As the COVID situation drags on here in America, stress levels remain high, as does depression and discouragement. But one thing human beings have that perhaps other species do not is the power of creativity. And during this time of isolation, quarantine, work-from-home, unemployment, and illness, it's important to use that power of creativity--more than ever before--to make your world something you can live with and thrive in.
Over the years our society has become adapted to high levels of entertainment. From the constant availability of our phones and computers, to the endless ongoing events such as concerts, nightclubs, plays, and movies. Local community guides have typically always had things to go do and give a try, and there has rarely been even the rainiest day that we cannot find something to keep us busy. But COVID is challenging us to come up with many of these things on our own now. Concerts and restaurants are closed, and even if one does find an event going on, it's not quite the same with the need to wear a mask and keep a distance of at least six feet, which changes the experience of most things entirely.
So now is the time to use the creativity that comes with this unique larger brain we are so proud of. Let's not let its propensity of survival (i.e., to think of the worst-case-scenario in order to survive) bring us to our knees with discouragement. In fact, in this age of modern technology--which is guaranteed to keep us distracted until the extinction of our species--this is the greatest opportunity we could ever imagine of getting a shot at learning to do something other than what we've been repetitively and ceaselessly doing every day for years.
Our stress comes from wanting things to be other than what they really are. And right now, many things are changed. And for many of those changed things, it does not look promising that things are going to go back to the way they were. So continuing to want them to return to the way they were only causes suffering.
Instead, it's important to move on. Let go of what was prior to COVID arriving, and begin to get creative now about the present and how it will shape the future. Stress levels will only rise by hanging on to a dead corpse, but stress levels can fall with acceptance of reality, which removes the oppressive feelings brought on by a refusal to let go of the way things once were. COVID has changed the world and it's important to lift our heads from the steady focus we've had them on just to get through it, and now look up and look around us to see this changed world.
For instance, the world of work has just changed for good. When COVID is long gone, this change will still remain. It's possible we've just now entered an entirely different world of work-from-home that will alter everything from the commercial office industry to traffic statistics. A large percentage of jobs may be changed now forever, and if we aren't going back, then we must adapt. Change is hard and frustrating at first, but once the adaptation is made, forward momentum can pick up again.
So go ahead and mourn the loss of the way your life was before COVID. It's important to mourn and get the feelings processed. But then it's time to also process what the losses mean. Yes, it's disappointing to not be able to get back to where we were before this all started, and most would admit they've held that desire in the back of their mind since it all began. But the truth is, things are on a forward moving path and there is no going back. It's time to decide now how you will create a new life for yourself in this continually changing situation.
Stress levels remain high, but they can be lessened by tapping into the creativity of the human brain and coming up with new ways of functioning now regardless of if that is at home or work. Don't wait for your favorite entertainment venue to reopen so you can once again be entertained. Better is to be creative and think outside the box for safe and enjoyable things to do on your own. Don't let giving up be the only option. Adapt and thrive!
Thanks to Don Miller for the great photo
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/
Monday, July 20, 2020
Tuesday, June 16, 2020
Expecting Change: A Way to Reduce Anxiety
In Buddhism there is something called "The Three Marks of Existence". They are: Impermanence, Suffering, and Non-Self. All three are interrelated and are very interesting to study, but for the sake of this blog we will focus on Impermanence.
Most people around the world right now felt (and are still feeling) the change that COVID-19 caused in our ordinary lives. The virus was an abrupt interruption to our illusion that whatever it is we are doing, or whatever it is that is happening in our world at any given time, will just keep on going as it is.
The reality of death and sickness interrupt (or wake) us in this way, and so does aging. But biologically, and psychologically it seems, we humans can only handle so much change at once before we get overwhelmed and stressed out. When change comes extremely fast we can suffer shock, such as when we are in a sudden accident or traumatized otherwise. But other changes, such as the COVID virus, that altered the way we work, function, and live are also things that comparably have a rapid onset and force change faster than can be adjusted or adapted to.
So if you feel like you are just now coming out of a little bit of shock in regards to the sudden demand for change that has been brought on by the COVID virus, and the way it has affected the world and human behavior, you are not alone. Many of us are beginning to shake our heads and ask..."What in the world just happened?"
But something else that stands out about the COVID situation is the change that has been demanded of us all. If you were (are) not trying to figure out how to set up a doable ability to work from home, you were (are) at least pushed to do your grocery shopping differently. From the way we interact, such as greeting one another with foot or elbow bumps instead of handshakes, to the way we line up now to wait our turn to just shop in a store. Or if your hours were reduced at work, or you were laid off completely, the change is something many cannot escape, and something that has come in abundance.
