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Dublin: 6 °C Friday 24 May, 2013

Column: Ireland needs to regain that elusive feelgood factor

For economic recovery we must first lift the national mood, writes Ruairi Devlin – and the arts can help do that.

Ruairi Devlin

AS A COUNTRY, Ireland is in serious decline. We constantly hear people blame the Government for the problems that we have. But a lot of these are the same people who blamed the last government.

So what can we, as ordinary people, do to change the problems of Ireland?

To my mind we need a new approach. We need to find what made Ireland successful. What was the key to the roar of the tiger? How can we recreate that?

Here is a solution, I believe, that could turn the country around.

What made people successful was the feelgood factor. Because everyone felt good this made them want to better themselves. By bettering themselves they worked with people around them to better their collective lives. So given the shortage of money, and the lack of community spirit, towns are falling into disrepair; main streets up and down the country are becoming ghost towns. The small shopkeeper is struggling to stay open, resulting in lay-offs and less money available in the community. And so the vicious circle continues.

If we can recreate the feelgood factor, we can rebuild these towns. This is where the arts come into play. They hold the key to the revival of Ireland and the reversal of the vicious circle.

When people go to see a show, they generally leave it with the feelgood factor. When people walk down a street and here quality buskers, they get the feelgood factor.

Lifting spirits

Arts and culture are the essence of the Irish as a people. Is it not funny that we fall back on them in challenging times? Good hurling, football and soccer teams lift our spirits. These are the people who will help us rise, each time we have a problem. When someone visits the museum to study our history, the theatre to watch a play or the fleadh cheoil to play music, they are seeing what we are as a people. This is important.

Equally, it is important that all cities and towns across our nation have affordable facilities for these groups. In Arklow, where I live, a team of people have worked for more than two years on the ground to bring a theatre and affordable community facility – offering meeting rooms, rehearsal rooms and community childcare – to the people. They have managed to get most of the town behind them and are now raising the money to build the centre. They have a site, now all they need is the funding.

Senator David Norris often spoke during his presidential campaign about a Scandinavian study which indicated the critical impact of community involvement in the arts in terms of mental health and well-being – demonstrating a saving to a country’s exchequer because fewer people needed to use mental health resources.

The arts are needed more than ever at this time, when people are depressed by bad news. Hollywood cinema boomed during the Great Depression and the same is happening today.

As a small country on the periphery of Europe, that which sets us apart from our nearest neighbours is our cultural identity – namely, our language, dance, song and music, as well as our cultural institutions which are headed up by people of world renown.

Fifty-seven per cent of adults – or almost two million people – are arts attendees, and 1.2million people engage in artistic or creative activities. Consequently, we certainly have the requisite number of ‘bums on seats’ for the size of our nation.

Giving everything

We need to foster these people’s knowledge. How many of these people have worked in groups and created magical shows on a shoe string? How many of these learned their craft with groups who had no money, no facilities and in a rented school hall? Yet despite all that, people left there with a smile on their faces, those partaking left on an almighty high – and even when attendances were small these people still gave everything in the name of entertainment.

Arklow Communities Together are a group in Arklow, Co Wicklow who have worked tirelessly for to try and create a theatre and community facility for the town. Just talking to people on their Facebook page you get a feel good feeling, and they haven’t even got their theatre yet.

These are the people we need advising the government. These are the people who spend their lives thinking outside the box, and who can point the departments in this and future governments into a new way of thinking. Leaving all politics at the door our civil servants need to bring in some new ideas rather than hit the old reliables.

By recreating that feelgood factor in the local community we can revive Ireland, town by town, county by county. It is time to hear the roar of the peoples’ applause to replace the roar of the tiger.

Ruairi Devlin has been involved in theatre since 1985. He has worked both on stage and behind the scenes as stage manager, producer, set builder, sound and lighting technician and director. He has also toured the US as a magician.

