kindkit: The Second Doctor and Jamie clutch each other in panic; captioned "oh noes" (Doctor Who: Two/Jamie oh noes)
kindkit ([personal profile] kindkit) wrote2020-04-10 04:19 pm
Entry tags:

coping

I haven't really been enjoying my day off due to anxiety.

Things I've done so far today to try to feel better, in order of effectiveness from most to least:

1) Work out with resistance bands
2) Listen to some Rusty Quill podcasts (specifically Stellar Firma and old Magnus episodes)
3) Play lots of Best Fiends
4) Look at Twitter
5) Make an inventory of my Emergency Food
6) Drink more coffee


Things I have not been able to do:

1) Nap
2) Read fiction; I haven't been able to concentrate on reading since this all got started
3) Watch films/TV; same problem


I thought, until recently, that I was doing fine. But I think all the anxiety was just building up.

Suggestions . . . sort of welcomed? I do not do well with meditation/mindfulness/sitting quietly with my thoughts. And normally I do take a walk every day, but today the thought of showering and getting dressed and going out was just too much.
batdina: (Default)

[personal profile] batdina 2020-04-10 10:42 pm (UTC)(link)
I suspect given what you've written in the past that audible is out of the question, but audiobooks in general are how I've been reading since all of this BS started. There are lots of free ones on archive.org.

Best I got. Just so's you know, as a former PhD student myself, the not being able to read thing is only adding to my anxiety level. I suspect we're similar in that regard.

Take care as best you can.
rydra_wong: Lee Miller photo showing two women wearing metal fire masks in England during WWII. (Default)

[personal profile] rydra_wong 2020-04-11 07:55 pm (UTC)(link)
Yeah, I was talking to a colleague today about having trouble absorbing/processing information and that this is an effect on the ongoing trauma of the pandemic -- we are all functionally impaired right now. Our brains cannot cope with this shit and think properly too.

It is frustrating/weird/scary not to be able to read.

Yeah. But fwiw, I bet there are a shit-tonne of people experiencing the same thing (I haven't tried reading anything requiring concentration, but suspect it would not go well), and it will pass as and when we get back to some kind of "normal", whatever that ends up being.
lilacsigil: 12 Apostles rocks, text "Rock On" (12 Apostles)

[personal profile] lilacsigil 2020-04-10 11:10 pm (UTC)(link)
I haven't been able to read fiction since this started either, even though I was part way through a book I was really enjoying. Very frustrating!
snickfic: Buffy looking over her shoulder (Default)

[personal profile] snickfic 2020-04-11 06:37 am (UTC)(link)
These are all just things that help me when I'm feeling stir-crazy and unable to focus:
- Yoga. Not the sit-and-think kind, but the sweaty kind. Yoga with Adriene on YouTube is my go-to.
- Housework. I get so much housework done when I have unfocused energy to burn! I start with the stuff that always needs doing, like dishes and vacuuming, and if I need more then I get into washing the windows and organizing the piles of junk that have been sitting around for months.
- Cooking. Cutting up lots of vegetables into very tiny pieces can be cathartic. Often I'll have a podcast on.
- Video games. I have a stash of them on Steam that I bought for cheap but have never played, and I dig into them when I'm sick, especially when I feel too bad to focus on anything static, like a book, but not bad enough to just sleep.