海角大神

Why tough times can mean better neighbors

|
Alessandra Tarantino/AP
Women lean out of windows and clap their hands in the Garbatella neighborhood in Rome, March 14, 2020. Italians are showing signs of solidarity with flash mob calls circulating on social media for people to ''gather'' on their balconies at certain hours, to play music or to give each other a round of applause.

On Saturday morning, residents of a 30-unit cohousing neighborhood in Boston emerged from their apartments for a flash mob. Staying more than 6 feet apart, the neighbors waved to each other and joined together in singing the Beatles song 鈥淟et it Be.鈥 One of the residents, a professional cellist, played an accompaniment for a singalong of 鈥淟ean on Me鈥 by Bill Withers.

鈥淓veryone appreciated the activity, which brought much-needed levity and connection during this otherwise solemn, isolating time,鈥 resident Minda Sanchez says via email.

Similar scenes are playing out in quarantined neighborhoods across the world. In Wuhan, China, whole blocks of apartment buildings chanted, 鈥淜eep up the fight.鈥 In Rome and in Siena, Italians on lockdown lean out of windows and balconies with tambourines and accordions to sing songs of solidarity. On Saturday night, cloistered citizens throughout Spain began clapping in unison to cheer health care workers.

Why We Wrote This

As the practice of 鈥渟ocial distancing鈥 burgeons during the coronavirus crisis, people are finding ways to meet heart to heart even though they can鈥檛 meet face to face.

As the practice of 鈥渟ocial distancing鈥 burgeons, people are finding ways to meet heart to heart even though they can鈥檛 meet face to face. They鈥檙e leaning on video calling and social networks to meet an innate desire for social connection. But people aren鈥檛 just staying in touch with friends and family. If anything, the global crisis has roused a sense of shared humanity that鈥檚 compelling people to reach out to their immediate communities. Amid the outbreak of COVID-19, there鈥檚 a countervailing surge of kindness among strangers.

鈥淚n times of great stress, helping others is a powerful way to reassert control in a moment where many of us feel helpless,鈥 says Jamil Zaki, author of 鈥淭he War for Kindness: Building Empathy in a Fractured World.鈥 鈥淜indness toward others actually can be a great source of healing.鈥澨

One of the most common ways that millions of people are being kind to others right now is by practicing the self-sacrifice of social distancing. For many, the key motivation is that they want to protect others. There are precedents for that impulse, says Jill Suttie, a psychologist at The Greater Good Science Center at the University of California, Berkeley. A study demonstrated the most effective way for hospitals to motivate health care professionals to wash their hands isn鈥檛 by noting the importance of safeguarding oneself from disease. It鈥檚 stressing the impact it has on protecting patients.

To be sure, not everyone is acting altruistically at the moment. Fights have broken out in supermarkets as people wrestle for the last remaining item on a shelf. Some are hoarding hand sanitizer, face masks, and toilet paper. Many individuals ignored widespread pleas to practice social distancing this weekend by gathering at bars, restaurants, clubs, and music venues. In response, governors in several states, including Massachusetts and Ohio, shut down restaurants and bars except for delivery and takeout and canceled all concerts.

Kindness can go viral, too

Even so, instances of selflessness have become increasingly common. In Longmont, Colorado, The Roost restaurant and pub has offered free meals to families whose children would have relied on the closed schools to provide them with lunches. Professional basketball players such as Giannis Antetokounmpo, Zion Williamson, and Blake Griffin have donated money to cover the salaries of arena workers affected by the suspension of the season. And when Jordana Shmidman鈥檚 bat mitzvah was canceled due to the coronavirus, parents volunteered to deliver 150 boxes of the catered food to quarantined families across several boroughs in New York.

Witnessing acts of kindness inspires others to pay it forward, says Mr. Zaki, a psychologist at Stanford University in California. In 2016, he published an article in Scientific American, , that included findings of studies about how people 鈥渃atch鈥 cooperation and generosity from others. This deep-seated desire to help and connect with others intensifies during times of crisis and it crosses lanes of class, race, and other divisions that typically keep people apart.

Case in point: When Germans began retreating behind closed doors last week, Molly Wilson realized she didn鈥檛 know any of the elderly people in her Berlin neighborhood. Ms. Wilson, an American who moved to Germany in 2016, teamed up with an upstairs neighbor to post flyers on mailboxes and trash cans on their street. Their notes offered to go shopping on behalf of those who felt unable to go outside.

