Categories
Mental Health

Will We Recognize the End of Pandemic Exhaustion?

I’m tired, y’all. This pandemic is dragging forever, and people are just ugly. A new friend used the term “pandemic exhaustion.” Maybe I’m late to the game. Maybe it’s talked about more in her church than mine. Whichever, this was the first time I remember hearing that term. I suspect “pandemic fatigue” crossed my consciousness once or twice, but exhaustion captures what we’re all feeling more than fatigue does.

Truth to tell, I think I’ve been exhausted by all the ugliness since 2016. It was less bad then. Like many of my friends and relatives, I thought the election and everything leading up to it was fine drama. Some people allowed their ugliness to show through then. One person offered scathing vitriol against everyone who had voted for the winner, little acknowledging or caring that good people had their own reasons for voting as they had. (Focusing on a single issue or two drives me nuts, but that’s how some people vote.) I thought maybe that was the worst I’d have to be exposed to, but no such luck.

When March 2020 hit and this novel Covid-19 virus that had been “over there” showed up “over here,” we thought it’d be over with fairly quickly. We heard all about “flattening the curve,” leading to the belief that if we did everything right, we could make this new enemy go away. Only, it didn’t. The curve went up and plateaued, then down and plateaued, then back up. Every time it’s gone down, society becomes a maskless, gathering free-fot-all, and the curve goes back up. Am I the only one who doesn’t see the relationship here? I know I’m not the only one who thinks that keeping mask mandates in place for an additional two months after cases drop isn’t the worst idea in the world. After all, if something’s working, why stop doing it?

Now it’s almost two years later. People have been acting out in person and on social media. The vitriol hasn’t abated. If anything, it’s gotten worse. My friend and I were talking about this, and that’s when “pandemic exhaustion” entered the conversation.

Masking. Social distancing. Quarantining. Not seeing loved ones. Understanding the germaphobia of TV detective Adrian Monk. Manic hand washing. Students being sent home when a classmate tests positive for Covid. Parents having to adjusts their whole lives–not just suddenly working from home, but also having to be present to children while they, too, are at home. Disorientation. Confusion. Uncertainty of who to trust.

In addition to these issues, any one of which by itself can send someone into a crisis state, there’s also people struggling with previously existing mental health problems. Suicide rates went up. People with depression got worse. Anxiety went through the roof. I spent the first three months in survival mode, fighting constantly to keep anxiety at bay and also helping one daughter as she struggled with college classes that suddenly went online and crying with my other daughter as activity after activity disappeared from her year.

After all this time–over five years at this point–will we be able to recognize the end of the exhaustion? Will we be able to feel when the crisis has abated? When all the health officials have determined that the pandemic has either passed or become endemic, will we be able to trust them? I wonder if ugliness is the new normal or if the end of the pandemic will mark a reset to the way people treat each other?

Even nice, compassionate people are struggling. I’ve watched marriages dissolve. People who believe that the lives of our friends of different shades of brown, those of our friends in the LGBTQIA community, and the lives of the vulnerable in our society (those most susceptible to dying from Covid) fight and advocate. We celebrate the little victories, like guilty verdicts handed down in the lynching murders of innocent Black men. We mourn the hospitalizations and deaths of children who are too young for vaccines. We feel angry at continued systems of oppression and injustice. And it doesn’t seem ever to stop.

When this is over, when our society and culture gets whatever our reset will look like, the compassionate people will still be compassionate. We’ll be a bit scarred, a bit battle-weary and -hardened, but compassion was our trademark before the pandemic and it will still be who we are coming out of it. If anything, our compassion has had opportunities to grow in the moments between the struggles.

Those who have allowed anger and vileness to become their modus operandi will remain angry and vile, though hopefully less so. Crises show us who we really are, and the past five years, and especially the last two, have ripped the masks off of many people, allowing everyone to see them for who they really are. Then there are the few others. These are the people who were angry and could be easily manipulated because of their own anger but who woke up. They had a figurative bucket of cold water splashed over them, and they realized that their anger and vitriol had been hurting them and don’t want that for themselves anymore. These folks are likely to leave ugliness behind. Maybe they’ll join the compassionate. Who knows?

If you’re reading this and you’re identifying with the exhaustion–exhaustion with the ongoing pandemic, ugliness, struggles–know you’re not alone, though it can certainly feel like it. Keep playing it safe and kind. Create space for exercise at least four days a week, even if it’s nothing more than taking a 20-minute walk. Develop a habit of mindfulness where you can find silence around and within you. Talk to someone; nurture those close relationships. (I’ve found that in talking to friends, I learn that our struggles are similar, so we can be servants to each other.)

And most of all… Theme for 2022… Be kind to yourself.

