
Leeds in Conversation – all episodes

Dear all,
The Census letters have been sent out. If you are needing any support or guidance you can call the free phone Contact Centre:- 0800 1412021.
You will hear an automated call at first with the following options:-
Option 1 – Would you like a paper questionnaire?
Instruction – please enter your 10 digit code at the top RH corner of the form.
A paper census will then be posted to them once the address is confirmed.
Option 2 – Would you like to hear frequently asked questions?
Option 3 – Would you like to speak to an Adviser?
This person will help them to fill in their Census over the phone if they would like to.
The 5 frequently asked questions are:-
1) Why have I received this? (explanation given)
2) This is not a residential property, what do I do? (Just ignore it)
3) Nobody lives here. (fill in household section only)
4) Confidentiality. (explained)
5) Can friends and family help you? (yes)
If you don’t feel happy to phone the Contact Centre we can help you if you wish. Just give us a call.
Census 2021
https://census.gov.uk/
Which I think generally does history a disservice by simplifying it into a series of league tables. The 17th century Great Plague may have been the most terrifying event since the 14th century Black Death and we’ll have to wait a while before we can make a comparative assessment of the Covid 19 pandemic, although in every case the victims were more concerned with their rapidly failing bodily organs than their place in history.
The president of the Royal College of Psychiatrists, Dr Adrian James, has concluded that the present plague constitutes the greatest threat to mental health since the Second World War, which is probably true, although if you take into account the mental health effects of the Holocaust, civilian bombings, widespread famines and the numbers killed in fighting (probably 42 million in the USSR alone), the comparisons with life under Covid19 seems, to at the very least, very tame indeed.
I know, from my childhood, a tiny bit about the connection between mental health and war because where I was brought up in Gainsborough, Lincolnshire, there was big Victorian institutional building, maybe a former workhouse, which seemed to specialise in looking after people irreparably damaged by the First World War.
They are all long-dead now but in the 1950s and 60s they were relatively young old men by today’s standards. Some, the legless ones, would get around in contraptions called invalid carriages, which were large, clumsy tricycles driven by hand, electric locomotion being a lifetime away.
There were also, to frighten and fascinate children like me, a number of old men who would walk the streets mumbling or sometimes shouting into nowhere.
I could see they were terribly distressed but the adults reassured me that this was just shell shock (now known as Post Traumatic Stress Disorder), so I forgot about them until Dr James brought up the connection between wars and mental health,
This made me wonder whether the heightened anxiety and feelings of boredom and depression which some of us may presently feel should be lumped together with the sheer terror of total war, or with the immediate suffering and trauma which has resulted from every single one of the thousands and thousands of Covid deaths so far.
I know that some of the illnesses which fall under Dr James’s remit can be ruinous and crippling, but feeling uncomfortable during difficult times is not generally a psychiatric condition, it’s a human one.
And if you think you are suffering as much as someone with a regular physical disease, I can only remind you that symptoms such as disturbed sleeping patterns are nothing compared to diphtheria.
Yesterday’s Monday Mind Workout was around British Phrases. How did you do?
Today’s Monday Mind Workout is around British Phrases. Good luck!
Get your comedy fix from the socially distanced comfort of your living room and support small, independent venues across the north of England. The second Your Place Comedy live streamed show of 2021 takes place on Sunday 28 February and features television regular Hal Cruttenden and star of Live At The Apollo, Mock The Week and 8 Out of 10 Cats, Rosie Jones. Hosted once again by resident compere Tim FitzHigham, the event will be free to watch on the Your Place Comedy website but there will be an option to donate if you have enjoyed the broadcast, with all money raised being distributed equally among the participating venues.
May contain adult themes and language. 18+
Sunday 28 February | 8pm