So the idea behind impermanence as a "mark of existence" is that change is always going to be a part of life. And we only suffer when we want that fact to be other than what it is. When we find something we like, we try to grasp onto it and keep it "forever", but no matter how hard we try, it will change. And when we find something that we dislike, we try to escape it or avoid ever coming nose-to-nose with it again. But the truth is, we will most likely run into it again someday in a different form--be it pain, illness, financial stress, heartbreak, or any other of the harder events in life. Our existence has both and they constantly change from one into the other.
So, COVID helps to remind us that nothing lasts forever. Not good things, and not bad things. It reminds us that we only suffer when we think it should be otherwise. When we want (desire) COVID to not exist, to go away faster than it can or will, when our favorite store closes because of the virus, and when we can't do things as we are used to doing them, we only suffer by wanting the whole existence of that reality to be different than what it really is. COVID is an incredible lesson and reminder that impermanence is indeed a "mark of our existence", and we can have less anxiety and suffer much less when we keep this in mind.
Most people around the world right now felt (and are still feeling) the change that COVID-19 caused in our ordinary lives. The virus was an abrupt interruption to our illusion that whatever it is we are doing, or whatever it is that is happening in our world at any given time, will just keep on going as it is.
The reality of death and sickness interrupt (or wake) us in this way, and so does aging. But biologically, and psychologically it seems, we humans can only handle so much change at once before we get overwhelmed and stressed out. When change comes extremely fast we can suffer shock, such as when we are in a sudden accident or traumatized otherwise. But other changes, such as the COVID virus, that altered the way we work, function, and live are also things that comparably have a rapid onset and force change faster than can be adjusted or adapted to.
So if you feel like you are just now coming out of a little bit of shock in regards to the sudden demand for change that has been brought on by the COVID virus, and the way it has affected the world and human behavior, you are not alone. Many of us are beginning to shake our heads and ask..."What in the world just happened?"
But something else that stands out about the COVID situation is the change that has been demanded of us all. If you were (are) not trying to figure out how to set up a doable ability to work from home, you were (are) at least pushed to do your grocery shopping differently. From the way we interact, such as greeting one another with foot or elbow bumps instead of handshakes, to the way we line up now to wait our turn to just shop in a store. Or if your hours were reduced at work, or you were laid off completely, the change is something many cannot escape, and something that has come in abundance.
So the idea behind impermanence as a "mark of existence" is that change is always going to be a part of life. And we only suffer when we want that fact to be other than what it is. When we find something we like, we try to grasp onto it and keep it "forever", but no matter how hard we try, it will change. And when we find something that we dislike, we try to escape it or avoid ever coming nose-to-nose with it again. But the truth is, we will most likely run into it again someday in a different form--be it pain, illness, financial stress, heartbreak, or any other of the harder events in life. Our existence has both and they constantly change from one into the other.
So, COVID helps to remind us that nothing lasts forever. Not good things, and not bad things. It reminds us that we only suffer when we think it should be otherwise. When we want (desire) COVID to not exist, to go away faster than it can or will, when our favorite store closes because of the virus, and when we can't do things as we are used to doing them, we only suffer by wanting the whole existence of that reality to be different than what it really is. COVID is an incredible lesson and reminder that impermanence is indeed a "mark of our existence", and we can have less anxiety and suffer much less when we keep this in mind.
Monday, May 11, 2020
COVID-19: Psychological Defensive Driving & Anxiety
When you first learn to drive, it's
inevitable that somewhere along the line someone will talk to you about the
importance of defensive driving. These driving techniques can save your
life and drastically reduce your chances of injury or death. Sadly, that
they exist at all is admittance that there are some really bad drivers out there, not
to mention bad conditions and situations that can't be avoided. It's an
educational way of saying, "Watch out, out there!"
We can draw analogies to these same
techniques with the COVID pandemic in America, and the new pressure to
"return to normal" life, while getting back to work, and returning to our
shopping, dining out, and socializing with others.
Yet, there is a lot of anxiety
being raised with the early push to try to get the economy back up and running,
and the convincing of a society that they can resume life as it was. Of
course--as is the usual pattern these days in America--it has created yet
another bipolar, bipartisan, and marital-bickering among the already polarized
society dwelling in the land of the free. Why our beloved country seems
paralyzed to the ability of polite compromise anymore is a mystery to write about
on another day.