If you would like to know more about Arklow Communities Together, join them on Facebook or email: arklow.communities.together@gmail.com

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Comments (60 Comments)

  • Ireland was once a happy country with good people. People who were honest, happy and law abiding. Now the place is full of corruption. Our problems began when the Irish started to turn their back on the people. Now corruption is everywhere and this is why the streets are no longer safe. It’s not too late to rise up and make this country great once again!

    Reply
  • Ireland was happy when everyone had so much money they didn’t have to care about anything. Bring back the money …

    Yes. Quite.

    There was no golden age. Anywhere. You think there was a time of plenty and calm because then you were a kid and things were plentiful thanks to your parents. Now you are an adult. Or maybe you are going on the basis of what your parents or grandparents say about their childhood, same deal.

    There has always been crime, there has always been poverty, there have always been people trying to do the best for themselves and their offspring.

    All we can do now, is try to do that best whether we abide by an atheist philosophy, an essential Christian one, or the basic principles of time travel (Don’t kill anything, don’t touch yourself) or whatever, try your best, smile and don’t deliberately try to annoy people.

    If vigilante theatre is your thing, have fun with it but … erm … no ta.

    Reply
  • mcbab 17/07/12 #

    I think you are all missing the point of the article. get involved in your local community, whether its joining or starting a theatre group, painting group, book club, walking group etc all of which cost nothing, and enjoy each others company and have fun. You don’t need to spend money to enjoy yourself. A lot of people would sooner sit and bitch and moan and blame the government for everything. I suspect those people would never find joy and pleasure in anything anyway.

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    • Well said, it would really help everyone if everyone could try to be a little more positive. it’s great to hear about a community pulling together in a POSITIVE way and trying to get a project off the ground.

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    • censored 18/07/12 #

      mcbab! You’re right again. I don’t understand why all those whiners just don’t get it. Thank God we have you to share your wisdom and joy amongst us all.

      Reply
  • What an odd article… When exactly was Ireland a happy country? While I agree about the importance of the arts, everything else here is nonsense. The history of Ireland is frankly depressing, and the fact is the brief improvement of the 90′s was the happiness of a person who’s yet to realise they’ve been conned. Don’t kid yourself that art is enough to deal with our huge issues, rising unemployment, massive, and increasing, suicide rate, and a political. system that doesn’t even hide it’s kleptocratic tendencies.
    Religion is no longer the opiate of our people, and we’d be far better off to avoid further sedatives, and maybe deal with some of our problems, than to hope a few songs will improve matters. Does anyone really believe someone using phrases as cliched as “think outside the box” is actually capable of doing so? How about instead we think inside the box and try figure out how to fix the blatant and egregious flaws in our social and political structures?

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  • Very well said….people don’t shout often enough how great our little country can be sometimes. If some people want to blame governments for every little thing that’s gone wrong in their life that’s fine but the government can’t crush a sense of community; and we all play our part in that

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  • While the arts certainly have their place in helping people to feel better, I think a more important starting point is tackling our default setting of talking the country down. Yes, we have our problems. Yes, it is harder for a lot of us to get by. We can complain about it and we should: to the right people – the Government, the law-makers, the bankers, etc. Complaining about it to our tourists, to potential investors, to all and sundry doesn’t help anything. All it does is make Ireland look unattractive. We *used* to have a reputation as friendly, welcoming people but now we’re at risk of turning into utter sour-pusses, completely incapable of seeing the good in anything about the country or ourselves. Would it really be such a big deal to think about and mention one or two good things we have going for us? Even just once a day. If taxi-drivers could recognise the importance of the fare they pick up at the airport and talk first about the great things that visitor can see/do in Ireland instead of the more usual the-country-is-completely-bollixed rant that I hear so often. You never know: some of those fares might even be considering investing here. I mention taxi-drivers only as ONE example, and only because I have had a number of miserable, doom-laden taxi trips from the airport recently. The commentary on this site is not much better. I *know* we have problems but we also have a lot to celebrate and promote. Even now. Let’s be sales people at some level. As the old song goes, ‘accentuate the positive.’ What’s the worst that could happen?

