Humble servant of the Nation

How to survive lockdown as COVID-19 cabin fever hits

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The media dances between adjectives. Depending on who is doing the scribbling for the autocue, we live in unusual, unprecedented, extraordinary, unique or challenging times. Sometimes all five at once.

For me, a lockdown is none of the above. When I was writing the Fine Cotton Fiasco last year, I barely left the house for three months.

As someone accustomed to warding off the horrors of cabin fever, let me give those battling with it a few handy tips:

Trousers are optional.

Shaving is a waste of valuable time.

You can eat whenever and whatever you want. And if you drop a little on the front of your shirt, no one cares because no one is watching.

If you leave your seat for any length of time, even a few seconds, cats will steal it.

Personal grooming is redundant.

There has been a bit of confusion over the vexed business of hairdressing and hairdressers. First, they were to close, then they would be available only for thirty minutes per customer and then it was back to a tonsorial artist’s free for all.

My view in these unusual, unprecedented, extraordinary, unique, challenging times is we should leave our uncoiffured bonces to their own devices. Let your manes grow long with a nod to the 1970s when hair was king. Where big hair was admired, and bald men declined the razor in favour of a nifty comb over.

Where one could let one’s hair grow for months before popping into the barber shop.

“Just the Barry Gibb today, mate.” “Give me the Phil Spector, thanks” Or, “I need a complete do over. Do you know what Peter Sutcliffe looks like?”

Afterwards, the cheerful scissor man would dust you off before asking with a knowing wink, “Something for the weekend, Sir?”

We have these things to look forward to when these unusual, unprecedented, extraordinary, unique, challenging times have passed.

Right now, we can save our communities, our nation and the world by simply sitting on our blots, watching television. It’s the kind of heroics I have long been waiting for. We can be a race of supermen and women by measure of the depth of the arse groove we make on our couches.

In these unprecedented, unusual, extraordinary, unique, challenging times our role models are hermits, the weirdly introverted, stick in the muds, even humble scribblers like me.

I live in a world where I am often stuck for long periods in a small home office surrounded by books on floor to ceiling shelves, a laptop, a television and a radio with the grim visage of Sydney gangster, John Frederick ‘Chow’ Hayes, as beautifully captured by my old mate, Bill Leak, looking over my right shoulder.

The work, which should have won the Archibald Prize, was originally entitled, “A Portrait of the Mass Murderer, ‘Chow’ Hayes” but Bill painted over this preferring for the gentler physiological based description. “John Frederick ‘Chow’ Hayes, 79 years, 175 cms. Painted between 15 June and 22 August, 1991.”

Chow Hayes was our first gangster. We know this because the NSW cops deployed the Americanism in a NSW Police gazette in 1928 for the very first time.

There are many stories about Chow that are worth telling but one stands out.

People who know Sydney well will know a newspaper stand has been a feature on Oxford Street, near Taylor Square for more than a century. Not far from it, further up the street a sly grog shop operated on the second floor above one of the shop fronts in the 1920s and ‘30s.

It was in the wee hours and the newsstand proprietor was busily stacking the shelves with the first editions of the morning newspapers. A crook bundled down the stairs from the sly grog shop and made his way down Oxford Street towards the city. A car pulled up, Chow got out from the passenger side, pulled a gun from his overcoat and fired five times, killing the man stone dead.

Chow hurried back to the car which sped off along Oxford Street towards Paddington. The newsstand wallah had seen it all and at close quarters. The ne’er-do-well was bleeding out in front of him just metres away.

God only knows what was going through the eyewitness’s mind – probably a mix of mouth agape shock, mental paralysis and an urgent need to urinate but his ordeal was not over. He spied Chow’s car do a u turn and head slowly back in his direction, pulling up across the road.

Chow got out again and marched towards the paper seller, his hands in his overcoat pockets. As Chow approached, his right hand emerged from his pocket, not with a smoking a .38, but a ten pound note which Chow wedged into the man’s hand.

“That’s for yer bad eyesight,” Chow said, before walking off and climbing back into the car.

I searched high and low for a record of this incident but could not find it. Chow was never charged over the murder. The research was made more difficult by the fact I had not even an approximate date of the murder, not a year, not even a decade. Hours spent scrolling through newspapers on microfiche came to nothing and I gave up. Perhaps it was apocryphal, a piece of Sydney folklore.

But when Chow sat for Bill Leak in Bill’s Surry Hills studio, something approaching confirmation came.

Bill had heard the story and when he thought the time was right, looked around from the canvass and cleared his throat.

“Chow, I heard you killed a bloke in Oxford Street…”.

“What?” Chow’s face turned fierce at what seemed like an attempt by his portrait artist to fit him up with a murder blue.

