Sunday, 29 August 2021

Genealife in Lockdown 5 NFHM Blogging Challenge

Over the last few months during the Covid-19 pandemic, my mind has been occupied following the Olympic Games and the Paralympics. So many of the athletes in their interviews commented that they were so glad to provide great sport for us all to watch at home, especially for those in lockdown. Those participating in the Paralympics shared an extra message: Hoping they provided inspiration to those with disabilities at home to join the Paralympics community and find a sport they love to participate in.

After finishing with a bronze medal in the women's 100m T34 Paralympics final, Australia's Robyn Lambird shared this message in a post-race interview for Channel 7:

“I just want to show all the kids out there - with disabilities or not - if you have a dream, chase it ... there's always a way, and you can find that way.”

Sunday, 22 August 2021

Genealife in Lockdown 4 NFHM Blogging Challenge


This week I am collating some of the images and messages I have found important, supportive and humorous relating to the Covid pandemic. 

I will start with a cartoon ‘welcoming’ in the New Year.

It was hoped that in 2021 we would be rid of the virus.


 Sadly it was not to be.


Around the world, there continued to be supportive and entertaining insights into how others were coping or helping others to cope.

Sunday, 15 August 2021

Genealife in Lockdown. 3. NFHM Blogging Challenge


A new strain of the Covid virus arrived here in July 2021, 
the SARS-CoV-2 Delta variant, which is commonly called ‘the Delta virus’.
It is more virulent than the first, Covid-19 and many carriers were asymptomatic for days, thus spreading the germs, unbeknownst. Stronger control was necessary for those infected, and urgency for the new vaccines to be available and issued. Now that the ‘Delta’ variant of the virus is circulating, no-one knows how long it will stay. Sadly there is a lot of misinformation being shared, inhibiting people from having the vaccination, not wearing masks in public and freely attending group gatherings.

Having a pandemic like this has reminded us of the last one years ago – the worldwide influenza epidemic, Spanish Flu’ in 1918, also known as 'La Grippe'. Well before my time, but I remembered reading about it when I was researching my first cousin X 2 removed, Andy Crawford who served in the First World War with the 8thLight Horse Brigade. How easy it was for sickness to spread in the trenches, cold, dark, stagnant, all so close with the sick and the dead laying there. 

Sunday, 8 August 2021

Genealife in Lockdown 2. 2021 NFHM Blogging Challenge


In the initial times of the 2020 Lockdown around the world, people were ingenious at finding ways to bring some joy into their lives

Image by: manuel-peris-tirado-fFhhUff5PJ8-unsplash.jpg


Many in high rise apartments played music and sang on their balconies. Others contributed from neighbouring units making up mixed bands, orchestras, and choirs. Much of it was shown on television and so shared internationally. Virtual singing groups formed from well-known musical stars, unknown musicians, parents, and children, even hospital staff.
In one way it was a beautiful time of collective happiness and a ‘sense of community’.

Sunday, 1 August 2021

Genea-life in Lockdown 1 NFHM Blogging Challenge


It is National Family History Month in Australia, and I have accepted a challenge to write about Genea-life in Lockdown. Blogging every Sunday in August will be an Olympic effort and tie in with the Olympic Games currently in action in Tokyo, Japan. 

 

We started our second lockdown here in Southeast Queensland on Saturday 31st July 2021, coincidentally the 50th birthday of my oldest daughter. We couldn’t visit her for the day, as the area she lives in  Central Coast of NSW is considered part of Greater Sydney and has been on lockdown for a while. 


This nasty virus arrived in Australia on 25 January 2020 (my husband’s birthday) when a man returned from Wuhan, Hubei, China, to Victoria and it has spread since then.