GINTA: Celebrate spring with simple but essential offerings — food, smiles and no judgment
ON SATURDAY, our neighbourhood was speckled with yellow all over: bags of food donations for the food bank. To say that the Kamloops community gave generously would be an understatement: 70,000 pounds of food, which should be ensuring the supply for the next six months, according to their Facebook page. Thank you to everyone who did not forget to stuff the yellow bags and big thanks to the volunteers who collected it all!
That’s one way of giving back to a community that is, like the rest of the world, affected by the pandemic. It cannot stop there, though.
Since physical distancing has been instituted, we have been learning new ways of keeping our heads above the water. It’s a whole new lifestyle, right? But the one thing that stands out time and time again is that no one can do it on their own. We’re leaning on each other to make good things happen. (See my previous column featuring the Caremongering movement and the associated N2N website, both volunteer-run.)
One of the good things we are encouraged to contribute to is helping local businesses get through the COVID-19 crisis. We are encouraged to order food from local restaurants, which you can pick up or have delivered by a local business; we are told to shop in local food stores as much as possible because that is how the local economy will survive through these tough times. All of this while observing proper physical distancing and the strict hygiene rules most of us have by now made our second nature.