Bill demurred.

“I heard there was an incident in Oxford Street,” and proceeded to tell the story of the crook and the newsstand wallah.

“Yeah, that sounds about right,” Chow replied.

Back in my office, Chow is smoking a durry, looking down fiercely, reproachfully. It keeps me on my toes.

In these times not of lock outs but of lockdowns, when self-discipline wants to take a holiday, when you think, I need a haircut or I need a beer and I need fourteen people to come to my house and help me drink beer, ask yourself what would Chow think?

He’s bound not to be happy about it. And when Chow was unhappy a lot of people got – well, there were a lot of incidents.

Stay inside. Stay safe. Stay well.

This column was first published in The Australian on 27 March 2020


242 Comments

  • Trivalve says:

    Hello Campers,

    Nice to ‘see’ you all. Razor, JL(?), Bassman if he appears, I’m sorry if I ignored any email correspondence, I just found it hard to keep up with it all and with the blog you can respond when and as you wish. Twitter has kept me interested in correcting the faults of the world at large but it’s just not the same.

  • Boa says:

    https://www.newyorker.com/humor/borowitz-report/dr-fauci-reports-that-alcohol-may-help-people-survive-coronavirus-briefings

    Words fail me! Apparently Trump’s ratings are on the rise. God save America, because Donald Trump won’t.
    Above, some wise advice from Dr Fauci, the only one who seems to know what’s going on there.

    • Jack The Insider says:

      This is fairly predictable. In times of crisis what normally happens is that political leaders’ approval ratings rise. These spikes are also temporary. Dubya on Iraq a pretty good case in point although it took a while before his approval ratings hit the toilet (around 28 per cent if memory serves). The US is going to be smashed by C-19. Some of that is due the Trump administration’s failures and my view is the Donald will pay a significant price for that.

      • Boa says:

        Hope you’re right, Jack. He really needs to go.
        My conspiracy theory for today is that when this over China will be the world supremo. America will be in tatters

        • John L says:

          Hi Boa
          Hope all is well and you are managing with take away coffee
          If you think Trump is bad wait until the CCP gets a grip on world domination. We will all yearn for Trump.
          Just visited the local grog shop – he is selling gin by the half dozen lots. He keeps a couple of boxes behind the counter.
          Buy shares in rehab clinics because after this we will all be raving alcoholics.
          Interesting problems for the authorities – local kids playground is closed but the toilets, which are a soap free zone and about 10 m away, are open.

          • Boa says:

            Hi JL!
            Not even game to get takeaway coffee anymore ….. staying at home except for a daily walk. Tassie’s tally was 69 last night – all, except a recent 2, are overseas travel or cruiseship related. Those 2 may be our first community transmission.
            I’m missing my daily extra hot, double shot, skinny capuccino over the newspaper – and seriously regretting not having a coffee machine. But life could be a lot worse. Got about 6 months supply of various abandoned herbal tea in the pantry that will have a new opportunity to prove themselves.
            One day when the stats are churned out, it will be interesting to see what role tourism played in this. I always used to shudder when one of those huge cruiseships overwhelmed Hobart – and although it seems an impossible fantasy, I for one, wouldn’t mourn their demise.

  • Razor says:

    Hey Boa! I’ve gone all greeny and got myself 5 Chook’s. I needed to fill the time I usually spent on the blog doing something.

    • Boa says:

      Good for you, Razor!. My daughter on Straddie has gone to extreme lengths. She started a Sustainable Living FB group on Straddie. From scratch in December she now has over 400 members. They exchange foodstuff they grow, plant sustainable fire resistant trees, chooks abound. Etc. All sorts of ideas. She’s enjoying this isolation and the need to be self-sufficient. Straddie has pulled up the drawbridge. Residents only. Stay safe! X

    • John L says:

      Do Brush Turkeys count?
      We have about half a dozen that call our back balcony home plus a few very smart white cockatoos.
      I keep looking at these turkeys and thinking that when the chips are down …………………….

      • Razor says:

        Razors tried and true Brush Turkey recipe John.

        You get a big pot of water throw in some sage, lemon rind and a couple of cloves. Bring to boil throw in a cleaned brush turkey and a rock. When rock is tender throw away the turkey and eat the rock.

  • Penny says:

    All good here, going between the Darwin Private Hospital and home to visit husband who has just had second knee operation. Eavesdropping all over the place on phone calls between Doctors, Nurses and Administrators about how prepared they are for an influx of coronavirus patients. We are prepared!!
    Good to be back JTI

    • Jack The Insider says:

      Excellent news, Penny

    • Razor says:

      Our health professionals have been extraordinary Penny in their preparations. We are about as ready now as we will ever be. As a person who has scoffed at particular modelling around a subject which will remain un-named, I will say this modelling has been eerily accurate. NSW and Victoria are the big worries at this stage and if it get’s into our indigenous communities then it will be horrific. The police planning around the Qld I dig communities has been going well but there are so many variables. To be honest it would have been better if this struck 2 months earlier so Mother Nature could have done the quarantining for us via flooded rivers.