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  • Looking by the faces of the people on the bus going to work they Dont look happy :(

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  • We constantly hear people blame the Government for the problems that we have. But a lot of these are the same people who blamed the last government.

    But that’s because, as predicted by some commenters prior to the last election, this government is very similar to the last government.

    Reply
  • My top tip would be to ignore articles about how terrible things are and all the things we should really be doing. You know – moaning. Then there’s the news, Prime Time and the rest. Oh, and Vincent Browne too. Definetly Matt Cooper and most of the newspapers. Don’t forget hastags like #pride and other nonsense. Make sure not to listen to Irish radio – it’s crap anyway, and you’re set. I guarantee you’ll be feeling better.

    Reply
  • many of these so called arts activities cost money (some over priced – musicals for example) so this whole idea at it’s core relies on people having disposable income which allot of people currently don’t have. I do agree we need to regain our feelgood factor but I don’t think it hinges on the arts, but of course it’s biased due to the authors involvement in the arts. I’m a keen hiker and I see the solution with the outdoors, it’s free for all to use, getting out and about in the fresh air will make anyone feel better and the act of doing exercise increases endorphins in the body leading to a feelgood factor for the person. If we get the nation out and about then that’s the return of the irish feelgood factor.

    Reply
  • What was the key to the roar of the tiger? How can we recreate that?
    I’m not sure recreating that would do anything for our feelgood factor to be honest. It seems to me that there is a much greater sense of community spirit now than there ever was in the boom. Economic boom based on cheap credit etc led to individualism and an i’m alright jack attitude which I don’t associate with a feelgood factor on an overall community level.
    Despite the hardship of recession it does offer us an opportunity to re access our values and put more thought into how we move forward and maybe learn some lessons.
    Having said that if the Gov of the day could have an identical celtic tiger “boom“ in the morning they’d grab it with both hands and learn nothing in the process.

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  • The feelgood factor comes with relative equality of income, which brings security and mutual respect. Ireland’s plunging wildly in the opposite direction, led by greed-fuelled politicians and their unethically rewarded advisers.

    Reply
  • Check out this initiative that helps bring men together working on various projects. And tries to regain some of that sense of community spirit that we have lost. http://www.menssheds.ie/

    “The Irish Men’s Shed Association (IMSA) is a member-based organisation formed to share information freely between Sheds and support communities and organisations wishing to establish a Shed. The IMSA as a national organisation represents the collective issues of Men’s Sheds in Ireland.

    The Irish Men’s Shed Association will work towards a future where all men have the opportunity to improve and maintain their health and well-being by participating in a community Men’s Shed”

    Reply
  • Wishing you all the very best with this project.

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  • We should legalize weed. That’d be a start!

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  • Look, if you need endless phoney feel good campaigns and the fake “pride” nonsense to ‘fix’ things it just isn’t going to happen. And the fakeness itself is a sign of failure and insecurity. It’s like the baloney about the irish language – you can’t force people to collectively do “what’s best”. Our biggest problem is we somehow think we should be the permanently happy, ‘everyone loves us’ irish. Whether we ever were really or not is irrelevant the point is that even aspiring to that as some kind of national collective is impossible and is itself what causes the problems. Upbeat phoney group-think and nationalism are impossible to keep going day after day -and far too stressful psychologically to keep up. Individuals are what they are and if something happens, it happens – that is reality. We can’t be stressed about how it damages some Dorian Gray ideal picture we have of ourselves – it doesn’t exist in the first place.

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    • Great comment Marko. It’s not about what image others have of us though, it’s about our own sense of identity and satisfaction with what we are. I myself am an idealist and I have to wonder if i’m not just a little bit deluded. I became fluent in the Irish language and when i came up for air I found that so few others from outside the Gaeltachts had bothered to put anything near the same effort in. I do have access to parts of our culture that I wouldn’t otherwise have had, and every bit of it was worth it, but I’ve also become really disillusioned and really aware of how few others really give a damn about any of those things. I have friends but I find it a lonely place in a way and I’m constantly aware now that I am on the fringes of society as I have less and less in common with those detached from the language and the culture and what makes this country good. I am giving back now as much as possible and working towards a better country but I would be probably be better off – personally- if I were to give up now and look after myself. I am battling now about this, stay and contribute, or go and look after myself. Regardless, when i look around me in Ireland now i don’t like what I see, and I hate to say, it, I don’t like the people as much as I used to. I’m having to look harder and harder to find the good ones.

