The feeling of inadequacy as you look at all of your responsibilities and realise you lack the resources to carry the load. The way your vision blurs as you look at the calendar: it’s hard to plan ahead when you don’t know what each day will bring. That knot inside your gut, the stomach ache of uncertainty about the future, which sometimes tightens when you try to untie it. Having lived through several years of crisis while adjusting, simultaneously, to life with small children and life with a chronic autoimmune illness, I’m familiar with the early warning signs of shock and stress: That’s what they call it when the rhythms of daily life are suddenly thrown into chaos. My calendar is now stripped bare, with event after event having been abruptly cancelled due to the exponential spread of the Coronavirus (COVID-19) in my city. Since then, the whole garment has rapidly unravelled. Three weeks ago, it felt as if the fabric of my daily life had a loose thread. Perhaps this Coronavirus pandemic was going to hit closer to home than I’d imagined? There was talk of exciting innovations, like the potential for my children to continue their weekly dance class and music lesson online.Īs impressed as I was by the commitment of my kids’ instructors, I found their enthusiasm strangely unsettling. Three weeks ago, a number of ominously upbeat messages trickled into my inbox. Now feels like a very appropriate time to share it with you! Try using it when you feel overwhelmed, to help you regain a sense of calm within the chaos. I designed a Serenity Prayer graphic last year, as a kind of therapy for myself on a particularly troubling day.
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