Each of us is answering that question all the time right now.
Observe social distancing protocols, or shrug and figure we’re young enough that the symptoms will be no big deal so why worry?
Do we think we’re all in this together, or do we blame it on others?
But it’s not particularly helpful in the face of a collective threat like coronavirus. It’s a primal response, not a considered one.
It reduces our capacity to empathise, and makes us more vulnerable to extremism or other hyper-tribal thinking. It leads to behaviours that push us apart.
It’s a far more prosocial response to threat.
Where fight-or-flight zones out on the individual and pushes us apart, tend-and-befriend focuses on the collective and brings us together.
In our work at @Collective_Psyc we highlight three factors in particular: Agency, Belonging, and Conscious self-awareness, or ABC for short.
Belonging is about whether we feel connected or alone; and
All three are really relevant to coronavirus.
This is what what we’re really looking for when we fill our shopping trollies with enough to survive a zombie apocalypse: the sense of being able to do something to control our circumstances.
A lot of people in our communities – especially elderly people – are going to have a very hard time over the next couple of months.
Many more, like those with weak immune systems or existing conditions, will also need to self-isolate.
Buying food or medicines.
Cooking food if needed, and leaving it at the doorstep.
Setting up systems for checking in on vulnerable people to make sure they’re OK.
Loneliness is terrible for health at the best of times; as bad for life expectancy as smoking 15 a day.
This is a deeply weird time.
ribbonfarm.com/2020/03/09/plo…
It might mean meditation.
Time in nature.
Eating healthily.
Reading Stoic philosophy, or a Harry Potter novel.
Yoga.
Favourite music.
Looking at the stars.
Curate your social media feed to mute haters and panic spreaders.
Try to defuse polarisation and fake news when you come across them.
Not just for our own wellbeing, but also because our inner states end up affecting everything else around us.
Coronavirus brings that fact into especially sharp relief.
Because truth is, all of us already *are* practitioners of collective psychology – whether consciously or otherwise.