[THREAD] Staying the lockdown course: One of the difficulties of lockdown is staying focused on the collective goal and avoiding stay-at-home fatigue. This occurs after a period of restriction, when we start to get cabin fever and feel tempted to break the rules.
During the initial lockdowns, one study following cellphone data showed that people started going out more frequently and travelling longer distances from home, after they passed that one-month mark of being confined to their home.
One simple explanation for stay-at-home fatigue that has been used by economists is called ‘diminishing marginal utility’. During the first few days in lockdown, you probably had the opportunity to do things in the house that you were fairly enthusiastic about.
Maybe you binge-watched Netflix, or built a blanket fort with your kids. But after several weeks at home (in the first lockdowns) your kids were driving you nuts, you got tired of trying to direct their learning, you dragged the dregs of Netflix shows & you just wanted it to stop
In other words, you used up all the ‘high utility’ (i.e. high happiness) activities and were scraping the bottom of the barrel. Cue stay-at-home fatigue, and the creeping desire to get out.

We might hit this point earlier, this time around
Many of us also appear to be driven by what it called ‘idleness aversion’. This may be a conditioned thing that we’ve grown to expect in life, but briefly, it’s our desire to get out of the house and do something
Research shows that we don’t actually like sitting around and doing nothing for extended periods of time all that much. So what do you do?
1. Reduce the overwhelm. You’ve done this before, you can do this again. Think about what worked for you last time and do more of that.
2. Make a public promise. If this fits with you, tell people what you are doing. When you go public with your intentions, it immediately strengthens your resolve, so announce it to friends and family on Facebook or by email.
A public commitment shifts your own thinking about your seriousness. No one wants to be embarrassed in front of others.
3. Set up accountability partners. Recruit people like you to help you stay the course and build each other’s resolve. Create a system of accountability so that you can report your actions, successes and failures every day.
4. Expect difficulties. There will be life situations that might get in the way of your efforts and it is so easy to allow them to undermine all your hard work.
Think in advance of possible problems that might arise and decide how you will deal with these situations and how you can stick to the plan.
5. Think of the consequences. Another way to strengthen your resolve is to think of the consequences before you take an action that will lead to them. Not just for you, but for everyone and all the effort that’s been put in so far.
Pondering consequences certainly isn’t a magic pill, but it can help if you usually don’t think about the consequences until they become real. Because that will most likely be too late.
6. Imagine others you respect can see you. Last but most definitely not least, you can benefit from some social pressure. Next time you want to choose the easy way out, imagine other people whose opinion you respect can see you.
Would you still take that unnecessary trip if they could see you? And what would disapproval from them feel like to you? Yes, you’re essentially manipulating yourself, but if it works to strengthen your resolve, then it’s certainly a tool you can go to [ENDS]

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More from @sarb

9 Sep
[WELLBEING THREAD] Keep going Auckland! Thanks for your work. Rest of NZ: keep vigilant, scan, , stay distant, book a vax & test if you’ve symptoms. Here’s 5 ways to boost your wellbeing through the weekend and beyond.
Living the good life, flourishing, joy, & purpose: Is it possible to experience any of these in the middle of a chaotic world and in lockdown? Yes, we can. The PERMA model shows us how
These five elements or components (PERMA; Seligman, 2012) are; Positive emotion, Engagement, Relationships, Meaning & Accomplishments. Here’s what you can do to boost each one of these:
Read 15 tweets
26 Aug
[WELLBEING THREAD] Preparing for lockdown decision announcement today. Frustration, irritation with yourself and others, and distress are common experiences when we are under chronic stress and it feels like there is no way out.
When your stress hormones are continually pumping because your threat system is active, it’s hard to see things as they are.
Some research suggests that when people experience frustration in the day, they tend to have more frightening dreams at night. It’s as if the mind is trying to process and make sense of experiences we find psychologically distressing when we are awake.
Read 12 tweets
25 Aug
[WELLBEING THREAD] With 2 days til the next NZ Alert Level decisions, if you’re going to feel tempted to cut corners + other risky behaviour, it’ll be around now. Here’s what you need to know to stick to the plan to STAY HOME + stay safe to protect yourself and others
Sticking to lockdown rules can be hard. It takes self-control. After exerting self-control for a few days, you can feel less motivated to continue (although you could do it if you REALLY had to). How can you find that motivation?
For example, you’ve been sticking to your eating plan all day with a healthy breakfast and lunch, and even resisted the donuts being offered around work in the afternoon.
Read 13 tweets
24 Aug
[WELLBEING THREAD] Lethargy and stress-related fatigue: Lockdowns can cause temporary stress that can be painful but bearable. But as you continue, with chronic stress begins to take its toll on your body
Maybe you can’t sleep, or you’re sleeping too much. Perhaps you’ve got headaches where you never used to have them, or they’ve got worse. Maybe you digestive system has gone haywire. Or perhaps you find yourself irritable or burst into tears and you can’t quite figure out why
All of these are signs of chronic stress.
But another sign is feeling constantly tired, feeling slow, and finding it difficult to plan and make decisions. Add all those other signs together as well as the toll on your physiology of constant stress hormones pumping through you...
Read 9 tweets
23 Aug
[WELLBEING THREAD - LONG] Read before / after Cabinet lockdown announcement at 4pm Monday 23/8. Anticipatory grief is that feeling we get when the future feels uncertain. It can be about things we hope for over the longer term, our imagined futures.
This kind of grief can feel very confusing. Our primal mind senses that something bad is ‘out there’, but we can’t see it. This breaks our sense of safety & makes us feel like worse is yet to come.
So what can you do when you feel those waves of dread, loss or grief approaching?
A useful starting point is to understand the five stages of grief: denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance. Although not everyone goes through all stages in a simple process, it’s interesting to observe how these stages have played out in our responses to Covid19
Read 15 tweets
22 Aug
[WELLBEING THREAD] We've still go some time to go at Alert Level 4, NZ. Here's some tips to get you through the next few days:
1. Limit your news intake. Try to limit yourself to checking the news 2 or 3x times a day. Find out what you need to know and then get out of your newsfeed. That way you won’t miss any important announcements or updates, but you also help to manage any anxiety and overwhelm
And do not do your infrequent news check-in just before bedtime. Give yourself a good buffer of at least a couple of hours between checking the news and the time when you want to be calm and ready to sleep.
Read 9 tweets

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