


What has surprised you about what you’ve done differently as a result of working from home? The reason this popped into my mind in the first place was considering what effects prisoners experience who were being released from their incarceration. Interestingly there are a number of psychological issues that can occur on release that I believe could be prevalent in many. These include increased levels of fear and anxiety, hyper vigilance, racing thoughts and ultra independence to name but a few.Īs we approach this new juncture of life in 2021 I will be conducting some more research in this arena and would welcome your inputs around this. The trouble with establishing a new reality that we have now become acclimatised to, is the fact that we are now expecting people to just be able to go back to the way things were and be totally ok with it. With glimmers of hope of a vaccine arriving, and governments looking at opening up a little more as we enter the festive period, there is also a sense of there may be an end in sight to the forced Zoom get togethers on a Friday night!īut I sense another impending issue that all of these new ways of working and living has created for us… There was a great deal of concern at the start of the ‘working from home’ era and the effects people would encounter as a result. There were certainly an increase in the number of initiatives to tackle the rising mental health issues that sprung up as a result of this new imposed reality.Ĭompanies, in the main, have done a good job at trying to help their employees grapple with this new world and I am amazed by the ingenuity of people as they come up with ever more new ways to keep people engaged within the incarcerated world that many found themselves in. It featured the band dressed as a family of women in a cramped terraced house, a ballet sequence, miners and an old knackered Hoover. We might not all be living the life, as depicted in the amazing music video of Freddy Mercury and the guys from Queen (please do watch the entire video with volume up full!), yet the plea is the same and we will be unleashing a whole heap of whup-ass back into the world as soon as we can! published 17 December 2016 A scene-by-scene guide to one of Queen's most iconic videos This David Mallett-produced video for Queen ’s 1984 single cost an estimated 100,000 to make. The World is about to free, even if only temporarily for the Christmas period, from the different state-imposed lockdowns and restrictions. Watch THIS to start! (you may need to Skip the adds when prompted, apologies!)