Categories
Ministry Writing

Reflections and Lessons, 2020 edition

As I sit here at the tail end of 2020 and look back at this rather interesting year, I have the opportunity to reflect on the lessons this year has taught me and to see ways in which I’ve certainly changed.

First, my Facebook memories reminded me of how much I was looking forward to putting 2016 behind me. I hope this isn’t going to be a trend every four years!

This year began hopeful. My teen was going into her second semester of dual enrollment and excited about having in-person classes after a semester of doing all online classes. She was busting her hiney and the days started early, but she enjoyed the vibe and energy of being in a college classroom. My tween was going to be wrapping up her life as an elementary school student and looking forward to what lay ahead of her–mission camp just for rising sixth graders, her last spring children’s program at church, and “graduating” from children’s ministry into youth. There’d be a year when both my girls would be in youth group together. (I joked to our youth minister that I’d be praying extra for him, and to let me know if I needed to make a liquor run for him.)

In late February, I finished the first rough draft of my book Finding Peace. Hours at the library while my teen was in class afforded me ample time to write and concentrated time to teach my tween, leaving my afternoons and evenings free to work (when I wasn’t working out in some way). For a writer, these were halcyon, though busy, days. Every day in January and February, I met my writing goals with words to spare.

Then March hit. We had no idea how bad it’d be. The first thing in our lives to fall was school; my teen’s classes went back to all online. It was tough. There were just some classes that needed to be in person for her optimal learning, and her English professor hosed the class over horribly. Church was the next to go. Then soccer season, dance classes, the dance recital, yoga classes, and finally, the highlight of my tween’s year–marine biology camp. We cried together over this loss.

In two months of non-stop losses, living in this crisis mode, trying to understand the pandemic and how to keep ourselves safe, we adapted to new ways of being. Counseling appointments involved long walks and phone sessions. I spent hours a week working out–walking, yoga, weight training–everything I’d been doing before the shutdown. Our hair got long, we adopted the mask life, and we emailed and wrote letters and cards like never before. Suddenly, emails and texts weren’t good enough.

But then in the midst of the losses, gains started showing up. My pastor-friend Cynthia who pastors a Presbyterian church outside of Philly invited me to join in a ladies’ Bible study via Zoom. Over the course of the coming weeks and months, I got the pleasure of getting to know these awesome ladies and learning from them. As the summer blew up with Black Lives Matter peaceful protests and Confederate monuments came crashing down across the south, my rural southern self got to share experiences and perspectives with my new urban/suburban northern friends.

As summer wore on, the refusal of people to abide by simple rules (wear masks and maintain social distance) irritated me. All these people shouting, “My body, my choice!” were overlooking the most basic, simple task of loving others by keeping their germs to themselves. I stayed away from people for the most part, getting out to go grocery shopping (masked and sanitized with handwashing and sanitizing my phone when I got home). We went to the beach where we could enjoy fresh air, sunshine, fun, and organic social distancing.

My teen and I dared to go to the beach for a weekend, staying in a new beachfront hotel. Even though hotel stays are higher risk than we’re accustomed to, we were comfortable with the owner’s Covid response. Most people followed the rules with no problems, and, hey, we were at the beach.

As school started in mid-summer, I expanded my ministry to include my tween’s best friend in our homeschool. I did it mostly to help the girl and her mom. I learned that not everyone is appreciative of what others do for them. I discovered that some people will take advantage of my kindness, and even with a successful homeschool teacher and environment, parent involvement is still mandatory for student success. Now I have a whole new appreciation for what my teacher friends go through.

With any and every ministry, it’s vital to know when to let go. It’s important to recognize when the work is done, when the helper has maxed out her resources, and when it’s time to bless the parishioner and send them on to somewhere that can grab the baton and carry them farther. That time came. My family affirmed this nudging from the Spirit as well as admitting they’re happy they’ll have more of me again.

I learned the importance of self care. I neglected myself for a few months and started feeling the effects of it. The time I’d had in the spring to walk, practice yoga, and tone up disappeared by the fall. By the time my other student went home, it was time to start making dinner.

I learned that I have absolutely no patience or tolerance for narcissistic, self-centered, attention-seeking people. As social distancing and staying at home continued, my social media streams began to annoy me. “Tell me how great I am” posts or endless selfies searching for praise and compliments made me gag. I wondered repeatedly how people can be so narcissistic. It seemed that people needed more and more affirmations from other people when I was thinking, “Let God give you your affirmations, not your social media friends.”

This self-centered behavior went offline, stepping off the screens and manifesting itself in real-life situations. As the pandemic wore on and all the cautionary steps got old and tedious, I heard more and more lame excuses for not wearing masks. One woman told me, “God will protect me from the virus” as her family and she attended church where almost no one masks. Yet, she owns a gun, buckles her little one in his booster seat, and bought a taser for her elementary-aged child “for her protection.” I guess God’s protection only happens within the walls of the church? My teen visited my parents’ church and, after observing the lackadaisical attitudes about mask wearing and safety, declared, “If I were looking for a church or new to Christianity, that would turn me off of the faith entirely.” Christians are supposed to follow the example set by Christ and sacrifice and show love to others, not violate the Torah by testing God.