      Reply
  • Great article, well done!

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  • I for one don’t want to hear the tiger roar again. It was a beast founded on greed and market place values, which ultimately kill authentic humanity. It’s teeth cut deeply into our authentic Celtic spirit and it’s roar silenced our social conscience.
    The so called feel good feeling the Celtic Tiger (ct) evoked was a shallow imitation of the real thing.
    Art, community feelings and a sensitivity to the needs of others were the very values that the ct destroyed.
    Yes we need to smile again as a nation and find contentment in so much less than the ct insisted we needed.
    So let’s not look to revive the ct but instead give life to Celtic spirit.

    Reply
    • The “tiger” was really a speculative bubble created by hyper-wealthy investors. They’re doing just fine, having separated you from your hard-earned money. I’m sure that as we speak, they’re planning our next great adventure in finance.

      Reply
  • Inspirational art comes from the souls of people… not subsidised smug arts communities continually claiming grants and welfare and telling us they deserve it!

    Reply
  • High unemployment. rain every other day, govt cuts, raising taxes/charges. People struggling to put food on the table, pay bills, banks causing grief.

    I don’t think buskers or D4 arty farty solutions are going to do much to get rid of reality.

    Reply
  • Karswell 17/07/12 #

    Art and culture are not solution to our economic problems, but it is true that the arts were given less attention by the general public during the boom years. The reason for this is simple; when people have little money but an excess of time, they will participate in creating fun. When they have excess money but little time, they will purchase their fun, rather than creating it themselves. The Irish arts and music scene has always been more productive in times of recession. Now in Ireland the grass roots music scene is thriving in a way it hasn’t since the nineties. But don’t get me wrong, I don’t believe that we should actively choose to be money-poor and culture-rich over money-rich and culture-poor.

    Reply
    • a grass roots music scene? where, virtually every pub or venue that had live music a couple of years ago now has no music at all or d.j’s instead of bands.( personally i’d prefare no music to the crap that so called d.j.’s play). we used to be out 4 or 5 nights a week playing live music ,now we cant get a gig a month, and its not because were a bad band or anything like that, its because publicans won’t pay for a live band if they can’t guarantee a full house, we used to be able to make a comfortable living from our music, now we dont get enough to fill the van with diesel. maybe if some of the pubs took a chance and put on live music they would get a few more ‘bums on seats’ but lets face it the majority of publicans were whinging about paying bands during the good times so its highly doubtful they want to cough up a decent fee now . there are plenty of ‘session’ style gig’s out there ,where your expected to play for free or for a ‘few jars’ these are o.k if your fortunate enough to have a full time well paid job, but if your a working musician it wont put bread on the table, and you cant even have the’ few jars because you have to drive the van home.

      Reply
    • Karswell 17/07/12 #

      What you’re saying dovetails with my earlier post. Of course it has become harder to professional musicians, as people have less money to spend on “just” being the audience. Until the early nineties, Dublin had many ratty venues; The Attic, McGonagles, Baggit Inn etc.. where, more often than not you could pay the pint of a pint or less and see three bands. The truth was, the majority of the audience were friends and/or similar bands, so there was far less distinction between the bands and the audience. Wait five minutes and they’d changed places. As Dublin grew more wealthy, these low-end venues were shut down as the properties were repurposed for more profitable ventures, and so the “shiny disease” took over the city. The was almost no possibly that four teenagers would be able to get a slot in Vicker St. Recession has led to more low-end gigs and more low-end venues, when the distinction between producer and consumer is blurry. This is no help to professional musicians in the short term, but it does help the music scene as it gives an opening for amateurs that was wiped out during the rich years. It might not benefit the culture industry, but it does benefit culture.