Never-the-less, the drive to get
folks back to the workplace and into the stores--but mostly to serving their
dutiful chores of spending money and supporting the establishment--has come
nearly at the barrel of a symbolic gun representing our right to bear arms, and
this return to what many think will be what it was before, will require a lot
of psychological and emotional defensive driving on our part.
In the same way that it would
typically be a waste of time, energy and attention to argue about whether
someone is a good or bad driver, you would just as equally better spend your
time learning to drive defensively to protect yourself (and your loved
ones) from those who might be more careless in their skills and attention to
the road.
And yes, the same holds true now
for the manner in which we are being pressured to return for our first trial
run at resuscitating our coveted-capitalistic-society, which has become part of American's sense of identity to the point that, to kill the society is to
kill those who have become identified with it. So you won't be able to
hold Americans indoors for long, because in fighting for their right to be
free, functioning, profit-making citizens, they need to have full reign.
That's why behavioral and psychological defensive driving is very important
right now in a society hell-bent on flexing its muscle in the face of COVID-19.
So how do we utilize defensive
driving techniques to help us cope with and reduce our stress and anxiety when
it comes to the dropping of the first-wave of stay-at-home orders in
America? Let's take a look:
1) Plan ahead for the
unexpected: This means we need to think before we leave the house.
Make sure you don't leave without your mask, sanitizer, and patience because
things aren't moving that fast our there right now. Prepare in advance to
have what you need to personally feel safer in a society that is trying to get
back up to full speed. Some feel safer wearing gloves and taking their
own water, food and utensils, etc. If you are thinking you can go about without a mask, you might find that you can't get into some of your favorite places anymore. So just take it and be ready to wear it.
2) Be prepared to react to
others: This means that you need to be ready to move out of the way if
someone steps closer than 6 feet inside your personal circle right now.
Many people will be eager to get right back to the way things once were and
will unintentionally step or breathe in your space.
3) Don't make assumptions
about what others "should" do: This means that you can't just
assume everyone will be courteous and stand back, cover their face, wear
gloves, not cough or sneeze in your direction, etc. So when they do, don't
come undone or make a scene. Just do what you need to do to step back and
take care of your safety the same way you'd hold back a bit when seeing a reckless driver. In addition, don't assume everyone should just drop their masks in the trash and return to pre-COVID-19 behavior. Many of the elderly people interviewed who had survived the 1918 pandemic of the Spanish flu told interviewers that it took two to three years for people to trust again, to be able to not tense up if someone was coughing or sneezing, and to be fully able to be out in society again as they had been before the pandemic.
4) Respect others along the
way: Respecting that others have views different from your own is very
important, and is just being courteous and kind. For one thing, it's just
not cool to laugh at others or make fun of them. So if you chose to not
wear a mask and see someone who is, just smile and move on. It's like
changing the channel on the TV when you don't like what you see. Move
on! Respect that others feel, believe, and think differently and carry
on. You don't have to be mean and bully others. And for goodness
sakes! Put the guns away. We're all in this together! The art
of debate still exists, so there is no need for aggression or
intimidation. Everyone knows you have the right to carry, but you don't
have to scare kids by showing you have one!
5) Be aware of special
conditions: Make sure you leave room in your emotional bank for rare
situations that don't represent groups as a whole. With defensive driving
this is the sudden pothole that hammers your shock absorbers and nearly rips
your bumper off with the blow. Or a hail storm that comes upon you
and other drivers out of nowhere. For our return to society, just open
your mind to knowing that stuff you didn't expect WILL happen, so just chill
out when it does and keep steady to the course. Everyone is trying to
cope the best they can so as long as it's not harming you or others, try to be
patient.
6) Stay alert and avoid
distractions: This means that just because you are prepared, doesn't mean
that everyone else is. If you take your eye off the road, you might run
into something, and the same is true for returning to a society coping with
COVID-19. Look ahead to see if someone is entering your personal space or
if a cashier has not wiped down a self check-out register when it's your turn
to use it. Be ready for someone to forget that we are using safe practices
of social distancing and be ready to speak up if you need to, but be respectful. You might
forget as well, so stay alert!
7) Control your speed:
This means that there are many in the country who are definitely ready NOW to
return life to "normal". But the news is that we are never
going back to the normal we had before COVID-19. Everyone is
entering or re-entering (or choosing not to enter) society at their own
pace. Don't let yourself be pressured into going before you are ready and
have the things you need to produce the least amount of anxiety. If you
are ready now, don't forget to go with caution. You seriously don't want to catch this illness! Getting back out there doesn't mean
you don't need to take care of your safety, health and life, or be careless
with the safety, health and lives of others.