I learned that I have developed zero tolerance for Christians who aren’t willing to live into Jesus’ command to “Love one another as I have loved you.” Jesus loved us all the way to the cross, but we can’t love each other enough to strap a bit of cotton over our noses and mouths to protect others from our germs.

Maybe it’s my age, but I learned I have zero fucks left to give. Then again, this has been the case for a while. There are people the thought of whom sparks joy for me, and there are people who give me an ugly feeling in my gut. I don’t have time or psychic energy to waste on users and people who are careless with those outside of themselves. I make time for people who have it all together with humility and joy, who can magnify positive energy. I can let go of the former and embrace the latter as we journey together into the New Year. Journey with me as we share love, positivity, and bless each other and those we encounter.

Categories
Ministry

What’s Your Status Quo?

My teen and I watched the 2012 production of Jesus Christ Superstar last night and this morning. While I’m more a fan of the pre-2000 staging with the Ancient Israel/1970s clothing and vibe, this production hit me hard. It’s ultra-modern with the pharisees dressed like Wall Street barons, Judas and Mary Magdalene with dreads, Pilate looking like a power lawyer, and the crowds looking like escapees from the Occupy Wall Street movement, complete with backpacks and tents. Jesus wears an orange jumpsuit at the end, and the jail where they toss him has chain-link and razor wire with armed guards. There are hashtags and allusions to daytime trash talk shows (“Herod’s Song”). There are pictures of homeless people. The crowd holds signs that read, “Rome Lies” and “People Over Profits.” How incredibly fitting for this time of pandemic! It’s raw and gritty, and I cried at the end. This is my second favorite play, and I’ve seen it several times on stage and I own the 1973 movie version. I know how it ends, and I know how the story really ends. (Hint: It doesn’t end on the cross.) And still, I got choked up with tears in my eyes and my nose tingling like it does before I cry. This production hit me as all too relevant.

As we face weeks upon weeks of stay-at-home orders, we yearn for a time when we can get back to “normal.” I’m not sure I want that, though, because if this pandemic has shown us nothing else, it’s shown us what our “normal” selves are like, and it’s quite disgusting. People went insane buying up toilet paper, disinfecting wipes, bread, milk, and paper towels, leaving none for the elderly, the vulnerable, and those who work until 11 p.m. on the front lines of hospitals. I’ve heard reports of people going into stores and pouring filth out of their mouths at other customers and employees. Still others selfishly wanted their rights to go wherever they wanted–including church–but didn’t give a damn about the elderly saints they could unknowingly infect. In short, this pandemic showed us just how big of selfish assholes people can be. Is that what we really want to go back to because that was “normal”?

In the play, what irritates the elite corporate ruling class is that Jesus upsets the status quo. Even in the original staging, the ruling class is made up of the Pharisees, and Jesus was messing with their status quo, too. What does our status quo look like? If our status quo looks like pandering to the wealthy 1% in hopes they’ll drop some financial crumbs, then we’re worshiping the same financial gods they are.

But what if Jesus Christ is our status quo? What would that look like? I think it’d look like altruism. It’d look like selflessness. It would be Christ-centered so that even stresses and irritations wouldn’t make us act like hateful fools.

It would be Bible-based so we would always have the words to share a beautiful or encouraging heart thought. “I thank God for you and think of you with joy.” “God is present with you.” “God hears the fears of your heart today.”

Jesus as our status quo would also be ministry-focused. It would reach out to people with those kind words. It would deliver cookies to neighbors. It would drop some toilet paper off at the home of someone who’s two rolls short and three days shy of pay day. It would send the text or make that phone call that says, “How ya doing? I’m praying for you.” It contacts the preacher to say, “This is tough and you didn’t sign on to preach via live stream to an empty church, but I want you to know you’re doing a great job.”

So what status quo do you want to get to: The materialistic, selfish one where it seems like big business is controlling everything and minimum-wage workers should just shut-up and be happy with what they’re making? The one where vast amounts of pollution belch up into the sky and debris and trash turn blue waters into sludge? Or the status quo that reflects Christ, that nurtures small businesses, advocates for fair wages for these workers we’ve suddenly determined are essential, protects the Earth that sustains our lives, and actively and joyfully cares for those who need it?

I don’t miss the way we used to be, and I’m liking the way we are now. It’s my hope that we are able to grasp hold of how it feels to minister, how it feels to help, how it feels to encourage, how it feels to share, and how it feels to breathe clean air and carry that over into the new normal once this pandemic passes.

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