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The official blog for Ann Douglas, author, radio commentator, and speaker. Ann is the creator of The Mother of All Books series and the author of Parenting Through the Storm. Her most recent parenting book, Happy Parents, Happy Kids, was published by HarperCollins Canada in February 2019. Her most recent book — Navigating The Messy Middle: A Fiercely Honest and Wildly Encouraging Guide for Midlife Women — has just been published in Canada and will be published in the US on March 28, 2023, and in the UK on May 8, 2023).

Lessons Learned from a House Fire: On Taming Your Anxiety and Coping When Life is Uncertain

On Father’s Day 2015, we experienced a house fire. Everything in our lives changed in an instant. We found ourselves forced to come to terms with a rapidly shifting reality and to move forward without any sense of when things might begin to return to something even remotely resembling normal.

On the day of the fire — when the house was still smouldering.

On the day of the fire — when the house was still smouldering.

Sound familiar? I’ll bet it does—because the situation that we’re dealing with right now is, in fact, remarkably similar.

We’re being forced to adjust to a rapidly changing world and to cope with the uncertainty that comes from not knowing what the future may hold for ourselves, the people we care about, the wider community, and the rest of the world.

It’s a lot.

After spending much of the past week trying to manage my own initially sky-high levels of anxiety, I started to look for ways to try to make things better (or at least a little less awful) for other people. Because I’m a writer, I landed on the idea of sharing stories about what I’ve learned about coming through times of struggle. (Spoiler alert: I’ve been through a lot and I’ve managed to come out the other side.)

I’ll be continuing to share other stories during the days and weeks ahead, but in this initial post, I’m going to highlight the specific strategies that proved to be most helpful to my family in allowing us to cope during an extremely scary and uncertain time. In other words, here’s the best advice from my family to yours on getting through the days and weeks to come.

Accept the fact that things are going to be uncertain for a while.

Uncertainly is one of my least favourite things. I really, really hate it. I find it incredibly difficult to cope with uncertainty and I’m pretty sure you do, too. I desperately want answers to questions that are unanswerable right now—or at least in any honest and meaningful way. How long will the current social distancing measures be required? What will be the final toll of this pandemic? What will our lives and communities look like when we come out the other side? At this point, the answer to most of those questions is that we simply don’t know and we probably won’t know for a while. Accepting that is an important first step.

Acknowledge and accept all your emotions.

Give yourself permission to feel all the feelings. Trying to talk yourself out of your feelings or trying to ignore those feelings doesn’t magically make those feelings go away. It simply drives those emotions underground or causes the emotion to get expressed in other ways that could make life so much harder for you.

Seek support from others.

You don’t have handle this on your own. As humans, we’re wired to turn to one another for support. So seek support from others and be willing to offer support to others. When your emotional well is empty, seek replenishment. When you feel like you have an abundance of emotional energy, dip into that well and use it to replenish others.

Pare down your worry list to the bare essentials.

Some things are worth worrying about right now; other things are not. Try to maximize your emotional bandwidth by zeroing in on what matters most in this moment and what is actually within your control right now. Try to put the rest of your worries on the back burner.

Take a gratitude inventory.

Take stock of the good things in your life: the things you can feel grateful for right now. Yes, things are incredibly stressful right now—and, yes, there’s also a lot to feel grateful about. This isn’t just a feel-good exercise, by the way. There is a huge (and growing) body of research to demonstrate the benefits of activating your sense of gratitude. As I explain in my most recent book Happy Parents, Happy Kids:

“People who experience gratitude more often are less anxious and less depressed. They sleep better at night. They have better social and emotional skills and healthier relationships, at least in part because they’re more likely to do kind things for other people when they feel grateful for the kind things other people have done for them. They feel an increased sense of meaning and purpose in their lives. And they find it easier to bounce back from life’s curveballs. Gratitude acts as a buffer against negative events and stressful experiences by encouraging you to treat difficult experiences as opportunities for growth.”

So there’s that….

