – many of them quite luxurious outfitted and staffed with smartly dressed attendants – only two had customers. Quite a few were shuttered. Commerce was heading for the doldrums before Corona virus blossomed, but the decline will have markedly accelerated due to Covid.
On the other hand, there is plenty of money stored in the community vaults which will be released in a pre-Christmas surge if things go to plan. This will transform the current bleak landscape into a circus of relief, exuberance and jubilation. I’m looking forward to it.
It will be hard to get a haircut or a dental appointment or lots of in demand goods for weeks after everything opens up.
Thanks, that reminded me to do both before the masses return.
Another “newsy” postcard from Melbourne; thanks indeed Guy. I have read on these pages that Perth is back to normal but recent emails from Perth locals over the last few days suggest increasing optimism but, apparently, not yet back to normal.
However, it might be useful to compare what is happening elsewhere (domestically and internationally) for better or worse. Then the article might look comprehensive.
It feels very ‘normal’ in my part of QLD, can’t speak for WA. I just spray more disinfectant for the hospitality job I still have. I even get the pleasure of visits from my little sister and her part of the family, driving hours to get here. A mate casually stopped by the other day. I have no doubt there are lives still disrupted in this state, but life goes on here for the most part.
I unsure if a postcard need be comprehensive, I always enjoy reading his subjective view on places though. It is one of the reasons I pay money to access here, so I’m a bit biased.
On the one hand I don’t mind postcards and thanks for yours because I am interested in comparisons. There is some talk of international flights to Japan, S.Korea and possibly Singapore from Vietnam (in about that order).
My nudge to Guy was for him to consider extending the postcard to an essay.