      I hope you are well and hubby will be and chasing you around the lounge room before you know it.

      • Penny says:

        They are aren’t they Razor. My husband had a slight setback today, nothing too serious, but with the last knee op.he developed a blood clot. Blood thinners made it go away. This time blood thinners have caused a problem. Quite normal apparently particularly seeing as he had both operations quite closely. Talking to the doctors though…..and believe me I asked a lot of questions I feel confident that everything is under control.
        Larrakia Nation people have managed to get over 800 indigenous people back to their communities….no mean feat. I have volunteered with the NT Council of the Aged to help the older people who can’t get out, to do their
        shopping. I also heard that in other jurisdictions most of the volunteers who deliver Meals on Wheels have themselves gone into isolation because most are over 70,so they are looking for drivers and food deliverers.
        Strange times, but maybe times that will result in our being kind to each other.
        Anyway it’s good the gang is back together, dare I say I missed you Razor 😁

        • Razor says:

          Why thankyou Penny I’m blushing. As for society, who knows this may make us less partisan and learn to cooperate more.

    • Dwight says:

      Talked to a lab rat friend of mine at RDH yesterday on her way to work. She says they’re as ready as they can be.

      • Razor says:

        Gidday Dwight! Great to see you back.

      • Penny says:

        They are Dwight. We even have a pandemic clinic, a testing centre and if worst comes to worst, we have a huge quarantine centre. Hope you are doing OK, apart from going stir crazy in your working, sleeping and living place.
        Cairns us due for some rough weather as well I think. Go well

  • Bella says:

    Hi there JTI you have been missed so many thanks. I’ve never previously felt it was ever a deal breaker to mention this at all but I’m immune compromised so self-isolating bigtime.
    My distrust of this dodgy government is off the charts this month as the lies & total lack of empathy continue. No words.
    On a positive I’ve just finished Tim Winton’s the shepherd’s hut (riveting) & onto Peter Greste’s First Casualty & have picked a resh salad every day in my verge patch..
    As for Chow, what a piece of work.
    Lastly, in these unprecedented, extraordinary. times, please avoid the comb over!
    Standards JTI.

    • Jack The Insider says:

      I have thick lustrous hair, about the only part of me that works, Bella. Welcome back.

      • JackSprat says:

        Passed the shaver shop the other day – very good electric clippers – US made – half price – $99 – cannot go wrong if you stick to #1,2,or 3. Wife for some reason has not taken up that offer – fussy I say.
        If this madness goes on for more than 4 haircuts I am ahead – who’s counting.
        With a long extension cord, a kitchen chair and an old sheet, I might be able to set up an open air barber shop up on the street.

    • Razor says:

      In the spirit of the new blog I’ll allow the criticism to pass through to the keeper Bella.

  • Razor says:

    Gidday everyone! Thanks heaps JTI. I’m under the pump at the moment and this will be just the tonic!

    • Jack The Insider says:

      Good to see you, Razor.

    • John L says:

      Seem to recall you were assigned to the Gold Coast Razor -are you busy keeping all those nasty people from down south out ?
      I have been trying to get up to Qld to see the rellies – trying to fit in with their holidays, droughts, fires, floods, epidemics and now even a QLD birth certificate will not get me into the state of my birth – sob.

  • voltaire says:

    Jack,

    1. Delighted you are up & about;

    2. truly bizarre times in terms of world-changing (i am a pessimist who sees this as the Depression revisited): so many jobs will be lost, businesses close and work practices change….. with no CHina to save us as th ewhole world goes through it….

    3. With a 96 yearold father in fair health and an 87 year old mother in poor health (quite aside from a dose of shingles), running scared for them – and hoping they don’t kill each other as he has a new hearing aid which he is not permitted (by her) to switch off….confining people – even vulnerable people – has consequences;

    4. Sydney CBD is a ghost town;

    5. Ok ok we get the 1.5metre thing but you don’t close the beaches to everyone or close tennis courts (so each person serving uses a different set of balls – their own and I am not being sexist): the therapeutic effect of fresh air and exercise is worth a lot (not even considering people who live alone in tiny bedsits…)

    6. Hairdressers: what were they thinking as logic (votes for vanity or vanity for votes?) goes out the window and makes people think it is not serious…

