Stressed in
Communication key to overcoming stress triggered by COVID-19, sheltering in
April 14, 2020
“We are all in this together!”
Or so say influencers on every social media platform. But nowadays, some of us feel lonelier than ever. The news is completely taken over by stories of coronavirus and stock market data. The world appears to be collapsing in on itself.
“When all of this first began I was really concerned and honestly terrified,” said Desert Mountain Keerthi Reddy (10).
Another student reported being “scared of uncertainty right now.”
“I had no idea that the last day of school before spring break was going to be the last day of my sophomore year,” said the name of the student, whose name also was withheld for privacy.
Many students are experiencing anxiety during this period of turmoil and change. Even with our copious methods to communicate, many students still feel lonely.
“I really hate how I can’t pick up the phone and call anyone. I’ve just never been that close with other people,” said the sophomore.
Students all over the United States are now doing school online as a result of the global COVID-19 pandemic.
“These are strange times we are living in. If you are lonely, stressed, overwhelmed, whatever the case may be, please make sure you are talking to someone,” said Alesha Davis, a DM counselor at Desert Mountain High School.
Parents said communication often is easier said than spoken.
“People think that we act frazzled, I think, when we’re stressed. Sometimes we bury it and we look perfectly fine and we walk around like we’re fine, but you’re killing yourself, literally,” said DM parent Meredith Chen.
But counselors said that a major misconception about stress “is that it’s ‘bad’,” said Paige Phelps, DM’s prevention coach.
“Stress is our body’s way of informing us that we need to pay attention to our thoughts in order to make necessary changes to bring our body and mind back into balance and harmony,” Phelps said.
With so many people on either social media or in life who are acting like everything is okay, students can very easily feel as if they are the only ones who are stressed. Everyone shows and deals with stress differently, but communication can help bridge the gap.
Communication, counselors said, in this time is crucial to understanding that we are not alone–and are all feeling some amount of stress during this time.
Parents said communicating with someone about feelings is not wrong and “the more we talk about it, the more we’ll realize other people feel the same thing.”
“We’re not in this alone and we can validate these feelings,” Chen said.
Managing mental health while we are quarantined is important and talking about stress is only one strategy. The Scottsdale Unified School District offers these other tips:
- Limiting news intake.
- Walking outside.
- Connecting with friends and family using a video chat.
- Taking frequent breaks away from work spaces.
- Journaling and acknowledging the positives in life.
Phelps said positivity is especially important now.
“We have control over our stress, anxiety and feelings of loneliness,” Phelps said. “Our thoughts dictate how we feel and we can change the way we think about things.”
If anything, students should focus on what they can control.
“Use this as an opportunity to learn and grow from our circumstances,” Phelps said, “which naturally reduces our stress, anxiety and feelings of loneliness.”
Added Chen: “It’s important to remember this time as a time of growing and learning that stress is okay as long as you don’t let it overcome you or overwhelm you.”
Parents said even in isolation, people aren’t alone.
“Stress stems from different places for everyone. It could be that your kids are younger, in elementary school, and you don’t know how to do their schoolwork anymore and it’s stressing you out because you don’t have all the answers,” Chen said. “It may be, like me, you don’t have money coming in, but you still have a job, you’re trying to file for unemployment and look for other positions, and you’re not getting hired at those.
“That stresses you out a little bit.”
Whether the lack of employment for adults or the lack of social time for teens, the end result is the same.
“But we’re all feeling something different now,” Chen said. “Whether we’re masking it, whether we’re actually allowing ourselves to feel it or not.”
Nadine Negrete • Apr 26, 2020 at 3:38 pm
Hello! I really enjoyed reading your article and it gave me a wonderful perspective on the stress level everyone must be feeling during this time. I understand better now how much our mental health can be affected from this epidemic and especially by the toxic news intake we are being fed each day. Thanks again for writing it!
Tommy Sedlak • Apr 24, 2020 at 11:06 pm
This is a terrific article to go along with quarantine. I think the world is going to become more sociable and friendly following quarantine.
Aditi Agrawal • Apr 22, 2020 at 5:32 pm
I think this is a great article that takes an optimistic perspective on the way things are right now. I appreciate that the author gave us some ideas on ways to reduce the amount of stress that we put on ourselves due to self-isolation. Overall, great article!
Cate Jung • Apr 22, 2020 at 2:46 pm
Hi! I just read this article and first off, I absolutely love the title! I like how you add a different perspective to why students are stressed about being stuck in quarantine; it’s less about the activities we have lost and more on the news. COVID-19 is giving a lot of students stress about the future, especially those of us going to college. I really appreciate this unique outlook 🙂
Tanner Stagner • Apr 21, 2020 at 8:07 pm
In times of stress, the best thing we can do for each other is to listen with our ears and our hearts
Maritza Chterev • Apr 21, 2020 at 6:32 pm
Thank you for writing this article! It is really helpful to know that I am not alone, and it is important that everyone knows that they have someone to talk to no matter how they are feeling. I think it is amazing that the DM news continues writing articles and stories like this one in order for people to see that there are good things happening in the midst of all the tragedy.
Sophia Zhang • Apr 21, 2020 at 4:18 pm
I really liked how you addressed the reality of stress and the reality that many many people attempt to mask their stress with a facade of happiness. Social media, though a good form of communication, is so detrimental because it gives a false reality; someone’s instagram only shows their good side. No one ever knows what’s truly beneath that. It is important to recognize that even though you see other people going out of posting picture etc, you should still be responsible and hold your own ground and stay locked down. Don’t get peer pressured into going out. Everyone is lonely and everyone is stressed. In my opinion, people try to fight that stress by going out but in reality they are just making it worse for everyone.
Zac • Apr 21, 2020 at 11:25 am
Hello,
I appreciate this article; a hugely overlooked factor in this, in my opinion, is the stress it is putting on people. High-school students are at a time in their lives where they need socialization and for most of them this is also where they get their support. Now that all that is gone, despite the fact that everyone is “in this together”, (which I find ironic coming from celebrities), makes students feel isolated in the “crumbling world”. I think that this shelter in place may have had some adverse effects that were not properly taken into account which may have resulted in a greater problem than they had anticipated. With that being said I do feel for those who are high risk because several of my friends fall into that category, however I feel like there are certain events we should hold, for seniors in particular, properly spaced and sanitary to help with the moral of the students and also let the seniors have some closure in their final days of high-school.
Connor Heron • Apr 21, 2020 at 11:21 am
Very insightful! Loved the points about communication being an important part of getting through this together
Hayden Arnold • Apr 21, 2020 at 11:13 am
Great article! A bit long but I enjoyed reading the whole thing and seeing different people’s perspectives on this situation.