Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your life seriously sucked before if you are enjoying this current situation. Anyone who had a good life before does not enjoy this period.
Nah, it’s just that some of us are still content with ourselves and our families even when we strip away the shopping and the travel and the eating out and all the other indulgences of a leisurely life. Life was good before. Now it’s good in a different way.
Anonymous wrote:I have to admit that this post, and its supporters, stress me out. No doubt, it is nice to get paid and not have to commute or run around for crazy schedules but those were choices that you made for your life. If you didn't like, you could have changed it.
Your happiness is also built on other people's back, e.g. people that stock groceries, keep your lights on, pick up your trash etc.
Lastly, your posts triggers a fear in me that this continues on just because some people like the way things are now.
Anonymous wrote:Your life seriously sucked before if you are enjoying this current situation. Anyone who had a good life before does not enjoy this period.
Anonymous wrote:I am the same. If I could go to the salon and get my hair done and still go on vacation somehow (magical thinking, I realize), I would be 1000% happy.
I was sooo happy to have Easter with just my husband and kids and none of my in laws! And my in laws aren't even bad people, I just don't need to see them all the time.
I'm as snug as a bug in a rug during this stay-at-home period. I hope it lasts until July.
Anonymous wrote:Your life seriously sucked before if you are enjoying this current situation. Anyone who had a good life before does not enjoy this period.
Anonymous wrote:First let me say, that I completely recognize how privileged and lucky I am to be in this position and feel very grateful. We are donating money to places helping those less fortunate in this downturn, supporting our local businesses, etc. I completely get that this is devastating for many people and businesses. Which does not negate that for me personally, I have been feeling at peace for weeks in a way I have not for years.
I am working full time as is my husband, and we have two kids, so we’re managing the online schooling, which has been challenging. We’re doing occasional virtual happy hours and keeping in touch with friends by text and phone. But the running around busy-ness and the social activities and the commuting and everything that drives me crazy is gone. I have time and patience, I’m being honest with friends if I just don’t feel like doing something social, I just decline and catch them next time instead of pushing myself into a bunch of stuff I don’t want to do. I’m doing activities I love in my house, playing games with the kids and catching up on housework.
My anxiety and light depression is gone - there’s no overwhelming choice of what I SHOULD be doing. I am release from the guilt of just doing what I want, which for the most part is a slow and simple life with the people I love. I buy only what I need and then don’t think about what I want. I’m not overwhelmed with social interaction. I’m very introverted and it exhausts me, but I feel pressured to go out and have fun and keep up with a bunch of friends.
I have had to have the same conversation with several friends and coworkers - “how are you holding up?” They’ll say and share their stories about how they miss regular life and they’re being driven up the walls and their kids won’t do their work, and I’m not overly honest, but generally say I’m surprised that I’m enjoying it so much. And it’s kind of a conversation killer. “You aren’t missing going out and hugging friends? Your kids aren’t driving you crazy?” No, they’re really not - I’m loving having so much time with them, helping them with work and watching them be creative in finding things to do. I almost feel pressure to be miserable and feel a lack of connection with my friends that I’m not sharing in their misery.
I went to be authentic in how I’m feeling and mostly, I want to continue this feeling to the degree possible when this over. I’m realizing no one else I know is feeling this way and it’s isolating but also worrisome - how do I not get sucked back into the busy busy busy extrovert thing that makes me so miserable in “regular” life.
Anyone else feeling this way? How will you hold on to some of these lessons learned from this period if so?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your life seriously sucked before if you are enjoying this current situation. Anyone who had a good life before does not enjoy this period.
NP here. I feel like OP. Have a very good life before this period, but also really happy to spend more time with my family now.
I think it is a function of having financial security, education, good health and a great family life.
The fact that you fee you did not have enough time to spend with family before means your regular life is not good. Really sad that it took lockdown for you to realize that.
Anonymous wrote:OP. I am actually out of work, so the financial part of this sucks.
But I do like the quarantine also. So much more time with the family. So nice to see everyone out.