Don’t forget to practice
safe psychological driving folk. Be kind and courteous to each other, and use defensive psychological driving if you must drive at all.
Thanks to siddharthav for the great photo
Friday, April 10, 2020
COVID-19: Normalizing Feelings (Extra April Blog)
April 2020 EXTRA COVID BLOG
Thanks to Sawtooth for the great photo
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0/
I know a lot of people have lost their jobs recently in a short amount of time. Many
can’t afford to see a counselor right now, so I want to share what you might find psychologically helpful, without stepping into
a therapist's office.
As a counselor I know the importance of normalizing
situations for clients. In other words,
helping them see how what they are going through is similar when compared to, or
sized up to, what others in a similar situation are going through. So let me tell you the key themes I’ve
noticed while offering online counseling, during the first 4 weeks of the COVID
situation.
Week #1: If you felt
like you were being pushed rapidly by a wave of energy that was demanding of
you to go home, work from there, and figure out how to make that just “happen”
nearly overnight, you were not alone. Many
people went through waves of awareness and denial while trying to sort out if
the situation was serious enough to even warrant a plan to work from home. As one business and school after another closed,
most people began to realize--this is real.
For others it meant that work just ended, income was stopped, and the
future was a sudden blank slate--empty of information.
Week #2: During the
second week of COVID if you were feeling angry and frustrated that you had no
choice but to work from home, be laid off, or cope with a situation you could
not control--you were in the norm. It’s
like when you go through the grief process and get through your shock and
denial, and then comes the anger. Many
people were mad that their lives had been disrupted and they had no choice but
to stay home, go without pay for many, and live a much more limited life. Favorite places were closed, familiar items
were no longer available, and needed items were vanishing from the shelves too
fast. So if you were grumpy on week two,
you were pretty much in the norm.
Week #3: A lot of depression
and anxiety set in during week #3 as folks began to wonder, “how long is this
going to last” and, “when will we be getting back to normal”. I think people were trying their best to
endure and hold out in hopes this whole thing would be over soon. But realizing that it was only getting worse
led to a lot of anxiety about what is to come (the unknown) and depression
about what’s been lost, changed, or place outside of everyone’s control.
Week #4: This week it
was clear that folks have been starting to feel suffocated and closed in upon
by those they are living with, and are now forced to be around much more than
before the stay-at-home orders and social distancing set in. If you are feeling this, you are having
pretty normal feelings as this seems to be what’s happening in many households
right now. So no, you’re not "losing
it". Those around you are feeling the
same thing.
I know a lot of people are afraid and fearful after losing
jobs and possibly income. And since I know
not everyone can afford psychotherapy right now, I’d like to share with you
what you might already know from your own experiences of these first 4 weeks of
COVID-19. If it helps you in any distant
way--via this writing--to gain some free counseling information, here it is:
On week one I recommended that people create a structured
schedule for themselves that included exercise, bathing, brushing their teeth,
walking, house cleaning, laundry, and time away from those they live with. Week two I encouraged folks to find new
outlets for their emotions because the kinds of things they used to do to
release tension are in many cases no longer available right now, such as fitness
centers, bars, restaurants, and shops they once visited. On week three I focused on mindfulness
practices to help clients bring the mind back to the present instead of
focusing on the “what-if” thinking about the future, and catastrophic thinking
that leads to anxiety symptoms, or the could-of, would-of, should-of thinking
that focuses on the past and leads to symptoms of depression. This week (week 4), I focused on normalizing as it is
common to believe that when you are in some difficult and unfamiliar or
unpredictable situation or emotions, that you are somehow outside the norm. (i.e., “losing it”, or “crazy”), etc. Nope!
It’s pretty normal right now to be feeling cooped up, suffocated by
loved ones, a little irritable about the demands of others, and that you could just used a little space.
Since COVID-19 is a new situation, we don’t have much to
compare it to that can tell us what week 5 will be like. For most, each of the prior week’s emotions
and feelings has been unfolding as time creeps on. But I can tell you what I’m beginning to see
little hints of, and that is the incredible creative spirit of the human
being. In my area, Denver, people have
begun going outside and “howling” at 8pm to acknowledge all the efforts being
put in by everyone, including nurses, MD’s, volunteers, those who still have to
work, and those who are struggling with sudden unemployment. My own personal interpretation of the howl is
that I hear it as a “don’t give up” trumpet in the early evening, a “we see you
and are with you” message that we can all get through this. It has in it a “we’re all in this together”
and “you are not in this alone” message that is that part of the human being
that we’ve all been hoping is still there.
