Why You Shouldn’t Feel Guilty for Ignoring the News

Staying off the anxiety roller coaster of the war isn’t inherently selfish

Karla Starr
Forge

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I was living three blocks away from a hospital in Queens when the pandemic started. The sounds of sirens and helicopters woke me up in the middle of the night, when I’d check the COVID statistics page on the New York Times and start wondering what my day would look like.

It’s getting worse. It feels like a war zone, I texted my family on the west coast. You’re just being paranoid, my brother replied. Stop watching the news.

But I wasn’t just watching the news: I was also looking at ambulances out of my window, waiting in long lines to enter the grocery store, feeling anxious whenever I’d brush up against someone in a tiny aisle, and getting frustrated when I couldn’t even run laps at the park without nearly bumping into a million people — because, you know, New York.

Stress is anything that impacts our survival and fitness, caused by an imbalance between a situation and the resources we have to manage it. The Coronavirus — uncontrollable, new, dangerous, possibly anywhere — fit this definition like a key. Resilience is the ability to bounce back from stress, to take a punch and adapt to the situation. The best way I could adapt to the situation and reduce my stress, I realized, was to control my attention.

I stopped watching the news. I stopped getting angry when other people weren’t obsessing over…

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Karla Starr
Forge
Writer for

Speaker & author x2, inc. Making Numbers Count (w/ Chip Heath). Behavioral science, cultural history, numbers.