Anonymous wrote:Yes, it absolutely did. I had bronchitis and went to the doctor about 6 days after the conflict started. My blood pressure was way up, my heart rate was abnormally high, and the doctor asked "Are you under any stress?" and I was like "Well, I've been jewish all week, so ... yes?" And I immediately stopped reading social media posts about it, stopped reading news articles about it, etc.
Anonymous wrote: I don't need to know which side of the middle east conflict you are on, but I felt like I was finally getting my head above water and treading water a bit post COVID/pandemic, Russia/Ukraine war breaking out, family illnesses and deaths, parenting stressors, sandwich generation stress and then *bam* the world explodes. I know it was heating up before this, but didn't expect things to erupt like this.
I know to take breaks from the news, do things I enjoy, immerse myself in work, appreciate the family I have (b/c FOO is a disaster), exercise, eat healthy...I will survive, but it's all so surreal. The world was already a mess and now it's just like a wildfire spreading to our town. You can't get away from it sometimes. There are reminders everywhere.
**Again, no need to know what side you are on or how you think we got here since that can be discussed on the politics board, just wondering how others are doing. How are you??
Anonymous wrote:I know a lot of people are going to come at this with “just turn off the news/the internet/get off social media!” And I don’t disagree but the whole “ignorance is bliss” approach doesn’t sit well with me. Does burying your head in the sand really work
Anonymous wrote:It's the type of divisiveness. We've seen the country go from moderate on both sides, to moderate and left battling crazy fiction and conspiracy, as if anyone can battle that. Then we have this middle east debacle where everyone has found another group to battle, including those who were once like minded, yet now against each other.
Political parties are meaningless now, we're all just in changing tribes on single issues.
It's almost as if Russian is looking for a last chance tactic for the 2024 election and it is working.
One thing is for certain- social media is not helping.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It has been giving me anxiety. I am worried about global war. I am worried about the divisiveness in this country. I am afraid. I think people can no longer talk and hear out other opinions. I worry about the decline of this country. I am a teacher and see every day how kids can't cope with even the smallest setback. They are weak.
+1
I’m also a teacher (HS). While I have glimmers of hope that some of them will become nuanced thinkers, so many of them have no motivation and no critical thinking skills. Then I look around at the adults … 😳😭
Internet+social media+AI+lack of critical thinking … I’m afraid we are actively watching the downfall of society.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not on any side in the mid east conflict, but I am staying away from the news because it's just so horrible. On both sides.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, it absolutely did. I had bronchitis and went to the doctor about 6 days after the conflict started. My blood pressure was way up, my heart rate was abnormally high, and the doctor asked "Are you under any stress?" and I was like "Well, I've been jewish all week, so ... yes?" And I immediately stopped reading social media posts about it, stopped reading news articles about it, etc.
I'm sorry for your stress, but this made me laugh. At least you are able to keep your sense of humor--I think that gets people through a lot of hard times.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, it absolutely did. I had bronchitis and went to the doctor about 6 days after the conflict started. My blood pressure was way up, my heart rate was abnormally high, and the doctor asked "Are you under any stress?" and I was like "Well, I've been jewish all week, so ... yes?" And I immediately stopped reading social media posts about it, stopped reading news articles about it, etc.