That creative, kind, and loving part of the human being that has in it the ability to stretch and think outside oneself about a greater cause.
Don’t be mad that your fellow citizens bought up all of the
toilet paper. They were just scared and
all of us had an expression of fear in some way or another over the last 4
weeks, be it buying toilet paper, or stocking up on sanitizer and meat. What’s important now is that we flow with the
creative human spirit that is surfacing, which will (and can) show us the way
out of this. If we didn’t have a
collective human sense of self-esteem, we’d of never been able to come together
and do what we need to do now to save as many of us from death as possible. If you ever lost hope about whether we humans
can come together to save our planet, look at this COVID situation to cheer
yourself up. As you can see, we are
capable of coming together if we try. The
last four weeks have shown us that we are capable of such unification.
Thanks to Sawtooth for the great photo
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0/
Friday, April 3, 2020
COVID-19: Perseverance and Stress
If you are treading water right now just to keep your head above water, you are not alone. All across America, people are struggling to regain their balance from the foundational shake that COVID-19 has brought to the country. What's the most important thing to keep at the forefront of your mind during this crisis? It is to keep putting one foot in front of the other, and not give up! Perseverance is important not only because giving up won't solve, or even help a problem, but it's also important because you won't find out how strong you really are if you give up.
We frequently hear about the importance of resilience as a trait that helps people bounce back from trauma or hardship. But what about the skill of endurance? Endurance is when we demonstrate the ability to sustain a difficult situation for a prolonged period of time. And that is what COVID-19 is asking of us all. That is--enduring quarantines, and showing the staying power we find within ourselves to withstand Stay-at-Home orders whenever they are put in place.
Endurance also has a lot of determination and consistency in it. With COVID-19 we are repeatedly asked to show consistent behavior of change when it comes to not touching our face, and washing our hands, or not shaking hands, and keeping a six foot distance from those around us. But the virus situation has also lead to economic scare and financial fears, anxieties and insecurities that will also require staying power. You might be about to discover how much you can live without and it's very important that you face these challenges to the best of your ability.
One thing that keeps us from finding our inner sense of endurance and staying power is Catastrophic Thinking. In this kind of faulty thinking we not only imagine the worst case scenario (something life-threateningly dangerous), but we also add to that imagined scenario the belief that we would never be able to handle the worst case scenario. "I'd lose my job and income, and then I'd not be able to support my family, and then I'd lose the house, and then we'd have to move to a smaller place", and so the line of continuous downward spiraling thoughts go.
What's not considered in this kind of thinking is the idea that even if things got that bad, you might discover (with staying power and determination) that you actually could survive these difficult situations. They would not be pleasant or enjoyable, and of course, no one wants them to happen. But if they did happen, consider the idea that you could survive them. You still have all your fingers and toes after job loss, and you can still live and breathe in a smaller living area, and you could live on less, and so on.
Marathon runners know all about endurance, but so do those who are oppressed. The runners literally know how to keep putting one foot in front of the other and the oppressed have no choice but to put one tired and frustrated, psychological and emotional foot in front of the other. Both teach us that giving up is not only unwise, but also not necessary. You can survive this difficult time, through all of its anxieties and hardships. And in doing so you will discover a side of yourself that you never knew was there all along. If your anxiety is taking hold and fear is setting into your bones--be it about illness or poverty--, challenge your Catastrophic Thinking right now and put a stop to allowing hopelessness to take root. You are so much more than you think you are, and capable of twice as much.
Thanks to Gabriel S. Delgado C. for the dynamic photo.
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/
We frequently hear about the importance of resilience as a trait that helps people bounce back from trauma or hardship. But what about the skill of endurance? Endurance is when we demonstrate the ability to sustain a difficult situation for a prolonged period of time. And that is what COVID-19 is asking of us all. That is--enduring quarantines, and showing the staying power we find within ourselves to withstand Stay-at-Home orders whenever they are put in place.
Endurance also has a lot of determination and consistency in it. With COVID-19 we are repeatedly asked to show consistent behavior of change when it comes to not touching our face, and washing our hands, or not shaking hands, and keeping a six foot distance from those around us. But the virus situation has also lead to economic scare and financial fears, anxieties and insecurities that will also require staying power. You might be about to discover how much you can live without and it's very important that you face these challenges to the best of your ability.
