Returning to nightlife can be beneficial for young people's development after COVID-19 isolation, says expert - Action News
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British Columbia

Returning to nightlife can be beneficial for young people's development after COVID-19 isolation, says expert

Now that B.C. is in Stage 3 of its restart plan, bars and nightclubs are open once again. Registered clinical counsellor Nina Sheere says nightlife can be a good thing for young people who have been isolated during during a developmental period when independence and friendships are important.

Clinical counsellor says clubbing is one of the transitional markers of adulthood

Club-goers walk down Vancouver's Granville Street on Dec. 1, 2018. Nightclubs and bars are welcoming patrons back since the province entered the third phase of its reopening plan on July 1. (Roshini Nair/CBC)

While bars and nightclubs are known mostly for their loud, crowded,alcohol-fuelled atmospheres, one Vancouver-based clinical counsellor says nightlifeis also an important component of development for many young people who have gone without it for months due to COVID-19.

Getting back to the bars and clubs after months of being cooped upis beneficial to those young people who have had social interactions severed at a time in their life when developing friendships and independence are important, saidcounsellorNina Sheere, speakingabout nightclubs Fridayon CBC's The Early Edition.

On July 1, B.C. health officials green-lit the reopening of bars, clubs and casinos and the return of normal liquor service hours as the province moved into Step 3 of a four-step reopening plan. Socializing between tables and dancing are not yet permitted, but nightlife venues are now open to the public and people can sip cocktails in the clubs once again.

"[Nightlife is] really representative of the transitional period in life where you're moving into adulthood," Sheere said.

InWestern culture in particular, going clubbing is seen as a marker of moving onto that next chapter inlife, she said.

"What's going on kind of developmentally is also that the friends are becoming more and more important and playing a bigger role while the family ties loosen up a little bit. And that's normal and it's meant to be happening," said Sheere.

She said nightlife can play an important role for this demographic as they transitiontypically out of high school and move toward adultindependence.

Tanysha Klassen, former chair of the B.C. Federation of Students, says she wasn't much of a nightclub frequenter before the pandemic, but noticed herself missing the scene a lot this past year.

She said even for people who don't dance, some semblance of normal is being welcomed by her peers many of whom worked front-line jobs and missed out on rites of passage like graduation ceremonies or their first legal drink.

Missing out and singled out

Klassen said not only haveher peers missed out,many were upset to besingled out by Premier John Horgan who this spring asked young people not to "blow thisfor the rest of us," while referring to spreading the virus.

"Young people werethe people that were still expected to go into work. They didn't have the luxury of working from home. They had to go in and be close to their peers in restaurants or foodstores and things like that. So they were just trying to, you know, do their jobs," said Klassen.

She said some young people tried hardto prove Horgan wrong, which cut them off further from social contact.

"We're really trying to overcompensate, which then, you know, made the pandemic isolation and all of that a lot worse," she said.

Sheere says a lot of her young clients have beenliving with their families longer than they had planned and have not been able to pursuetheir plans and dreams.

"Not being able to go out and connect with peers, even in their local communities has just been kind of the final straw that for a lot of them has been really, really difficult," she said.

With files from The Early Edition