Coronavirus, anxiety, and the profound failure of rugged individualism
From Vox:
Coronavirus, anxiety, and the profound failure of rugged individualism
The coronavirus is making us all more anxious and depressed. Heres what we can do about it.
By Roge Karma on March 28, 2020 9:30 am
I never had serious problems with my mental health before the coronavirus hit. But over the past few weeks, Ive found myself struggling: the constant sinking feeling in my stomach, difficulty falling asleep at night, crippling mental and physical fatigue out of nowhere. I had heard all of these symptoms described to me by depressed and anxious friends before, but this is the first time in my life Ive truly felt them for extended periods of time. And Im not the only one. Usage of mental health apps and chatbots has gone up in recent weeks, as have mental health-related social media posts and dozens of friends and colleagues have relayed similar experiences.
Through it all, the book thats been at the front of my mind is Lost Connections: Why Youre Depressed and How to Find Hope (audiobook) by Johann Hari. Drawing on interviews with dozens of neuroscientists, biologists, and social scientists, the book advances an argument that is both radical and obvious: Depression and anxiety are more than just chemical imbalances in the brain; they are also products of our distinct social environments social environments that have left our core psychological needs unmet.
Over the last few weeks, there have been and will continue to be some fundamental shifts in the social landscape within which we live our lives. Unemployment applications have reached record highs. Small businesses are shuttering by the day. Entire cities are being told to shelter in place. Social distancing has become the new normal. And theres no telling when any of it will end. ........(more)
https://www.vox.com/2020/3/28/21196268/coronavirus-johann-hari-lost-connections-anxiety-depression-failure-rugged-individualism