Showing posts with label self-care. Show all posts
Showing posts with label self-care. Show all posts

Friday, June 20, 2025

Welcome to a new ‘gloomcycle’ of news. Here’s how to stop compulsive scrolling; The Guardian, June 20, 2025

, Guardian ; Welcome to a new ‘gloomcycle’ of news. Here’s how to stop compulsive scrolling

"I’m certainly not a life coach but as someone whose work requires me to stay connected and informed, I’ve developed some coping resources.

Here are three recommendations to manage the firehose of bad news and to protect your spiritual and emotional health while still staying engaged in the world.

Set thoughtful limits...

Engage in self-care. 

Rely on trusted voices and sources of news." 

Thursday, October 31, 2024

Your guide to coping with election anxiety; Vox, October 28, 2024

Allie Volpe , Vox; Your guide to coping with election anxiety

"Feeling jittery and unsettled about the upcoming election? If you’re anything like the 69 percent of American adults who said the 2024 presidential election was a “significant” source of stress in their lives, per this year’s American Psychological Association’s Stress in America poll, you’re not alone. 

Elections are common wellsprings of anxiety because they’re rife with uncertainty, says David H. Rosmarin, the founder of the Center for Anxiety. You’re unsure of the outcome, and unsure of what life may look like for you under a new administration, especially when the difference between the two choices is undeniably vast. Some of the proposed policies may threaten people’s safety and freedoms, resulting in even more anxiety. Research shows political anxiety can impact people who aren’t generally anxious otherwise.

There are key differences between everyday anxiety and election-related anxiety. Sometimes, generalized anxiety is rooted in cognitive distortions, or inaccurate beliefs or fears about the world. But election-based distress isn’t necessarily based on hypotheticals or overreactions, says licensed clinical social worker JneĆ© Hill. “A lot of the concerns,” she says, “are very real and very valid based on people’s real lives and lived experiences.”

While election anxiety may feel large and existential, mental health experts agree it can be managed. In the lead-up to November 5 — and the uneasy days following — there are some strategies that can help quiet your mind."