The most vulnerable people within that group are the recently self employed. They are a group who have slipped through the net and not covered by any support.
It’s not about a sense of entitlement. It’s that this government has decided some people are worthy and some are not.
Either support nobody or everybody.
Those self employed in the last year can’t access any support. This is a financial death sentence to some families.
Some will be forced to find alternative work - and directly go against staying home, protecting the NHS and saving lives.
This government policy will almost certainly contribute to deaths.
If the government offered fair support to all - then fewer people will be outside of their homes.
If further support is coming - then fine. But take the time to reassure the people.
Something any citizen of a *wartime* government wants to hear is “We care about you. We will help you”.
In this crisis, no British citizen should be left behind. Ever.
So @BorisJohnson has written a letter saying "The government will do whatever it takes to help you make ends meet and put food on the table." Just not if you became self employed in the last year. @RishiSunak@BBCBreakfast
Could this economic plan have worked?
(1/3)
✔️Freeze all mortgages and rent
✔️Freeze all utilities
✔️Freeze all other bills like TV licence, broadband and council tax
✔️The government to sort out payment of this with the individual companies at a later date
✔️Every house to receive a weekly/monthly food allowance
(2/3)
Could this have been simpler, leveraged the work out to businesses, and excluded nobody?
Wellbeing isn’t tokenistic gestures or acts of ‘being nice’ to people. All those acts *contribute* to wellbeing, and can help people feel valued and appreciated. I’m NOT saying don’t do them. But they are not wellbeing.
Wellbeing is a state of comfort, health and happiness.
We need to address how staff can reach a state of ease, rather than dis-ease, by addressing workload, use of time, expectation of communication and feedback streams.
We need to step back and look at all the things we do and ask:
Why do we do this?
Who is it for?
When I’ve done it, who looks at it after?
What do they do with it?
Is it essential or optional?
With schools trying to develop a ‘recovery’ curriculum, there are a few people outside of education who I would be keen to work with to develop wellbeing in schools.
I don’t run a podcast yet - but if it meant I could speak with these few - I’d make it happen.
Failure doesn’t mean it is the end. Failure means it is the start of a new journey.
2/
When we fail or get something wrong and tell ourselves we are not good enough, smart enough or strong enough, we chip away at our level of self-esteem and self-worth through negative self-talk.