One thing that keeps us from finding our inner sense of endurance and staying power is Catastrophic Thinking. In this kind of faulty thinking we not only imagine the worst case scenario (something life-threateningly dangerous), but we also add to that imagined scenario the belief that we would never be able to handle the worst case scenario. "I'd lose my job and income, and then I'd not be able to support my family, and then I'd lose the house, and then we'd have to move to a smaller place", and so the line of continuous downward spiraling thoughts go.
What's not considered in this kind of thinking is the idea that even if things got that bad, you might discover (with staying power and determination) that you actually could survive these difficult situations. They would not be pleasant or enjoyable, and of course, no one wants them to happen. But if they did happen, consider the idea that you could survive them. You still have all your fingers and toes after job loss, and you can still live and breathe in a smaller living area, and you could live on less, and so on.
Marathon runners know all about endurance, but so do those who are oppressed. The runners literally know how to keep putting one foot in front of the other and the oppressed have no choice but to put one tired and frustrated, psychological and emotional foot in front of the other. Both teach us that giving up is not only unwise, but also not necessary. You can survive this difficult time, through all of its anxieties and hardships. And in doing so you will discover a side of yourself that you never knew was there all along. If your anxiety is taking hold and fear is setting into your bones--be it about illness or poverty--, challenge your Catastrophic Thinking right now and put a stop to allowing hopelessness to take root. You are so much more than you think you are, and capable of twice as much.
Thanks to Gabriel S. Delgado C. for the dynamic photo.
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/
Monday, March 9, 2020
COVID-19 Corona Virus: Awareness of Terror Management Theory
No matter where we are or what we are doing, there is an awareness we carry--be it conscious or unconscious--that our lives will eventually end in death. And there are plenty of things we do to try to comfort ourselves when the awareness of this truth comes too close to consciousness. Terror Management Theory (TMT) is the study of this phenomenon, and it has much to tell us about our human behavior when it comes to awareness of death.
In light of the recent COVID-19 (Corona Virus) pandemic that has taken the world's humans by the psychological throat and rendered them terrified beyond belief, it is important that we try to better understand what we are doing as humans and how our brains function , yes. But more importantly, how they can frequently function with flaw and error.
Terror Management Theory originally derived from Ernest Becker and his book The Denial of Death, but it is championed today by three main researchers: Jeff Greenberg, Sheldon Solomon, and Tom Pyszczynski. Together they have come up with some fascinating research about our awareness of death and how it influences our behavior, and more specifically, our beliefs.
Take, for instance, the current human behavior regarding information about the COVID-19 virus. It is safe to say that people are scared. Just the information and updates about global deaths occurring from the virus has everyone on edge. Behavior has been altered as evidenced in the buying out of toilet paper, food products, and the stocking up on disinfectant cleaners and hand sanitizers.
But at the heart of all of this is a human behavior that has been studied and identified by the three researchers named above, who together wrote the book, The Worm at the Core: On the Role of Death in Life. Basically what they have to say is that our current behavior tends to be affected by our current awareness of our inevitable death. And at any given time, we may therefore use a bundle of tactics to wipe that awareness from our current awareness simply to maintain a sense of human functioning and self-esteem. Of course, this makes sense, as it is very hard to maintain a sense of meaning and goal-oriented functioning when we are constantly aware that our own life and the lives of others we may know and love, will eventually end.
What's interesting in their studies, however, is that when we are made more aware of our inevitable death, such as we are now with the daily bombardment in the media regarding COVID-19, our behavior alters because this information clashes with our basic survival instincts. What they found in their work is that humans prefer to push awareness of death as far away from awareness as possible, and when people are struggling to do this--such as now, due to the introduction of death awareness via the nightly news--they tend to begin using faulty thinking and behavior.
For instance, we begin to make up ideas and beliefs about how we don't really ever die. Such as reincarnation, life-after-death, and an ongoing future existence in an after-realm. In addition, we begin to seek out only those that think just like we do, which the research has found, leads to bigotry and prejudice. So basically, we begin to "manage our terror" of death in these faulty ways, as a form of self-created survival instinct. Our human confusion and conflict between "terror of death" and "instinct to survive", looks for ways to solve it. Interestingly, the human brain begins to make mistakes about reality just so-as to convince itself there is plenty of reason to keep focusing on the "instinct to survive". We give ourselves false hope by making up scenarios in which death never comes.
Why is this important now? In the face of the COVID-19 virus? It's important because we need to realize as human beings that we can be aware of our inevitable death AND also function with our survival instincts on a daily basis, WITHOUT falling into the trap of faulty thinking. More toilet paper and food in the freezer will not eventually put an end to death. But embracing reality (i.e., that death eventually comes), can instead help us to live more in the present moment. Though we may understandably have an awareness that death comes, we may also know that in the present moment "I am alive and breathing". In moderation, we can prepare for illness, quarantine if necessary, and yes... even prepare for death if it comes. But we cannot stop death and we cannot wish it away with a mythological fantasy.
