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Living with Covid-19: Together, we can help achieve our next good season

David Hurley and his wife Linda during their visit to the NSW town of Mogo in January 2020 to see how it was recovering after the summer bushfires. All Australians now have a ‘role to play to reach the new normal’, the Governor-General writes. Picture: John Feder
David Hurley and his wife Linda during their visit to the NSW town of Mogo in January 2020 to see how it was recovering after the summer bushfires. All Australians now have a ‘role to play to reach the new normal’, the Governor-General writes. Picture: John Feder

During the first two years of my term as Governor-General, Linda and I have visited and engaged with communities afflicted by drought, floods, cyclones, bushfires and the Covid-19 pandemic. As I have often remarked, I sometimes look to the skies to see if four horsemen are appearing.

I am not one to deliver Churchill-like speeches. I try to support and uplift Australians face-to-face, one-on-one or in small groups – countless conversations and moments with people from all walks of life and in every situation you can conceive. That approach has given me the opportunity, with Linda alongside me, to acknowledge, celebrate and thank many Australians for what they do for our country and its people.

I recall visiting a cattle property north of Julia Creek about six months after the devastating January and February 2019 floods in the Gulf Country. In discussion with a group of cattle station owners and managers I made the comment that they had a lot of hard work ahead of them. Their response was something that has stayed with me: “We are not afraid of hard work, just give us a good season.”

That response told me so much about Australians. In almost 50 years of service life I have never heard such a concise explanation of who we are.

I know from countless visits to Australian organisations – businesses, charities, schools, not-for-profits and institutes – that Australians are not afraid of hard work and that they will take on the hard questions and issues. I also know we are kind and community-minded: I have witnessed first-hand the generosity of neighbours and strangers alike in times of need.

We are in a period when that willingness to work hard and to address complex issues is extremely important. We face a tough struggle with the more infectious Delta variant of the coronavirus. We are also trying to understand what the “new normal” of living with Covid-19 will look like and how to achieve that new normal. There are ongoing economic and health issues, includ­ing the significant mental health impacts. These are hard issues. We all must participate in finding solutions. There can be no “She’ll be right, mate” or “I’m looking after number one” attitude. Australians know and under­stand the blessings of living in this country. If we want these blessings to continue then we all need to ensure “a good season”occurs in the not-too-distant future.

The immediate way ahead is simple: for those of us in lockdown, we must limit our physical interactions; and for all of us, we must be vaccinated. Limiting physical interactions, though, requires personal sacrifice and discipline. We must draw on our national characteristics that have been so evident in previous difficult times and use them to support each other as we also deal with our own privations and disappointments.

I witnessed an outpouring of such behaviour in response to the Black Summer bushfires. That behaviour cannot have been lost or just disappeared because of our current circumstances. That behaviour is part of us. We need to ensure that it finds expression with our neighbours and within our communities. It can be a simple check-in on a neighbour or friend. The smallest act of kindness can have a big impact on the mental wellbeing of the recipient.

Some may say that I speak to you from a position of privilege. True, perhaps, in the sense of where I live. But like many of you, my family – children and grandchildren – lives in lockdown. Linda and I haven’t seen our grandson in months and we are not sure when we will be able to meet our granddaughter, who was born just over a week ago. FaceTime helps but it is no substitute for the human touch.

I mention my circumstances because I want to stress that overcoming Covid-19 and its adverse impact on many sections of our community is a national effort conducted at the personal level. We are all involved, we all bear the consequences, and we all have a role to play to reach the new normal.

I urge you all to help achieve our next good season. None of us alone can defeat Covid or eliminate all uncertainty but the things that are in our control – listening to directions, getting vaccinated and being considerate to those around us – can shape how we get through this and what we look like on the other side. You know what to do, the tools are available. It is up to all of us to ensure we emerge from this successfully.

David Hurley is the Governor-General of Australia.

Read related topics:BushfiresCoronavirus

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Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/commentary/living-with-covid19-together-we-can-help-achieve-our-next-good-season/news-story/c36f799ec467f629085061b52a6c475d