Frits Ahlefeldt
2 min readApr 15, 2020
Keeping our distance, while thinking the same — Drawing by Frits Ahlefeldt

COVID-19, isolation and social distancing are on everybody’s thoughts — It’s almost like the less we are together — the more we think the same.

Keeping our distance, while narrowing our thoughts

Text and drawing by Frits Ahlefeldt

The diversity in what we think at the moment, strangely seems to have narrowed dramatically, as more and more places go into lock-down, and we isolate ourselves. Looking at our screens instead, we are all served the same diet of stories, almost all related to the pandemic. While very few other stories can be seen or heard.

Could it be that when we keep a physical distance from our peers, local places, shops and communities, we will feel an urge to go online instead… using technology to feed on a few global news outlets, that might tend to streamline our thoughts, stories and reality?

Can isolation make us think the same?

In the old days, before the web and global communication giants, isolation created diversity. But now, in a more and more technology based reality, I wonder if it might be that physical isolation instead make us watch the same online reality, and think in same ways and on the same things instead?

Story and drawing by Frits Ahlefeldt: Also on my site: DrawnJournalism.com

Keywords: COVID-19, pandemic, cognition, culture, thrive, understanding, isololation, self-isolation, keeping distance, corona virus, drawn journalism, graphic journalism, illustration, drawing, news

Sign up to discover human stories that deepen your understanding of the world.

Free

Distraction-free reading. No ads.

Organize your knowledge with lists and highlights.

Tell your story. Find your audience.

Membership

Read member-only stories

Support writers you read most

Earn money for your writing

Listen to audio narrations

Read offline with the Medium app

Frits Ahlefeldt
Frits Ahlefeldt

Written by Frits Ahlefeldt

Website at https://FritsAhlefeldt.com . My stories, thoughts, art, walks, and drawn journalism

No responses yet

Write a response