It’s OK to be tired right now. We promise.
Just thinking of all the effects that the coronavirus pandemic has had on our lives is exhausting, as is the daily drone of trying to keep going even as it feels like the world is crumbling.
Self-compassion Is Needed During the Stay-at-home Period
Some have responded to the pandemic and stay-at-home orders with a whirlwind of productivity. Many have pointed out that Shakespeare wrote King Lear amid an epidemic. Recipe challenges are swapped on email. Instagram is littered with perfectly baked sourdough bread and workout challenges.
It may seem like everyone on your social media feed is doing something with all this “extra time” we supposedly have without commuting. Not needing to go to school or leaving our houses on the weekends.
But the more stay-at-home time you spent hasn’t meant more free time. For many, balancing their jobs with childcare and homeschooling duties. For others, a lay-off means filing for unemployment and finding ways to cut costs.
Frustration can easily set in when on a stay-at-home order. Photo: Getty Images
Many of us are cleaning more, to prevent the spread of the virus, and cooking more, as restaurants close or offer limited takeaway.
As people work from home, the ability for work hours to bleed into personal hours becomes easier. Health-care and essential workers are also facing the stress of battling the virus on the front lines.
The pandemic has not given us time to self-actualise. It has robbed us of time and exhausted us. And it’s OK to feel that way, experts say.
“Try to not judge yourself by a standard set by someone else about how you should be spending your time,” says Caroline Vaile Wright. She is director of clinical research and quality at the American Psychological Association. “It’s OK to not be OK right now. To just do your best to get through this truly unprecedented time.”
Many parents have had to learn how to work and take care of children at the same time. | Image source: Getty Images
At the beginning of self- and government-imposed social distancing, there was a flood of online discourse about how to spend quarantine. Some found it overwhelming.
“I felt an immense amount of pressure every time I’d get an invitation to some sort of Zoom story hour or art class that conflicted with a work meeting,” says Robyn Rizzi, who works in ad sales marketing in New York. “[Or seeing] someone’s colour-coded ‘homeschool calendar’. I don’t even have the time to make this type of chart. Let alone have any chance in the world of sticking to it.”
Rizzi unequivocally says she has less time since she started the stay-at-home life, what with taking care of her four-year-old son with her husband. She is also constantly disinfecting her home, doing more cooking and laundry, and checking on friends and loved ones.
Parents working from home have a unique strain during this time, says Dyan Hes, a paediatrician in New York with Gramercy Paediatrics.
“Some parents feel that they have to be super-productive because the kids are out of school and they need to be occupied all the time,” she says. “Lots of the ‘online’ schooling is really just online homework, which is super-stressful for parents. They may seem extra-productive, but they are really trying to become teachers while working from home and maintaining their household.”
Even without childcare responsibilities, the pandemic makes it hard for all of us to complete tasks, says Kathleen Cadman. She is an assistant professor of nursing at Weber State University in Ogden, in the US state of Utah.
The pandemic has placed many into situations where physiological needs such as food and sleep “are no longer met”, she says. “Safety is now a concern… This makes it difficult, or arguably impossible, for [people] to stay fully engaged.”
Stay-at-home: Try and find more time for relaxing. | Image source: Getty Images
Getting through a regular workday, let alone side projects like reorganising your kitchen or writing a novel, is hard enough. Alison Green, a workplace advice columnist, thinks employers need to manage their expectations for what their staff can achieve in the middle of this crisis.
“Employers who try to hold people to the same expectations they had before are going to end up with a frustrated, demoralised workforce,” she says. “Once you show your employees that you don’t value them as humans, you usually can’t ever regain that trust.”
Rather than setting unrealistic goals at work or home, psychologists recommend practising self-care, which doesn’t require much extra time.
“We can practise relaxing as we are walking, cleaning our house, doing the laundry,” says neuroscientist Richard Davidson, founder of the Centre for Healthy Minds at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. “We can also practise a little self-compassion at these times. For example, recognising that no one is perfect and not being too hard on ourselves for failing to accomplish something in the time we had originally planned.”
A silver lining of the coronavirus pandemonium is recognising what we have, Davidson says. He recommends practising appreciation, in addition to self-care.
“So much of our lives depends upon others,” he says. “We need others to help us get our food, to pick up the garbage, and, of course, to care for our health. Intentionally cultivating an appreciation for these many people who are serving others in this challenging time can be enormously helpful in promoting our own well-being.”
This article originally appeared in the South China Morning Post (SCMP), the most authoritative voice reporting on China and Asia for more than a century. For more SCMP stories, please explore the SCMP app or visit the SCMP’s Facebook and Twitter pages. Copyright © 2020 South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.
Copyright (c) 2020. South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.