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The Lockdown Years


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On 07/02/2023 at 19:30, 8MileBU said:

My main memory from the Lockdown years has to be routinely going out to the doorstep every Thursday night for a month to clap for that boy from Irvine who got a month in the jail for jet-skiing 4.5 hours over the Irish Sea to the Isle of Man for his Nat King Cole.

Surprised that's not been made into a film or tv show yet.

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Worked all the way through it. Was a little bit scary at first, seeing icu staff in the full gear etc.  mrs took covid early on and it was shite. Real worry about her being taken into hospital. 
my youngest sons learning involved learning about scotland, glasgow in particular. I did consider letting him just sit and watch billy connollys world tour of Scotland, purely for help with his learning. 
We actually spent hours with him kicking my arse at star wars battlefront as well, and we had such a laugh with it. We built a shed and i bought a treadmill. When my hairdressers opened back up, they had an appointment system in place, which stopped us having to wait an hour, just to get a haircut. So there were some positives, but like others, it was a struggle. No 5s, no nights out, just work, home, walk the dug some nights.

 

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Disaster all round, life stolen for 2 years.

Gave abit of an alarming insight into the British society, the fringe conspiracy theorists being part of it but I always knew they were mental, I was much more shocked at how many people live their lives not too far away from full lockdown their entire lives,   Sleep,  work, dinner and shite TV 5 nights a week and some gardening at the weekend.  Met a lot of people who ‘ didn’t really bother them’ they maybe missed one or two meals out for birthdays and that was it.  I didn’t realize quite how many people lived 350+ days a year in an utter pathetic existence and being happy with it.

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One thing I remember was a couple of weeks in having to nip into town to pick up some stuff from work - went in about 10am and was the only passenger in a four carriage train. You normally don't notice the jakeys and junkies about the place, but at that point they were all that was around...genuine 28 Days Later vibe going on.

Never paid much attention to the tier system...I'm walking distance from another health board area dnd it never stopped me. I remember it was a bit weird though being issued with a letter from the SFA which "allowed" me to travel as I was involved in the delivery of elite sport. Strange times.

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10 minutes ago, Hillonearth said:

One thing I remember was a couple of weeks in having to nip into town to pick up some stuff from work - went in about 10am and was the only passenger in a four carriage train. You normally don't notice the jakeys and junkies about the place, but at that point they were all that was around...genuine 28 Days Later vibe going on.

Never paid much attention to the tier system...I'm walking distance from another health board area dnd it never stopped me. I remember it was a bit weird though being issued with a letter from the SFA which "allowed" me to travel as I was involved in the delivery of elite sport. Strange times.

Yeah, working in Glasgow city centre those first few weeks was nuts, zombie film is the exact vibe I thought of with everything shut and boarded up and these mutants roaming about, as they always are tbf but the ratio of them to regular people was off the charts at that point.

My work's solution when folk complained they were terrified walking to their cars or to whatever public transport existed was to give us all personal alarms.

One quite cool thing was walking over the pedestrian bridge over the Kingston bridge at say 8am and there being about 3 cars on it.

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26 minutes ago, parsforlife said:

Disaster all round, life stolen for 2 years.

Gave abit of an alarming insight into the British society, the fringe conspiracy theorists being part of it but I always knew they were mental, I was much more shocked at how many people live their lives not too far away from full lockdown their entire lives,   Sleep,  work, dinner and shite TV 5 nights a week and some gardening at the weekend.  Met a lot of people who ‘ didn’t really bother them’ they maybe missed one or two meals out for birthdays and that was it.  I didn’t realize quite how many people lived 350+ days a year in an utter pathetic existence and being happy with it.

Didn't affect me too much as I was a 24/7 home carer apart from respite breaks. I missed pubs but I had a garden and a beer pump and I'm in my sixties. If I'd been between say 15 and 30 I would have probably exploded with rage, or more likely just ignored the guidance and rules and been one of these terrible people having house parties.

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I experienced lockdown in three different countries, and it ranged from good to annoying then horrific.

When it first happened, the restrictions were incredibly strict (i.e. you can only leave certain times of the day, and not at all on weekends) to effectively no restrictions by middle of 2020.

By the end, in a different part of the world, it was a kafkaesque quarantine and monitoring system as I fought hoards of ants in ropey temporary accomodation.

But I really enjoyed working from home.

It happened, it's part of life, very happy we have moved on.

I will 100% pretend to future generations it was a big hardship I was tough enough to overcome, rather than the truth that I was in a dressing gown most of the time.

