What do you fear?
"Panic is a sudden desertion of us, and a going over to the enemy of our imagination." ~Christian Nestell Bovee
The last several months have surfaced many fears of human kind. We can look back and recall several natural disasters and some not so natural that have caused a considerable amount of anxiety. Recent earthquakes, floods, fires, and tornadoes have ripped through different parts of the world and left us feeling a little helpless. Add the global economic crisis and you have a pot boiling over with some pretty stinky stew.
The latest blaze of paranoia to rip through humanity now comes with a snout and an oink & is attached to a sore throat and fever. 3M is making a killing on selling masks, as well as other medical supply companies. The media assures us there is no reason to have great
or grave concern and yet they bombard us with live updates and break into regularly scheduled programming with up-to-the minute coverage.
Internet search engines line their borders with news briefs and photos of mask-wearing travelers or workers crossing the border at San Ysidro or the countless other Ports of Entry. Every day my children come home from school with reports that "so-and-so's" brother has swine flu or "what's-his-name's" dad is in Mexico and can't get home. While this is, indeed, scary because "we just don't know" and the media is even less helpful - Two different reports I heard on Wednesday: 159 deaths in Mexico versus 7 deaths, what's up with that? There is a big difference between these two reports and, unfortunately, we are only too happy to accept the sensationalized side of news and run to the local drug store to buy out hand sanitizer.
Swine Flu- "You cannot get it from eating pork, but the pigs themselves, are living Petri dishes because of their living conditions," reported by Yahoo yesterday, "The swine in both Mexico and the U.S. are not getting sick." And yet Egypt has moved forward with the
slaughter of over 300,000 pigs, are you kidding me?
How do we, as smart people, allow this to happen? How do we become trapped in paranoia and permit it to take over? The state of the economy, the 5.1M jobs lost since 2008, and a current U.S. unemployment rate of 8.5% spells disaster any way you slice it but recent reports of continued and
increased hiring is cause for some slight celebration, right? How do we take this good news combined the bad news we keep getting every hour on the hour and make our own worlds tolerable? I am typically not one that is easily pulled in by dread but it does seemed difficult to avoid the panic
tractor beam that is increasingly magnetic.
I am reaching out to you, as my Co-Hort, for answers and advice. Short of shooting the bird that sings all night, how can we cope, adjust, and make it work on our own project runways? Share ideas and advice. My mother always told me to distinguish your wants from your needs. Well..., we are wanting and we are needing a gi-normous pill of valium right now cause
mother's little helper isn't cutting it. "A chemical reaction, you might say..."
Life has a funny way of shaking you up and defining who you are. Cut of cloth, work ethic, the golden thread, a beam of light, a hand reaching down, an introspection of sorts.
What is your definition?
"Look at misfortune the same way you look at success - Don't Panic! Do your best and forget the consequences." ~Walt Alston
by rayannethorn