    7. For a couple of others here, skiseason in Oz is unlikely – and overseas travel at the end of the year is problematic: aside from the risk if you are looking at 14 day isolation periods on either side of your flights, it needs to be a bloody long holiday to be worthwhile and you must be loaded with no urgency ….(ignore the double entendre)

    8. Face to face bridge also stopped indefinitely……

    9. Notwithstanding electronic access, books are your best friend…..your own books as the libraries are closed;

    10. Speaking of electronic access, having had electronic access to the Australian as a legacy subscriber, it was cutoff when they switched platforms (the cutoff without notice). I continued my print subscription for the next 18 months before succumbing to a promotional offer for digital subscription ((JTI et al being a plus) with weekend Oz delivered….3 weeks later the thing still doesn’t work, there is an “acknowledged problem” but either enough people are not in the same boat, they have let go the relevant tech people or they just don’t care but I have wasted hours on the phone with personally pleasant customer care people but producing no results! If anyone has pull with Uncle Rupert, it would be nice as a subscriber for well in excess of 27 years, to have something positive happen: there must be someone who can persuade/force a couple of coders to flick a switch, change the system or put on a patch: for a future oriented multinational this should be an embarrassment!!!!

    first public rant for 2020

    • Jack The Insider says:

      Outstanding, Voltaire. I must reply to your email and I will soon. Apologies. I have been busy working on a story that will at least not proceed for the foreseeable and probably die. Such a shame because it is a good story but also some of the miscreants will return to their hidey holes.
      I’m sorry you’ve been unable to access the Aus. They have a lot of these technical problems, far too many. HK Jack had similar issues. Most frustrating. The good news is the Aus and all News paywalled papers will be free for at least the next month. Hopefully they will sort you out by then. If not, let me know and I will take it up with the propeller heads. Good to hear from you.

    • Razor says:

      In Brisbane these days John. We are certainly living in interesting times.

  • John L says:

    Hello Everybody – I hope you are all well in these troubles times.
    Now John L and not JackSprat.
    All well here – I have some form of a cold that is hard to shake – the Dr does not think it is the Corona – no fever or headaches and it is definitely not a dry cough 🙂
    For the technically minded who want to understand what the authorities are up to I can recommend 30 mins watching this on Simulation of an Epidemic
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gxAaO2rsdIs
    and of course this one is self explanatory
    https://www.nationalgeographic.com/animals/2020/03/chinese-government-promotes-bear-bile-as-coronavirus-covid19-treatment/

  • Tracy says:

    I gave my dad (yet again) a talking to yesterday about the positive health benefits of keeping his and my mothers backsides firmly ensconced on the couch, all I get is a nervous laugh and of course we’ll stay in……..but we need to go to the shops
    Obviously my advice of a few weeks ago to get a little extra each time they shopped has gone over their heads like the staying inside bit🤬
    I did do a fruit and veggie run this morning after yesterday’s emergency trip to the dentist and to add to the excitement it’s the flu jab on Monday, then I’ll find another drawer/cupboard to clean out
    It’s all go I tell you

    • Jack The Insider says:

      Similar situation with my folks in Melbourne, Tracy, although they’ve vbeen pretty good lately. If the message hasn’t got through by now I’m not sure what else can be said.

    • Dwight says:

      Stepdaughter in Cape Town had a slight go at me about that yesterday. But, her heart’s in the right place.

  • Boa says:

    Hi Jack, hi all
    How good is it to be back!. It’s been a long time ……I’ve missed the blog – who would have ever predicted that we would find ourselves in these ‘unprecedented’ circumstances.
    It will be so good to have “blog time” again as we find ways to pass days that have suddenly become much longer…. lively discussions with friends.
    A group of friends of mine have a competition going, viz. What’s the most out of date food in your pantry – and how did it taste?
    Leader at the moment was pasta with a use-by date of 2002. It was fine- so was the ancient pasta sauce. Conclusion? Use-by dates are definitely a marketing ploy.
    Love
    Boa

    • Jack The Insider says:

      Hi Boa.
      Good to see you here.

    • Trivalve says:

      Boa, my daughter (who has moved back in with us – (we went from empty nest to 2/3 full in two weeks) reorganised the pantry yesterday so I can’t be sure. Had some berries in the freezer I tossed from 2009 recently though.

      What I can tell you though, is that I had some Joseph Liddy bat oil (no virus link) and when I started playing cricket again I asked at the cricket centre if it would still be any good after 26 years without being opened. “You’ll be the one to tell us” said the guy, who was probably about 5 when I bought it. I can tell you that if you spill it on your garage floor, it is unbelievably sticky.

      • smoke says:

        cobber that’s rolled gold rust prevention for any steel.. dinkum..it plasticizes. ..boat trailer rims? bullet proof!

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