鈥淢y husband and I are both on parental leave, so one of us can absolutely go and get some noodles and beans for somebody who lives a couple streets over,鈥 says Ms. Wilson. She also posted her note on Twitter to inspire others. 鈥淲e need to do something off-line in order to let old people know that it鈥檚 OK to reach out for help.鈥

When in-person interaction is limited,听technology can temporarily mend听rips in the social fabric.听Good Samaritans are using social media platforms to post offers to help strangers.听For example, Jerry Xu, a tech professional in San Francisco, used the app NextDoor to volunteer his services.听(Free to join, NextDoor connects members to others in their geographic locale.)鈥淲e can help people use apps/websites to get goods; we can help delivery with our vehicles; we can even help with medical emergencies,鈥 Mr. Xu wrote in an email response to the Monitor.

Beyond offering a cup of sugar

To Marc Dunkelman, author of 鈥淭he Vanishing Neighbor,鈥 these neighborly responses to the coronavirus crisis are notable in their contrast to normal times. Most people鈥檚 acquaintances resemble a model like the rings of Saturn, with the innermost bands representing the most intimate connections and each successive loop becoming less intimate. Over the past 50 years, people have invested more time on the innermost ring of friends and family. People have also invested more time in the outermost rings with online acquaintances they don鈥檛 know personally but with whom they share common interests such as sports, hobbies, or politics.

People have largely abandoned those rings in the middle, says Mr. Dunkelman, a research fellow at Brown University鈥檚 A. Alfred Taubman Center for Public Policy and American Institutions. Those are the face-to-face rings of contacts, such as neighbors and once-popular associations such as bowling leagues, Boy Scouts, or Rotary clubs. Yet the coronavirus, striking close to home, offers up the opportunity for greater local connection.

鈥淐ould it be that in the context of this crisis, people do break through that initial barrier and say to one another, even though they鈥檙e not supposed to be accosting one another or having real intimacy, 鈥楬ello. You know, I live in apartment 2B. You must live above me鈥?鈥 says Mr. Dunkelman.

For his part, Mr. Dunkelman maintains a listserv of nearby neighbors and they鈥檙e using it to stay in contact and assist each other. Some have gone further. In Massachusetts, Mutual Aid Medford and Somerville (MAMAS) has created a shareable, public Google document to connect those with specific skill sets to those in need. In addition to sharing links to helpful resources during the coronavirus, it organizes neighborhood pods of hyperlocal text message groups or phone trees since not everyone has access to online communication. Other areas have used the document鈥檚 In the U.K., the burgeoning COVID-19 Mutual Aid UK network is up to 87 groups and counting.

The crisis will necessarily alter the way we connect socially during the crisis. What matters most is how we interact with others, says Ms. Suttie of Greater Good, pointing to on within social circles 鈥 including online associations.

鈥淭hey found that it spreads within three degrees,鈥 says Ms. Suttie, who recommends 鈥渢rying to calm each other to the extent that we can and not raise panic because that helps all of us to be a bit calmer and to see things more clearly.鈥

At the Jamaica Plain cohousing neighborhood in Boston, Ms. Sanchez is going to institute more sing-a-longs. On Sunday they the Bill Withers song 鈥淟ovely Day.鈥澨齇n Monday, they sang, 鈥淲ith a Little Help From My Friends鈥 by the Beatles and danced to Gloria Gaynor鈥檚 鈥淚 Will Survive.鈥

The activity not only brought community members to their feet to dance in the sun, it brought many to tears.

鈥淣eighbors have already started sharing song requests with me,鈥 she says. 鈥淟ooks like we鈥檙e going to develop a playlist for community in troubled times.鈥

Editor's note: As a public service, we've removed the paywall for all our coronavirus coverage. It's free.听

You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.
Real news can be honest, hopeful, credible, constructive.
海角大神 was founded in 1908 to lift the standard of journalism and uplift humanity. We aim to 鈥渟peak the truth in love.鈥 Our goal is not to tell you what to think, but to give you the essential knowledge and understanding to come to your own intelligent conclusions. Join us in this mission by subscribing.
QR Code to Why tough times can mean better neighbors
Read this article in
/USA/Society/2020/0316/Why-tough-times-can-mean-better-neighbors
QR Code to Subscription page
Start your subscription today
/subscribe