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Winnipeg, Manitoba

This year's spring arts exhibition will take place in Northwestern Ontario!
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  • The Brutal Truth About Your Social Battery
  • Motivation

The Brutal Truth About Your Social Battery

Reconnecting isn't a grand, cinematic gesture; it is a series of tiny, uncomfortable micro-decisions to be present.
Jamie Bell 24 Jan 2026
Background for The Brutal Truth About Your Social Battery

The ultimate guide to overcoming social isolation through grit and small connections.

Stop waiting for a community to find you when your isolation is actually a choice you’re making daily.

Living in the North, whether you’re in Thunder Bay or a small pocket of the Kenora district, we love to blame our solitude on the geography. We tell ourselves that the winters are too long or the Trans-Canada is too treacherous to justify a drive for a simple meetup. But let’s be real: after the world spent years in a forced crouch, we all got a little too comfortable in our own bubbles. We’re out here in the 807 area code acting like we’ve forgotten how to interact without a screen as a buffer. It isn’t just a personal failing; entire arts organizations up here are ghosting each other because the friction of real-life coordination feels heavier than it used to.

Overcoming social isolation requires a level of grit that goes beyond just “putting yourself out there.” You have to recognize that the cozy feeling of being alone is often a sophisticated trap. In Acceptance and Commitment Therapy, we talk about experiential avoidance—that’s the brain’s way of dodging discomfort by staying safe. You avoid the potential awkwardness of a new workshop or a collaborative project because you’re afraid of being judged or misunderstood. But that safety is actually a cage. If you’re an artist or a creator in the rural North, your work will eventually wither in a vacuum. You need the resilience to be seen, even when you feel like a total NPC in your own life.

Breaking the cycle starts with the “Five-Minute Friction” rule. Don’t worry about hosting a massive gallery opening or a town-wide festival yet. Spend five minutes every single day doing something that involves another human being without a digital filter. Walk into a local shop or a gallery space, not because you need to network, but just to occupy the same physical reality as someone else’s creative output. Say one sentence to the person behind the desk that isn’t just a transaction. Reconnecting isn’t a grand, cinematic gesture; it is a series of tiny, uncomfortable micro-decisions to be present in the world.

Our rural communities used to thrive on a specific brand of mutual aid, but those muscles have atrophied. Organizations need to stop relying on the “pivot to digital” and start pivoting back to the tangible. If you’re part of a small arts collective in a town of two thousand people, stop sending mass emails that no one reads. Pick up the phone. Show up at a studio with a thermos of coffee. We have spent half a decade being conditioned to believe that distance equals safety, and unlearning that takes a conscious effort. It requires us to rebuild the social infrastructure of the North one awkward, face-to-face conversation at a time.

You aren’t broken because you feel disconnected, but you are the only one holding the keys to your exit. Resilience isn’t just about surviving a blizzard alone in a cabin; it’s about the dignity of showing up for your community when you’d honestly rather stay under the weighted blanket. Drag yourself to that weird meeting. Pitch that collaborative mural. The walls of isolation only crumble when you start chipping away at them from the inside out. You have the tools, so stop staring at them and start using them.

The Brutal Truth About Your Social Battery

Exploring the arts in Manitoba and Northwestern Ontario

With activities rooted in our Winnipeg, Manitoba and Northwestern Ontario hubs, we’re exploring arts, culture, and recreation programming that brings our communities together. From creative workshops and local exhibitions to youth activities and cultural events, we support rural artists, strengthen community connection, and celebrate the creative spirit.

Explore more mindset posts and random thoughts with Melgund Recreation, Arts and Culture.

About the Author

Jamie Bell

Jamie Bell

Administrator

Jamie Bell is a Winnipeg-based interdisciplinary artist and strategist working at the intersection of media arts, community engagement, and public affairs. Among others, his work has been supported by the Canada Council for the Arts, the Manitoba Arts Council, and the OpenAI Researcher Access Program, with a focus on participatory media, strategic communications, and arts-based collaboration across northern and urban contexts.

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Upcoming Exhibitions

The Art Spot Canada Under $100 Art Exhibition is coming to Winnipeg, Manitoba this August! ART SPOT was created in 2008 in Calgary to support local emerging artists.  ART SPOT has curated and facilitated over 100 successful art events, including solo exhibitions, group exhibitions, workshops, concerts, body painting competitions, markets, community events and more.
Our arts show brings together creative voices from across Northwestern Ontario and Manitoba, with a special focus on the communities of Dyment and Borups Corners in Melgund Township. This exhibition weaves together visual art, storytelling, and digital experimentation, highlighting the unique perspectives that emerge from both rural and northern spaces. By connecting artists across regions, the show creates a shared platform for collaboration, cultural exchange, and community expression—inviting audiences to experience work that is grounded in place, shaped by lived experience, and driven by a collective spirit of creativity and resilience.

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The Spring Arts Exhibition 2026 in Melgund Township, Northwestern Ontario, and Winnipeg, Manitoba is a premier Multi and Inter-Arts showcase featuring Northern Artists, Indigenous arts practitioners, and emerging and established creators. Presented through our Northern Arts Program and led by Arts Incubator Winnipeg, Art Borups Corners, and Melgund Recreation, Arts and Culture, this month-long exhibition highlights visual art, sculpture, photography, digital art, mixed media, and participatory community projects. Visitors can experience innovative artwork, live creative sessions, hands-on workshops, and cultural storytelling that celebrates Indigenous arts, land-based knowledge, northern traditions, and multi-disciplinary artistic practices. By connecting rural and urban northern communities, the Spring Arts Exhibition 2026 fosters cross-regional collaboration, supports local talent, and positions Northwestern Ontario as a vibrant hub for northern arts, creative innovation, and cultural engagement.
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MANITOBA ARTS PROGRAMS

This platform, our Winnipeg, Manitoba hub and programs have been made possible with support from the Manitoba Arts Council Indigenous 360 Program. We gratefully acknowledge their funding and support in making the work we do possible.

Manitoba Arts Council Indigenous 360 Program

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

The Arts Incubator was seeded and piloted with strategic arts innovation funding from the Canada Council for the Arts Digital Greenhouse. We thank them for their investment, supporting northern arts capacity building and bringing the arts to life.

Canada Council for the Arts Digital Greenhouse Logo

NORTHWESTERN ONTARIO ARTS

This platform, our Northwestern Ontario hub and programs have been made possible with support from the Ontario Arts Council Multi and Inter-Arts Projects Program. We gratefully acknowledge their funding and support in making the work we do possible.

Ontario Arts Council Multi and Inter-Arts Projects Program
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