Identify the strategies you’ve used to weather other challenging situations in the past.

Unless you’ve led a truly charmed life, you’ve no doubt encountered some challenges and figured out a way to work through them. Maybe you’re a great problem solver—someone who is able to look at a problem that has other people completely baffled and zero in on a really creative solution. Maybe you’re the kind of person who is able to radiate a sense of calm in a moment when other people are coming completely unglued! (I long for that superpower.) Maybe you’re good at reaching out for support and offering support to others.

When people sing your praises, what kinds of things do they say about you? What kinds of strengths do they spotlight? How might you leverage those strengths during this time of struggle?

Focus on finding meaning in this moment.

Look for opportunities to make things better for other people—people who may be having a much tougher time than you. Challenge yourself to find all kinds of creative ways of contributing to the common good. The more we can invest in our collective humanity, the stronger and healthier our world will be when we emerge from this difficult time. We have an unprecedented opportunity to plant the seeds for a happy, healthier, more just, and more compassionate world. Let’s do our best to start spreading those seeds.

After the house was repaired (Fall 2015).

After the house was repaired (Fall 2015).

* * *

So there you have it: some advice from my family to yours. I’m going to continue to write about getting through times of struggle during the days and weeks ahead. If you’d like to be notified of future posts, just sign up for one of my three newsletters (or all three, if you’d like). Or follow me on social media (Twitter | Facebook | Instagram).

And if there is something in particular you’d like me to write about, please leave me a note in the comments section below. (Yesterday’s post about sleep strategies was the direct result of requests I received via social media. I’m happy to continue to create content in response to what the community needs right now.)

On weathering the emotions of a truly terrible week

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It’s been another exceptionally difficult week to be a caring citizen of the world: a week in which one horrific news story has blended into the next, triggering what pretty much amounts to a tidal wave of awful.

If your heart is feeling a little broken and battered right now, please know that you’re not alone. Mine is, too; and judging by the conversations I’ve been having with family and friends (to say nothing of a whole bunch of random wonderful strangers), I think a lot of us are feeling this way right now.

And yet we can still find beauty amidst all that brokenness. As writer, moral philosopher, and environmental thought-leader Kathleen Dean Moore notes in her brilliant and thought-provoking book Great Tide Rising: “Isn’t this a measure of your love for the world—that you will find it beautiful, even when it is desperately wounded?”

The question, of course, is what can we do to hold on to the beauty without surrendering to that brokenness or, worse, allowing that brokenness to break us?

Here are a few thoughts.

Acknowledge the painful emotions that you are feeling.

Don’t be afraid of them. Don’t try to run from them. Don’t try to bury them. Instead, face them head on with the courage that comes from knowing you can handle them, because you can. The beautiful thing about emotions is that they’re transitory squatters, not permanent residents of your brain. Eventually (and typically when you least expect it), they pack up their bags and leave town. In the meantime, be willing to sit with them, be patient with them, and learn from them. They can be surprisingly great teachers.

Look for opportunities to send tiny ripples of goodness out into the world.

Taking action feels so much better than doing nothing: standing by and watching as the world quite literally goes up in flames or innocent people fall from the sky. If you’re not sure what to do or how to get started in tackling the wickedly complicated problems facing our world, you’ll find plenty of ideas and inspiration in this rather provocatively named guide (a guide that—spoiler alert—actually encourages you to be anything but lazy).

Connect with others who share your commitment to making things better.

Tiny actions can have a far-reaching impact—and the impact of those actions is multiplied immeasurably when we’re able to connect our own efforts with those of others who are working just at hard at making change. Their energy will recharge you and their commitment to making things better will motivate you to keep on taking action, too. And if you’ve ever found yourself feeling discouraged by your own smallness or asking yourself, “What can one person do?” you might want to heed Kathleen Dean Moore’s game-changing response to that question: “Stop being one person.” Truly. Just stop….

Give yourself permission to hit the pause button on the news.

