Fall is here and living in New England is a treat! We have the gift of seasonal change, beautiful landscaping with autumn leaves and the cozy stability found in hunkering down as the colder weather arrives. As soon as September hits we feel that chill in the air and it is reminiscent of returning to our regular routines such as school, work, community, and social commitments. October rolls in and the humidity of summer becomes a memory. Now the air is crisp, and we buy apples, pumpkins and look for that favorite sweater. This year, schools have opened, and some closed then reopened, fall recreational programs are beginning and…wait. Did I just say that summer is over? Didn't we just go through a season of behaving as if it were the winter season during the spring and summer? Although we enjoyed the outdoor weather, many people remained within their immediate environments. They were stuck at home (or work) during the time where regularly scheduled summer activities were supposed to take place. Ritual vacations, camps, recreational activities, businesses, and offices were not available or minimized. No wonder so many people report feeling out of synch and exhausted. Our lifelong routines had been altered without our permission.
The summer season allows us to regroup and recharge after the routines of the cooler months. Many people have told me that the realization of having spent much of their recharging season sheltering-in-place is extremely unsettling. Intuitively and currently, we maintain our concerns for others and ourselves by following social protocols that mask our expressions and challenge the human need for closeness. However, these actions feel counter-intuitive to our overall lives; we go out, we do things and above all, we interact. As we re-enter the time of year where this began, we arrive with an overwhelming sense of frustration and exhaustion. Inadvertently, we have swapped our season of fun and relaxation with feelings of fear and suspicion of a virus we cannot see. Countless people have told me that they are tired of being stuck at home, their family is driving them nuts, adults and kid miss their friends, teachers, peers, that guy at the market and just want out and we want our people and places back. Simply, we want this COVID19 thing to release our lives.
Overall, unless you ventured out onto the golf course or beach, the traditional rights of summer were closeted away as we sought refuge from COVID19’s rapid spread. We were relatively victorious as these new practices secured a freedom from a virus that destroys people, places and things. However, the collateral damage includes the grieve of opportunities lost. On the other hand, this crisis, (like other crises) has brought many of us together to flattening the curve, launch new products like masks with your dog’s face on it, spend more time with those we love and for those teaching at home, learn to teach children that strange method of math.
The bottom line is that we are bored and overwhelmed all at once; that is a lot to manage.
Early on forecasters projected that this pandemic’s social responses would include an increase of babies and divorces (one probably having nothing to do with the other). Since the courts remain closed or are backlogged with cases, (making divorce difficult), (and you should probably not divorce your kids, parents, siblings or room-mates), it is time to reduce the frustration of pandemic restrictions. Try these suggestions:
Tips to make life more manageable:
Look at this realistically.
This is not forever. History teaches us that there has not been one pandemic that continued forever. Somethings may change, but the pandemic will end. If you think that COVID19 is not stopping, and everyone is always in your space and you have no time alone and … (can you feel the tension building?) then it is time to check in with your self-talk, also known as your inner voice. Self-talk merges your unconscious and conscious thoughts to helps your mind to process experiences. What is your inner voice telling you? If your self-talk is negative, you will feel defeated. If your self-talk references appreciation and hope, you will feel and react as if adjustment is a part of life. Your self-talk will help you to recall how you have made it through other challenging times and you will do better than make it through. You will experience life in a way sort out the good from the bad and be able to rise above it. In the end, your self-talk helps to defines who you are and what you do.
You are a pioneer.
This is true. Until now, there has not been a time where a pandemic moved swiftly throughout the globe and people were able to remain in touch. We are able to share information, share social time face-to-face (online), work and/or be entertained. In fact, the last global pandemic took place in 1918/1919. Known as the 1918 Influenza Pandemic, about 1/3 of the world’s population (500 million people) were reported to have been infected and 50 million died, 675,000 of which occurred in the United States. None of those people were in touch, countries sharing methods for a cure was almost nil and no one was able to watch box office movies at home or share their sourdough recipe. And for whatever it is worth, they didn’t have LinkedIn, Messenger, WhatsApp, TikTok or Zoom family holidays to connect with.
Build upon history.
In 1918/1919 they did not have the medical insight or technology necessary to treat or prevent the virus, control efforts were localized to isolation, quarantine, improved hygiene, use of disinfectants and public gathering restrictions. All of which was done world-wide and with great inconsistency. It seems that we are learning from history with the incredible benefit of technology and medical research that has led us further and kept us safer than our predecessors.
The mark of a great pioneer
is to build upon what history supplies as they look through the lens of future potential. They overcome significant challenges as they try new things and push the limits beyond where they have been before. You have been doing this since COVID19 altered your lifestyle. This is you!
Decrease your boredom and feelings of being overwhelmed.
People report that this boredom is due to having limited things to do. You may be stuck at home but only you can define what happens within those walls. This is exactly how you make a house a home. You envision what you want to experience and apply whatever is necessary to make it happen. Therefore, you can ruminate upon thoughts about social restrictions or change this season of your life:
Things to look forward to.
You can create a new structure at home to look forward to. For example you can create special events and challenges such as, Movie Monday, Taco Tuesday, cooking meals that are not typical, scavenger hunts with unexpected rewards at the end, etc. That new structure will give you and everyone at home something to look forward to. You are shaking it up as you make life interesting. The biproduct of this is enjoyment. If you are living with other people, they can become involved too. Innately, this will draw people together as they have a common purpose.
Separate and manage issues.
The definition of being overwhelmed includes being buried or drowning beneath a huge mass. That is exactly what it feels like. We become overwhelmed by a mass that seems too big to manage. If you separate your experiences you can address them individually. This does not deny that situations may overlap, but they are often independent of each other. If you have to work from home, school your children, meet with your doctor using an online platform that is alien to you, you can either decide that this is one big ball of wax, or you can address each independent component to create a sense of order and personal control.
It is your decision. How do you want to feel and how do you want to proceed? Do you want to swim endlessly in a swell of overwhelmed emotions and boredom, or do you want to make this a memorable time in your life where you were the pioneer? (I highly recommend pioneering. It makes you even cooler than you already are.)