Tired of Being Tired? Living through Changes and What to Do
Introducing the Reactive Reset Response Phenomenon
People are overwhelmed, fatigued, and some so frustrated that they are giving up on their goals. With an overview of the last few years, it is easy to see why. Until the recent past, people spent concentrated time and energy making “it” happen. And happen it did, until we were side swiped by the runaway COVID19 train. Oddly, a mere two years ago feels both like forever and yesterday. We remember people scheduling time for work, school, family, friends, daily routines, and time to take time. Then March 2020 came in like a lion and no more for you. No more office for you. No more classroom for you. No more whatever that was for you. Stay home. Stay in. Stay away from each other. So, we reset. Suddenly, people began organizing a lifetime of photos, baking sour-dough bread, buying air-fryers, and sharpening their synchronized dance skills. It is easy to argue that Tik Tok may have saved some people’s sanity.
Don’t hyperventilate, the story gets better. Time, doing what time does best, gave us the time and space to figure things out and redirect. As the months moved on, we adjusted and re-adjusted our lifestyles and pace. When Corona was no longer novel, there was a push to return to life as we knew it. COVID19 and its offspring variants snubbed their viral noses at us and simply said No. We did not ask for much. We just wanted what had been taken from us. We were done feeling the fear of closeness. (Remember when people were so uncomfortable, they avoided eye contact as anyone could be a contaminated killer.) We wanted our freedom back. We wanted to go to the studio, the store, the coffee shop. We just wanted to buy something in person. We even wanted to see people we didn’t like. However, pandemics don’t care about what you want. The virus was busy doing its job – it was working to spread and survive.
Meanwhile, research, vaccine development/availability, health reports, and the like provided us with important and informative distractions. These diversions helped us to look beyond the scope of our fear-based lens. We also paid attention to the throngs of dedicated and strained first responders, for whom we worried and offered support. (No, I don’t mean your liquor store employees). While they bobbed and weaved within this epidemic’s whirlwind, the rest of the world was moving more slowly than it had before. Most of us were off our axis and living in a rotation that was way out of balance. We worked hard to recalibrate, as we are built to survive no matter the lifestyle or environment.
In our quietude, some good shifts occurred. Many people unexpectedly found peace, as their inner introvert was nourished by the lack of constant stimuli. Discussions of maverick achievers were replaced by mindfulness and self-care. Portions of our social narrative changed due to the consistency and length of time within this new culture. Extraverts and otherverts worked to remain face-forward with promises of our world re-opening. However, no matter your vert (or characteristic leaning), many people swore that things (such as commutation time) would decrease and living to work (where possible) was no longer the trend. Yes Millennials, it is true! The world could suddenly see what you had seen long before. We changed direction and set our feet upon the work to live path, realizing that working from (or close to) home benefits productivity, decreases business expenditures, and increases our at-home time. It can also be argued that platforms like Zoom, and FaceTime saved minds and added to our vocabulary. Zoomtails? Like cocktails on Zoom? Look at us creating compound words.
All of this to say, there was something we may not have considered: When the uptick in our ability to re-connect emerged, we would be jettisoned into somewhat of a chaotic hyper-drive. Emotionally, analytically, and simultaneously, we would experience conflicts in regrouping. We would be both eager and suspect. Each thought would be accompanied by a reaction. As the era of virtual meeting pajama-bottom attire hit the veritable brakes, we went flying. Why? Just because something changes doesn’t mean everything does. At least not right away. (See inertia) Human beings need time to adjust - and we’ve been doing far more than our share for a long period of time.
Most people I speak to feel very tired, frazzled, are having a tough time focusing, feel less tolerant than normal and often out of synch. The word overwhelmed has become a part of our daily vernacular. People of all ages tell me that they feel like there is so much to do that they cannot keep up. There is an overarching sense of frustration and tiredness. For instance, some students have explained that suddenly it feels like there are so many academic demands they are overloaded. The truth is that the pre-pandemic and current workloads are probably similar. Some say they have abandoned their fixation on grades. It is not worth it. I just want to graduate. We are staring at the results of what happens when a person or group must repeatedly adjust in a time of certain uncertainties.
Let’s not forget that during our adjusting to adjust, people have been trying to feel okay and practice better health. They are meditating, medicating, doing yoga, hiking, delving into passions, not taking life for granted, etc. Nevertheless, our mental health has been affected. We have endured so many shifts that our brains have been yanked around quite a bit. Stop, go, slowdown, wait, mask on, mask off, mask on…this consistent inconsistency is a lot more to manage than we gave it credit for. Your brain is tired of this viral Simon Says and when your brain is tired you are tired.
Each time we have an experience, our brain reacts. This is your brain doing its job. It adapts to protect you and equips you to respond accordingly. In situations such as a pandemic, just when we think we have it right, we have had to adjust and re-approach. This is counter-intuitive to your brain which is looking to find what it understands best - it likes routine. Our interrupted patterns have made us tired, unfocused, and frustrated because we have had to learn, stop, redirect, focus, and then do it again. I call this phenomenon Reactive Reset Response (R3). It is exactly what is happening, and it is easy explain and remember.
Want to crush Reactive Reset Response? Keep these three things in mind: (1) There is no way to make a change if you don’t know what to change (2) You cannot change what you don’t understand. (3) Keep your thinking simple – simple is easy. You can use these methods to beat R3.
Decrease the strain: Understand what has happened.
As an individual and member of a greater group, you have shifted from life as you knew it, to a very slow, rearranged pace, to a reintroduction to a life that continuously introduces more. That is what happened.
Center your self: No, that is not a typo. Self speaks to your nature, the characteristics that you manage and own. How can you balance your self as the world is working to steady itself? Find your answer in the easiest place: In your lifetime, when you faced challenges, what has been your best way of becoming confident and steady?
How to treat your self: Using your brain chemistry, treat that self of yours with good inside-your-skull chemicals. Do this by using your memories (they prompt brain chemistry). Have you learned anything that helped you (or someone else) to get through difficult pandemic times? Did you engage in new behaviors? Do any of those new behaviors belong in your life for the longer term? Focus on new or proven constructive methods to divert you from feeling lousy. If those new behaviors brought you peace, use them – or something like them – now.
Respect adjustment: Remember that your brain adapts to help you reason and survive. Although adjustment can feel lonely or confusing, you are not alone. During this complex time, people have been doing their best to adjust, even when there were almost no or conflicting answers. The definition of adjust means change not stability. You are doing your best and will land on your feet when you find your balance.
Above all, know that you count: You are a pioneer. You are a part of history where societal changes were made. You helped to make those changes. You helped to make life work. You are a valuable member of that global recovery mission. That is the truth.
These methods will help you to decrease frustration and allow your energy reserve to increase along with your peace of mind. You will have made your thoughts and emotions more manageable, and in that there is tranquility, a sense of knowing, which is exactly what that brain of yours is looking for.