      Reply
  • Kinda hard to lift the spirits with the troika’s jackboot pressing down on yer windpipe.

    Reply
  • Ireland was once a happy country with good people. People who were honest, happy and law abiding. Now the place is full of sin. Our problems began when the Irish started to turn their back on the church. Now Satan is everywhere and this is why the streets are no longer safe. It’s not too late to come back to the church and make this country great once again!

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    • I don’t know if Satan is everywhere, but he is definitely in your keyboard.

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    • If this is true, then your god is a sadistic and vindictive bully, you can keep him all for yourself.

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    • hey troll most of all wars is because people follow one religion or other. as an atheist sin is what happens to those who believe and something to fear (judgement day) I don’t believe in judgement day and hence don’t believe in sin. so your comment is aimed at those who believe in religion and sin, they are the sheep who hear the same message as you do every week. Your trolling those that believe in your book. Go on you. “cast the first stone hypercritical sinner”, your not allowed to judge others.

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    • The church was abusing children and protecting the perpetrators- do you read the news at all?

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    • It’s saddens me to see that people are so ignorant. A blind man can see that the Celtic Tiger was like a modern equivalent of the temptation in the Garden of Eden. People were happy before, but felt that all the materialism could make them happier. Now look where we are. Why not go back? Profess your sins and return to mass. This is where you will meet your neighbour and shake his hand rather than ignoring him in the street.

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    • If the devil is everywhere and we know the devil has all the best tunes then give the man a busking licence! Problem solved. Can I get a hell yeah!

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    • It saddens me when people like Waterford come on here with their trolling comments.

      As a Church-goer, it’s sad that people might begin to associate Waterford’s bigoted, uninformed and unchristian comments with the majority of Catholics who would in no way support or associate with such fundamentalist, narrow-minded views!

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    • Well its certainly a great time for old “Beelzebub” to be everywhere with all those cheep NAMA properties about, I myself however, am off to dance barefoot at the cross roads. (I think that’s the other place Satan can’t get you Waterford?)

      Reply
    • In these troubled times, Waterford, I wonder if the time for the “get thee behind me Satan” has passed.

      Maybe we should try a different approach of “Come in Satan, have a cup of tea, let’s talk this out.”, disarm Satan and his legions of proselytizing atheists with good manners and politeness.

      Only love can defeat hate. Hate cannot defeat hate.

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    • Haha. This is definitely a pi*s take folks!

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    • Haha. This has to be someone taking the mick.

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    • Edna, Gimmemore, Brutal, Splatter, Sulk Hogan etc have sold their souls to the Merkel/Troika/Eu/Euro Devil, and we are all paying the price….!!!

      The Church sold it’s soul to the Devil years ago….Only have to look at all the Priests/Nuns/Brothers being done for abuse over the last 50+ years. Not to mention the Abuses they carried out over the last 2000 years….You can keep your God….Mine is in my pocket….!!!

      Aetheism….The Only way…!!!!

      Reply
    • Dear Waterford, the only thing I can identify with in your fearful commentary re Satan is perhaps that what you are trying to say is that belief in something bigger than oneself, whether that be Religion or Spirit can act as a compass for positive action? An ability to give, create, innovate and invest in community will contribute to the rebuilding of Ireland but fear that unless you adore a prescriptive God that Satan will get you should have been left somewhere In the 12th century and has no place in a modern and recovering society.

      Reply
  • Richard 17/07/12 #

    ‘The Roman emperors knew, so it seems, what they were doing when they took care to supply the masses with bread and circuses: both vanish once you have taken them in, without leaving behind a corporeal shape on which
    consumers can vent any disappointment, boredom, or anxiety they may have suffered or may yet suffer.’

    - Albert Hirschmann, Shifting Involvements: Private Interest and Public Action.

    Reply

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