Can't imagine what those in China went through with the years of lockdowns, that would have driven anyone crazy.

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8 hours ago, parsforlife said:

Disaster all round, life stolen for 2 years.

Gave abit of an alarming insight into the British society, the fringe conspiracy theorists being part of it but I always knew they were mental, I was much more shocked at how many people live their lives not too far away from full lockdown their entire lives,   Sleep,  work, dinner and shite TV 5 nights a week and some gardening at the weekend.  Met a lot of people who ‘ didn’t really bother them’ they maybe missed one or two meals out for birthdays and that was it.  I didn’t realize quite how many people lived 350+ days a year in an utter pathetic existence and being happy with it.

Each to their own, no? If they are happy with it, what's the issue?

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Just now, Alert Mongoose said:

Each to their own, no? If they are happy with it, what's the issue?

There's nothing wrong with folk being happy with it if that's their lifestyle choice.

To have folk whose entire life revolves around work and watching telly try to tell the rest of us to be content with that same mind-numbing boredom was absolutely galling, though.

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11 hours ago, Gaz said:

There's nothing wrong with folk being happy with it if that's their lifestyle choice.

To have folk whose entire life revolves around work and watching telly try to tell the rest of us to be content with that same mind-numbing boredom was absolutely galling, though.

That would be annoying as you say. I don't recall anyone telling me to do that though?  Unless this is an attempt to have a go at lockdowns which is surely a different argument.

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4 minutes ago, Alert Mongoose said:

That would be annoying as you say. I don't recall anyone telling me to do that though?  Unless this is an attempt to have a go at lockdowns which is surely a different argument.

There was enough holier than thou c***s giving it "oh stop complaining all you have to do is stay home and watch TV"  how about naw ya c**t!  people don't like being confined to their living quarters and not being able to do or see who they want to. That's why we send people to jail as a punishment

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35 minutes ago, effeffsee_the2nd said:

There was enough holier than thou c***s giving it "oh stop complaining all you have to do is stay home and watch TV"  how about naw ya c**t!  people don't like being confined to their living quarters and not being able to do or see who they want to. That's why we send people to jail as a punishment

Did anyone actually listen to those people though? 

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23 hours ago, RiG said:

Queuing to get into Sainsburys for a pint of milk during the great toilet roll / flour / sugar / disinfectant shortage of 2020.

 

f**k. Had forgotten about that.

I’ll need to add “trying not to look smug as I marched to the front of the queue with NHS credentials “.

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On 09/02/2023 at 19:21, Gaz said:

There's nothing wrong with folk being happy with it if that's their lifestyle choice.

To have folk whose entire life revolves around work and watching telly try to tell the rest of us to be content with that same mind-numbing boredom was absolutely galling, though.

 

On 10/02/2023 at 07:15, Alert Mongoose said:

That would be annoying as you say. I don't recall anyone telling me to do that though?  Unless this is an attempt to have a go at lockdowns which is surely a different argument.

There was absolutely loads of this, including on here in the Covid thread, and it was fucking infuriating. Pensioners and people who are happy with their lives exactly as pars described telling everyone that we must stick to the rules and that they were no hardship, precisely because they didn’t affect them. Welshy was a prime example of this. As soon as the rules affected him and his travel plans, suddenly that’s when they were a problem. Lockdown was great at highlighting the selfishness of the population.

I remember an older family member at the time saying if they were in charge they would permanently keep the curfew rule of nobody allowed out after 9pm because “I’m never out after then, it’s only people causing trouble”. Difficult not to scream in their face.

On 08/02/2023 at 23:59, welshbairn said:

Didn't affect me too much as I was a 24/7 home carer apart from respite breaks. I missed pubs but I had a garden and a beer pump and I'm in my sixties. If I'd been between say 15 and 30 I would have probably exploded with rage, or more likely just ignored the guidance and rules and been one of these terrible people having house parties.

Interesting you’re now saying this after your scathing criticism at the time of the people on here in that age bracket who openly criticised the rules.

Edited by Honest_Man#1
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On 10/02/2023 at 07:57, Alert Mongoose said:

Did anyone actually listen to those people though? 

We ran a government by that principle, that locked up the largest urban centre in the country for any other activity for about nine months - and that was after the first wave emergency. 

We also 'listened' to similar, nonsense claims that churches filled with old biddies could be opened again on a basis of risk, but big, bad, football fans couldn't watch a game outdoors. 

The response to Covid in Scotland was as much about enacting class snobbery and white collar privilege as it was 'following the science'. 

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