The Lockdown Life: Your Neighbourhood Network

South Africans are now living the lockdown life, and while seeing your neighbours for a casual braai is out of the question, your neighbourhood network can help everybody get through this unprecedented time of pandemic.

Living that lockdown life

All South Africans are now staying home. Aside from essential workers who need to attend to their duties, and the occasional trip to the grocery store or pharmacy, everybody is staying home. Yes, that means staying in, not walking the dogs, and not being able to pop round to your neighbours for a quick sundowner or a casual braai. But, at this time, strangely enough, your neighbourhood network may strengthen more than ever before.

Your neighbourhood network

In the sweet and quaint times before lockdown, when freedom of movement wasn’t so top-of-mind, many of us signed up for location-based WhatsApp groups, neighbourhood watches, or community patrol coordination groups. And, now that lockdown is our way of life, they’ve never been more important. As an active participant in these technology-driven community groupings, you can use them to strengthen your neighbourhood in several ways.

When it comes to security, we recommend:

Checking in on your neighbours

A community chat group can also be used to check in on your neighbours, without popping in to see them physically. We’ve rounded up some of our favourite ideas. These include:

Caring for others

Of course, every neighbourhood has community members that rely on others for help. You may have elderly people living in your street, or a new mother who is overwhelmed with the tasks attached to raising a newborn, or you may have someone undergoing treatment for an illness. These members of your community need to take extra care during this time, and they’ll need your help to be extra careful. Where possible, try and coordinate neighbourly assistance to help those members of your community who really need it. We suggest:

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