So where are we today?
At odds, reactive and fighting with ourselves, our neighbors, and family, the world – or so it seems. (How’s your Thanksgiving dinner been these past few years?).
Between COVID’s impact, immigration events around the world fueled by climate events, devastating wars, economic wobbliness, and the impact of social media in our intimate lives, we’re suffering. No doubt about it.
Anxiety is up in 2024 by 43% (per the American Psychiatric Association) with more than two-thirds of us feeling anxious about current events, gun violence, and the economy. Not surprising, 73% of us are anxious about the upcoming election.
We feel conflicted and disconnected, yet we aren’t exactly sure how to talk about it. So, we don’t.
Instead, we isolate or avoid, find those within our bubble to yammer with, or we find ourselves caught up in the hot emotion of difference and feel a defensive need to stake a claim on our point of view - others be damned!
Perhaps most importantly, we somehow expect we should be able to handle this massive upheaval of stress, just like in days past.
“The expectation that we can be immersed in suffering and loss daily and not be touched by it is as unrealistic as expecting to be able to walk through water without getting wet.” ~ Dr. Rachel Remen, Stanford Medical School Faculty
But today different mindsets and skills are required, which takes me back to Sue’s question.
My answer to Sue’s question?
We’re in a state of collective dysregulation.
As humans, we love certainty, and I believe we’re on the search for the quality of connection we experienced in the past to sustain us. I think we’d all like to relax in our trusted village square - which makes sense since the most significant determinant of resilience (in all major studies over 50 years) is the quality of our connections with one another on the village square of our lives.
Instead, our stress levels are ratcheted up, as are our emotions and energy.
When our stress hormones are running high, we literally can’t think as clearly.
Our decision making is compromised by stress and anxiety.
We become more easily and quickly overwhelmed. Emotions, being contagious, pick up as we key into one another’s emotional states. Before you know it, we’re personally off kilter which can lead to burnout and compassion fatigue.
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