In some forms of Buddhism, monks might be asked to meditate while seated in a field next to a decomposing body. Each day, they return to meditate in the vicinity of this decaying human body in order to help them see that death comes to all of us. Even to the meditating monk. Eventually the monk becomes aware of much more than death. They become aware that the only place life truly exists, is in the present moment, and in each breath. Existentially, awareness of death can make us more aware of the urgency of life. Terror Management Theory study can help us see the ways in which we try to deny awareness of death, and try to convince ourselves it will never happen to us.
In the face of COVID-19, work to remind yourself that death is real and does come in time to us all. It doesn't mean you don't take precautions to protect yourself and others by washing your hands and not touching your face. It doesn't mean that you don't quarantine when necessary or avoid some social gatherings for awhile. It doesn't mean you don't stock up (in moderation) on enough food and supplies to be in that quarantine if necessary. And it doesn't mean you act as if this precious one life is not worth protecting and prolonging.
What it does mean is that we can breathe into the awareness that some things in life we cannot control. But we can breathe into this very moment and know we are here and alive RIGHT NOW! We don't have to trick our mind into believing things that aren't true just so we can sleep at night. It is possible to be aware of the reality of life (and death) limitations, as well as live each moment to its fullest. Approaching the COVID-19 virus situation with moderation is a sound decision. Stock up if you need to. Wash your hands and disinfect, as you should. But know that death comes, and... you can live with that awareness.
Here are some helpful videos about Terror Management Theory (TMT) and Corpse Meditation:
Stephen Caves: The 4 Stories we tell ourselves about death
https://www.ted.com/talks/stephen_cave_the_4_stories_we_tell_ourselves_about_death?language=en
Sheldon Solomon: How Death Affects Everything You Do
https://www.youtube.com/watch?reload=9&v=N9D6TW2CjhE
Corpse Meditation (The Washington Times)
https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2005/jan/3/20050103-123230-5077r/
Thanks to Mathias Ripp for the great photo from Bamberg Germany
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/
In light of the recent COVID-19 (Corona Virus) pandemic that has taken the world's humans by the psychological throat and rendered them terrified beyond belief, it is important that we try to better understand what we are doing as humans and how our brains function , yes. But more importantly, how they can frequently function with flaw and error.
Terror Management Theory originally derived from Ernest Becker and his book The Denial of Death, but it is championed today by three main researchers: Jeff Greenberg, Sheldon Solomon, and Tom Pyszczynski. Together they have come up with some fascinating research about our awareness of death and how it influences our behavior, and more specifically, our beliefs.
Take, for instance, the current human behavior regarding information about the COVID-19 virus. It is safe to say that people are scared. Just the information and updates about global deaths occurring from the virus has everyone on edge. Behavior has been altered as evidenced in the buying out of toilet paper, food products, and the stocking up on disinfectant cleaners and hand sanitizers.
But at the heart of all of this is a human behavior that has been studied and identified by the three researchers named above, who together wrote the book, The Worm at the Core: On the Role of Death in Life. Basically what they have to say is that our current behavior tends to be affected by our current awareness of our inevitable death. And at any given time, we may therefore use a bundle of tactics to wipe that awareness from our current awareness simply to maintain a sense of human functioning and self-esteem. Of course, this makes sense, as it is very hard to maintain a sense of meaning and goal-oriented functioning when we are constantly aware that our own life and the lives of others we may know and love, will eventually end.
What's interesting in their studies, however, is that when we are made more aware of our inevitable death, such as we are now with the daily bombardment in the media regarding COVID-19, our behavior alters because this information clashes with our basic survival instincts. What they found in their work is that humans prefer to push awareness of death as far away from awareness as possible, and when people are struggling to do this--such as now, due to the introduction of death awareness via the nightly news--they tend to begin using faulty thinking and behavior.
For instance, we begin to make up ideas and beliefs about how we don't really ever die. Such as reincarnation, life-after-death, and an ongoing future existence in an after-realm. In addition, we begin to seek out only those that think just like we do, which the research has found, leads to bigotry and prejudice. So basically, we begin to "manage our terror" of death in these faulty ways, as a form of self-created survival instinct. Our human confusion and conflict between "terror of death" and "instinct to survive", looks for ways to solve it. Interestingly, the human brain begins to make mistakes about reality just so-as to convince itself there is plenty of reason to keep focusing on the "instinct to survive". We give ourselves false hope by making up scenarios in which death never comes.
