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The state of the nation starts in your street

state of the nation

As wake-up calls go, you couldn’t really ask for anything louder than this.

Two facts about contemporary Australia seem to me to be so significant, they constitute the clearest possible warning about the direction our society is taking.

Fact #1

We are experiencing a mental health crisis and, in particular an epidemic of anxiety, with two million sufferers from an anxiety disorder last year alone.

Add to that the rates of depression and other forms of mental illness, and we start to look like a very sick society.

Imagine how concerned we would be if a more visible disease was occurring on such a scale. Because the symptoms are silent and invisible – sufferers are not coughing, limping or bleeding – we are generally unaware of the extent of mental illness.

There are many specific triggers for anxiety in individual cases, of course.

Relationship breakdown, job insecurity, rent stress, loss of faith, addiction to an IT device (strongly correlated with high rates of anxiety), lack of sufficient “nature contact” time… even a concern with the future of the planet itself.

But when anxiety and depression are occurring on such a large scale, we need to look beyond individual, personal triggers to some more basic, societal factors that might be driving such a widespread epidemic.

Fact #2

We are a more fragmented society than we have ever been in our history.

Consider the impact of such social changes as these:

More could be added to that list – such as the effects of increasing income inequality, and a housing stock that is no longer appropriate for the way we live – but you get the idea: there’s an accumulation of societal factors putting pressure on the stability and cohesiveness of local neighbourhoods.

In my view, the health of a society can best be gauged by the health of its local neighbourhoods, since that’s where we must learn to get along with people we didn’t choose to live amongst.

Take another look at those two facts: increased anxiety and increased social fragmentation.

They are really two sides of the same coin, inextricably linked: fragment a society and watch the level of anxiety rise. Continue reading

 

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