Should I keep wearing my mask or should I fling it in the closet? Should I balloon my bubble or keep it tight? Should I leave it all on the nightclub dance floor or stay busting moves in the kitchen?
With the recent lifting of most of B.C.ѻýs COVID-19 safety measures, you may have been asking yourself these questions. Everybodyѻýs answer will be a little different depending on their circumstances.
Steven Taylor, a professor with the UBC department of psychiatry, told me in a phone interview this week that when restrictions are lifted, most people ѻýbounce backѻý rapidly to their old behaviours.
ѻýBut that doesnѻýt apply to everyone,ѻý he said. ѻýSome people are very anxious or theyѻýre slow to warm up and some people are highly anxious and are in need of treatment for their anxiety.ѻý
If you have a friend whoѻýs anxious about re-opening, Taylor recommends asking them what they need and what would help them feel more comfortable.
ѻýDonѻýt go telling them ѻýoh you should take off your mask ѻý let me take that off for youѻý. You want to enable their sense of control and let them do whatever opening up they want to do at their own pace.ѻý
When youѻýre indoors, consider wearing your mask to keep yourself and others safe. If someone doesnѻýt want to stand next to you, give them space. When you go in for the handshake or a hug, ask if someone is comfortable with that first. Essentially: use your COVID common sense and donѻýt be rude.
When April 8 comes around the B.C. Vaccine Card will be lifted and unvaccinated people will be once again allowed in all the spaces where the card is currently required. In those spaces, the topic of vaccination might be best relegated to the social realm of politics and religion ѻý itѻýs not worth starting a bar fight over someoneѻýs vaccination status.
As restrictions lift, your friends and family members who are disabled, immunocompromised or elderly will likely feel left behind. For them, itѻýs not a matter of comfort ѻý COVID is a matter of life and death. Find ways to continue spending time with them in a way that they feel is safe. Donѻýt make assumptions about what they need. Ask them what they need and respect their boundaries.
Whatever you choose to do, enjoy this period of relatively reduced COVID transmission because it wonѻýt last forever. We are very much still in a pandemic and cases are rising globally. The actions that we take today will have an impact on COVID infections ѻý and restrictions ѻý in the future.
Cole Schisler is a provincial reporter with Black Press Media.
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cole.schisler@bpdigital.ca
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