Take
a Break
“Today
a kind of [planetary] point of view has burst upon mankind. The world is
rumbling and erupting in ever widening circles around us. The tensions,
conflicts, and sufferings even in the outermost circle touch us all,
reverberate in all of us. We cannot avoid these vibrations…We are asked today
to feel compassionately for everyone in the world, to digest intellectually all
the information spread out in public print, and to implement in action every
ethical impulse aroused by our hearts and minds. The interrelatedness of the
world links us constantly with more people than our hearts can hold.”
Anne
Morrow Lindbergh (“The Beach at My Back,” Gift from the Sea, p.117-118)
Anne
Morrow Lindbergh’s little classic, Gift from the Sea, was written in
1955—long before social media, cell phones, even computers. Most households
were just getting television. Yet Lindbergh was already feeling overwhelmed by
the breadth of information coming at her. She wrote, “…modern communication
loads us with more problems than the human frame can carry. It is good, I
think, for our hearts, our minds, our imaginations, to be stretched but body,
nerve, endurance and life-span are not as elastic.” That was 65 years ago.
Just think how our connections have multiplied since then and now fill twenty-four
hours per day.
I have
spoken with so many people lately who express exhaustion. They describe it as a
kind of fatigue that a night’s sleep does not dispel. We seem to be mystified
about why this would be the case. It has become common for us to spend our days
and nights watching or listening to news from a variety of sources and screens.
Now, thanks to a global pandemic, we are even conducting work and school virtually.
We are living through conditions that none of us have experienced before, and
yet we expect ourselves to function the same way we did before the coronavirus erupted.
Don’t you think that is a bit out of touch?
Since
we cannot expect the world to stop and let us take a break, we have to do it
ourselves. We must turn off our technology, silence our notifications, and let
our poor brains rest. We’re exhausted because we are constantly on-call, and we
don’t seem to know how to not be. Heck, I get forty emails a day just from
politicians trying to wring a couple of bucks out of me. I’m sure you do, too.
We humans still think that technological advances save us time and energy, but
we could not be more wrong. They run our lives! They are just one more thing
that demands our attention.
And, as
Anne Morrow Lindbergh acknowledged, we simply have more than we can bear—fires and
floods, hurricanes, epidemics, social unrest, and rising oceans. Right now, we
are watching yet another wildfire in California that has already burned more
than a million acres, and two hurricanes are converging in the Gulf of Mexico
and headed toward poor old Louisiana—again! Schools open and close, lives are
turned upside down, jobs are lost, a contentious political season is upon us—and
on and on and on. This is compassion depletion due to massive overload.
We must, in spite of
everything, learn to take care of ourselves. If that means taking breaks from
the onslaught, so be it. A walk in nature, a day at the lake or the beach, a stroll
through botanical gardens, whatever takes us away from the news and into the
natural world will dispel some of our fatigue. And when you can, rest, rest,
rest. We are in this for the long haul, so we must conserve our strength. Be
kind to yourself. It will help you (and me) to be kind to everyone else.
In the Spirit,
Jane
1 comment:
Perfect timing! I was jaut thinking to myself this morning, "why am I so tired still? How can I get more sleep?" Maybe that isn't the answer!Love you!
Post a Comment