Welcome to the July edition of Tips and Topics.
In SAVVY, Gretchen Rubin, author of “The Happiness Project: Happier at Home and Better than Before” gives tips on what to do about all the uncertainty we are experiencing with COVID-19.
In SKILLS, Jamie Ducharme, Staff Writer at Time Magazine, summarizes tips for fighting “caution fatigue” from Jacqueline Gollan, an associate professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine.
In SOUL, Gretchen Rubin gives one last piece of advice on how to handle the uncertainty and anxiety over COVID-19 and quotes Ovid: “Perfer et obdura, dolor hic tibi proderit olim. (Be patient and tough; someday this pain will be useful to you.)”
The July 15 news podcast “Here & Now” noted how the coronavirus pandemic is continuing longer than many expected. The disruption, loss, social isolation and health risks remain part of our daily lives. Gretchen Rubin, author of “The Happiness Project: Happier at Home and Better than Before” hosts a podcast “Happier with Gretchen Rubin.” She gave some advice on what to do about all this uncertainty.
This month’s SAVVY is based on the interview with Gretchen Rubin. I have selected and paraphrased and organized the interview in Tips and Topics style. But listen to the interview if you want to hear this in her own voice.
Tip 1
Identify your areas of uncertainty during COVID-19 with tips on how to accept uncertainty and manage anxiety
What are your current COVID-19 uncertainties?
What you can and cannot do
Since you can’t really do anything about the virus except wear a mask; spatially distance; and wash your hands, what can you do to just accept that reality and even lean into it?
Tip 2
Look for alternatives and advantages of the shutdown of national and international travel
Tip 3
Be kind and compassionate with yourself. But also make use of the time you now have at home with no commute, eating out and gatherings
With more time at home there can be pressure to feel you have to learn a new language or clean out those drawers or complete that home project you started 2 years ago.
The Balance between being kind to yourself and making use of your time
Some feel “well if I’m not going to do it now when I have the time, when will I do it?”
Of course you may have so much anxiety going on and chaos with homeschooling; learning to work from home, even actual sickness from COVID that “cutting yourself some slack” may be the way to have to go. It depends on each person’s circumstances.
Tip 4
Schedule time to worry
Constant rumination is draining, so scheduling a time to worry can help. But don’t schedule it for just before you go to bed!
If you wake up in the middle of the night with racing thoughts, write it down then and get it off your mind and deal with it later.
As COVID-19 cases flare up and lock-downs drag on in many U.S. states, people’s resolve to continue social/spatial distancing is flagging, especially as summer entices us to get out and socialize.
Jamie Ducharme is a Staff Writer at Time Magazine. She is an American journalist based in New York, New York and covers a wide range of health topics — from medical research and public health to relationships and psychology. She wrote recently about COVID-19 “Caution Fatigue” and In the July 6-13, 2020 edition of TIME magazine. You can read her article on yahoo! news.
Jamie summarized tips for fighting “caution fatigue” from Jacqueline Gollan, an associate professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, who coined “caution fatigue” for when people tire of taking precautions. It was based on her 15 years of research into depression, anxiety and decision-making.
Again, I have organized the content of Jamie’s article in Tips and Topics style. This is Jamie Ducharme and Jacqueline Gollan’s content and wisdom.
Tip 1
Take care of your physical and mental health
“If people can address the reasons for the caution fatigue, the caution fatigue itself will improve,” Gollan says.
Tip 2
improve your “emotional fitness”
Tip 3
Reframe risks and benefits
Tip 4
Rebuild your routine
Tip 5
Make altruism a habit
“There’s something powerful about hope, compassion, caring for others, altruism,” Gollan says. “Those values can help people battle caution fatigue.”
Tip 6
Switch up your media diet
Even something as simple as checking a credible news source you don’t usually follow, or catching up on headlines from another part of the country, could help your brain reset, she says.
Gretchen Rubin gave one last piece of advice on how to handle the uncertainty and anxiety over COVID-19.
“If you want to be happy, the key to happiness is strong relationships – pay attention to your relationships; stay connected with other people; go out to the street and smile at others over your mask; look for ways to feel connected to other people; do good in the world to feel connected to your larger community. You can’t control the virus but you could do for example, virtual volunteering or virtual babysitting for someone who can’t get any work done because of little kids.”
In high school, I studied Latin for two years. That study was mostly wasted as I can barely remember anything. There aren’t many people around I can practice Latin conversation with.
But my Latin study does allow me to recognize Latin words. Gretchen ended with a quote from the Roman poet, Publius Ovidius Naso known as Ovid in the English-speaking world. He was born on March 20, 43 BC and died AD 17 or 18 at the age of 60-61.
“Perfer et obdura, dolor hic tibi proderit olim. (Be patient and tough; someday this pain will be useful to you.)” ― Ovid
One day all this COVID-19 pain will be useful to us. In whatever way, we’ll get through it. “This too shall pass”