OP-ED | Facing Exhaustion As Serious Threats Persist – CT News Junkie

Posted: February 21, 2022 at 5:56 pm

Im tired. Like, really tired. Im finding it hard to get interested in things I used to absolutely adore. For instance, the Winter Olympics, by far the best Olympics, passed without me noticing it much at all. I watched part of a hockey game and some figure skating, but that was it. There was a time when I could watch curling and downhill skiing and speed skating for hours. But now? Not so much.

A lot of people I know report the same kind of feelings. Pandemic fatigue is a real thing, after all. For those of us who always took the pandemic seriously, and who did everything we could to keep ourselves and our loved ones safe, the past two years have been an exhausting grind. Thats what its like living through times like ours: they take a toll.

But there are other dimensions to this kind of tiredness. One long-term crisis is bad enough, but weve actually been living through three of them. And the people we need most to get us through these crises are the ones who are feeling the most burned out.

When we talk about pandemic fatigue, were really talking about two different, overlapping phenomena. The first is the kind of weariness that the day-to-day calculus of pandemic leaves us with. Okay, so you want to go to the grocery store. Will people be wearing masks there? Should you try to go when its not busy? The numbers are down, so its probably alright if youre there with a lot of people. You second-guess yourself, but end up going and its fine. You dont catch it, you dont bring it home to your loved ones, but man, its a lot.

The second is just generally being fed up with life being thrown out of whack. People hate restrictions and mandates, they hate sending kids to school with masks, and they hate thinking and talking about this freaking pandemic all the time. Some people grit their teeth and get through it, because thats how we all stay safe. Thats the tiring way to do it.

Others take a completely different approach. They hold loud protests, they get up in peoples faces during school board meetings, they go out without masks and flash gotcha grins at anyone wearing one, and they form big truck convoys and take over national capitals.

These people arent tired. They seem to have endless energy. And that leads us to crisis number two.

Were in the midst of a long political crisis that has affected democracies all over the world. The rise of stop-at-nothing, ultranationalist, authoritarian right-wing populism is one of the worst threats to liberal democracy since the end of the Second World War, and I dont say that lightly. In this country its been fueled by 30 years of cynical demagogues exploiting racial and cultural grievances, all of which culminated in the Trump administration and the storming of the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.

Right now theres a lot of overlap between the sorts of people who cheered on Jan. 6 and the ones who protest pandemic restrictions. You dont believe me? Then explain to me why a rally against masks in schools at the state Capitol in Hartford a few weeks back broke out into a sustained, wholehearted Lets Go, Brandon chant. As the man himself says, cmon, man. We know who they are.

From 2015 to 2020, populist authoritarianism reared its ugly head in this country. We fought it and we won. Barely. If that sounds like some kind of over-dramatization of the situation, I have to ask: do you remember the Trump years? Do you remember the lies, the gaslighting, the abuses of power, the rallies, the cynicism, and everything else?

I admit, Im having trouble hanging on to a lot of it, myself. But it happened, and it burned out a lot of people on politics for good. When exhaustion in the center and on the left allow the Republicans, a party that by all rights should have disqualified itself from ever holding office in this country again, to come back to power this November, we will be reminded.

There is a third crisis behind all of these: the slow-moving but inexorable march of climate change. New England is warming faster than other parts of the country and we feel it. If youre tuned to the seasons like I am, you notice when somethings not right, and there really hasnt been a normal year since 2010. Unlike the pandemic or the rise of right-wing authoritarianism, theres no exit ramp. Its too late to stop climate change; all we can do is mitigate it. Were not even doing a very good job of that.

Whats the future going to be like? How will our civilization change? How do we even plan for this?

Its tiring. Im exhausted. But the pandemic, the Lets Go, Brandon chanters, and the changing climate are all wide awake.

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OP-ED | Facing Exhaustion As Serious Threats Persist - CT News Junkie

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