Why is this important now? In the face of the COVID-19 virus? It's important because we need to realize as human beings that we can be aware of our inevitable death AND also function with our survival instincts on a daily basis, WITHOUT falling into the trap of faulty thinking. More toilet paper and food in the freezer will not eventually put an end to death. But embracing reality (i.e., that death eventually comes), can instead help us to live more in the present moment. Though we may understandably have an awareness that death comes, we may also know that in the present moment "I am alive and breathing". In moderation, we can prepare for illness, quarantine if necessary, and yes... even prepare for death if it comes. But we cannot stop death and we cannot wish it away with a mythological fantasy.
In some forms of Buddhism, monks might be asked to meditate while seated in a field next to a decomposing body. Each day, they return to meditate in the vicinity of this decaying human body in order to help them see that death comes to all of us. Even to the meditating monk. Eventually the monk becomes aware of much more than death. They become aware that the only place life truly exists, is in the present moment, and in each breath. Existentially, awareness of death can make us more aware of the urgency of life. Terror Management Theory study can help us see the ways in which we try to deny awareness of death, and try to convince ourselves it will never happen to us.
In the face of COVID-19, work to remind yourself that death is real and does come in time to us all. It doesn't mean you don't take precautions to protect yourself and others by washing your hands and not touching your face. It doesn't mean that you don't quarantine when necessary or avoid some social gatherings for awhile. It doesn't mean you don't stock up (in moderation) on enough food and supplies to be in that quarantine if necessary. And it doesn't mean you act as if this precious one life is not worth protecting and prolonging.
What it does mean is that we can breathe into the awareness that some things in life we cannot control. But we can breathe into this very moment and know we are here and alive RIGHT NOW! We don't have to trick our mind into believing things that aren't true just so we can sleep at night. It is possible to be aware of the reality of life (and death) limitations, as well as live each moment to its fullest. Approaching the COVID-19 virus situation with moderation is a sound decision. Stock up if you need to. Wash your hands and disinfect, as you should. But know that death comes, and... you can live with that awareness.
Here are some helpful videos about Terror Management Theory (TMT) and Corpse Meditation:
Stephen Caves: The 4 Stories we tell ourselves about death
https://www.ted.com/talks/stephen_cave_the_4_stories_we_tell_ourselves_about_death?language=en
Sheldon Solomon: How Death Affects Everything You Do
https://www.youtube.com/watch?reload=9&v=N9D6TW2CjhE
Corpse Meditation (The Washington Times)
https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2005/jan/3/20050103-123230-5077r/
Thanks to Mathias Ripp for the great photo from Bamberg Germany
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/
Monday, February 3, 2020
Cognitive Reframing: Reducing Anxiety and Stress with a new Mindset
Perspective is the way we view things. Our frame of reference. And the way we see things is very important since it has a strong influence on the way we make our decisions and eventually end up feeling. So making sure that the way we view things is as realistic as possible is key in reducing our stress and anxiety.
Cognitive Restructuring is the way that therapists help individuals learn to identify the types of faulty thinking styles they've been using, and once learned it's just called Cognitive Reframing, which is something you can do on your own in your everyday life. It was developed by Aaron Beck, who was the same man that developed Cognitive therapy, and it's as easy as ABCDE...
Here's how it works:
A= Activating Event (i.e., an event or events is happening in your world)
B= Belief (i.e., you use faulting beliefs to filtering those events through your mind)
C= Consequences (i.e., negative feelings result from the way you think and filter the events)
D= Disputations (i.e., learning to dispute the negative thinking styles with facts and evidence)
E= Emotions (i.e., the new and more comfortable emotions you experience as a result)
Example:
A= Your boss gives you an evaluation and says that your could work a little bit faster
B= You filter that comment through a faulty belief that your boss never appreciates your work
C= As a result you start to feel depressed and angry and think about finding a new job
D= Then you challenge your belief by recalling your boss compliments you quite often
E= The result is a calmer feeling and a realistic awareness that one critique does not end all
Here is a link to read more about some of the most frequently used faulty thinking styles.
And yes, we all use some of them sometimes, and some of us use all of them sometimes! Try to identify which of the faulty thinking styles you use most often and practice disputing them with more rational thinking. What you will find in the end is that the way you feel can change and your stress and anxiety can find relief.
Thanks to Nikky for the great photo
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