Take refuge in activities and relationships that provide you with a much-needed break so that you can refuel your emotional stores and renew your faith in humanity. And recognize that there's a difference between being immersed and being informed, when it comes to current events. Sure, you want to be aware of what's happening in the world, but that doesn't mean that you have to be plugged into your Twitter or Facebook feed 24/7. So take breaks and aim for a balanced media diet. Don't just focus on the really bad news. Gravitate toward the good, too. Because it’s out there. You just have to keep looking.

Ann Douglas is the author of numerous books about parenting including, most recently, Happy Parents, Happy Kids and Parenting Through the Storm. She is also the weekend parenting columnist for CBC Radio.


Related:


How to Avoid Being Psychologically Destroyed by Your Newsfeed

How to Avoid Being Psychologically Destroyed by Your Newsfeed

emotional-storms

This past week has been brutal, in terms of what has been coming across my newsfeed. And 2016 wasn't exactly a picnic either. So lately I've been thinking a lot about the mental health impact of a steady avalanche of Really Bad News. Many of us (myself included) deal with mental health challenges on a daily basis and being fed a steady diet of devastating world events only serves to make that harder. So I've decided to share a few strategies I'm using to avoid being completely crushed by my newsfeed right now. (I'm writing this post as much for myself as for anyone else. But I'm also hoping that this post will be helpful to some other sensitive soul who is having an extra tough time right now.)

Here's my best advice....

Recognize that there's a difference between being immersed and being informed

Sure, you want to be aware of what's happening in the world, but that doesn't mean that you have to be plugged into your Twitter or Facebook feed 24/7. Give yourself permission to take breaks. And aim for a balanced media diet. Don't just focus on the really bad news. Gravitate toward the good, too.

Stick to your usual routines as much as possible

We humans are creatures of habit and we find comfort in the familiar. And make sure that you're giving your body what it needs to function at its best: healthy food, regular physical activity, time for fun, and adequate sleep. (I don't know about you, but I find that sleep is the glue that holds everything else together. I've learned to recognize it for what it is: a necessity, not a luxury.) 

Look for opportunities to take action

It doesn't have to be something huge. Frankly, it will feel a whole lot less overwhelming if it's not. But by carrying through on sort of positive action, however small (writing a letter, making a donation, attending a face-to-face get-together in your town), you'll be engaging the rational-logical part of your brain. And that will help to put the brakes on what can otherwise quickly escalate into paralyzing feelings of anxiety and sadness. Feeling powerless fuels anxiety; taking action brings it down. 

Allow yourself to feel all the feelings

Allow painful emotions to flow through you as opposed to avoiding them (which suppresses positive as well as negative emotions, leaving you feeling emotionally "flat") or dwelling on them (which ties up cognitive resources, leaving you less equipped to solve problems or connect with other people). Remind yourself that feelings come and feelings go -- and you are not your feelings. 

Optimism is a strategy for making a better future. Because unless you believe that the future can be better, you are unlikely to step up and take responsibility for making it so.
— Noam Chomsky

Maintain your sense of optimism

Focus on what you can control as opposed to fixating on what you can't. You'll find it easier to make this mental mindshift if you make a conscious effort to boost your level of positive emotion by doing things you enjoy and spending time with people you love. Positive emotions leave the door open to possibility while negative emotions slam the door shut. You want to keep the door open right now.

Reach out -- don't crumble inward

Connect with other caring citizens who share your concern about what's happening in our country and our world. Talk to other people you know who may be going through an especially difficult time right now -- especially members of vulnerable or marginalized communities. Let them know that you will be there to support them and that you care. Smile at strangers. (Assume their good intentions unless proven otherwise.) Look for opportunities to build bridges, not walls. Finally, reach out for other types of support if you feel like you're really struggling. Self-care isn't selfish; it's self-preservation. You need to take extra good care of yourself right now.

Talk to your children

Address their fears and spark their compassion. Do everything in your power to nurture their caring and to encourage them to dream of a better world. Then support those brave dreamers. They offer the best path forward for our deeply troubled world.