USA TODAY US Edition

FOMO is yet another worry in the time of a global pandemic

- Charles Trepany USA TODAY

People still fear missing out, even while coping with shutdowns and virus concerns.

The coronaviru­s pandemic has canceled many things, but FOMO doesn’t appear to be one of them. h Jennifer Wolkin, a New Yorkbased health and neuropsych­ologist, describes FOMO, aka the “fear of missing out,” as “anxiety that’s elicited by the perception that others are thriving while we aren’t, or that others are overall experienci­ng a better version of life.” h In other words, you know that sinking feeling you get when you see other people on vacation while you’re sitting at home? That’s FOMO.

But with travel plans nixed, large gatherings canceled and many stuck in quarantine, is 2020 a year of less FOMO?

The fear of missing out is alive and well in lockdown, according to Wolkin and other mental health experts.

“It’s shape-shifted,” she says. “It might not be looking at pictures of someone’s vacation or their parasailin­g trip or swimming with dolphins. It now becomes ‘They’re making sourdough starters,’ and ‘They’re going for a hike in these woods with their family, and I’m just on the couch and doing nothing and surviving and trying to find my breath.’ “

Here’s what you need to know about quarantine FOMO, including what triggers it and how to stop it:

If everything’s canceled, why is there still FOMO?

As lockdown orders took hold across the nation, Lalin Anik, an assistant

professor of business administra­tion at the University of Virginia, set out to learn more about the effect of quarantine on FOMO.

What she found in her research, which she hopes to publish this winter, is that FOMO, like many things in 2020, hasn’t gone away. It has just moved online.

“Now FOMO is felt toward digital experience­s that we cannot be part of, either because we’re just too tired, too busy, too overwhelme­d,” she says.

Throughout the pandemic, Americans have been bombarded with digital alternativ­es to in-person activities, such as Instagram Live workouts, online cooking classes and new films on streaming services. As a result, there’s actually more to miss out on, Anik says.

“We’re almost overwhelme­d by the flow of informatio­n,” she says. “What we find is that FOMO in the pandemic comes from the difficulty

of catching up with all the things being offered online.”

Social media is still a big FOMO trigger

In addition to the abundance of virtual events, social media remains a major trigger of FOMO. Though many have flocked to Twitter, Facebook and Instagram to socialize amid the pandemic, Anik says these sites breed more FOMO than they do genuine connection.

“If I look at your social media, it doesn’t make me more connected to you,” she says. “It just makes me consume more posts or more content. But as a result of that, I feel more FOMO. I’m seeking social connection, I come to virtual world, I don’t really get social connection, but I get more FOMO.”

We also feel FOMO for what could have been

Productivi­ty expert Melissa Gratias, who wrote a children’s book about FOMO (“Seraphina Does Everything!”), notes that people also feel quarantine FOMO because they imagine what their 2020 could have been were it not for coronaviru­s. For example, Gratias describes how her mother-in-law still has tickets to a canceled concert under a magnet on her refrigerat­or. She’s holding on to the tickets in hope of a refund.

“She sees these every day, these concert tickets,” Gratias says. “So it’s not

just (comparing our lives) against other people, but it’s against the lives we would have been leading if we were not quarantine­d or social distancing.”

Uncertaint­y about the future doesn’t help either, says psychologi­st Kevin Chapman, director of the Kentucky Center for Anxiety and Related Disorders, who adds that not knowing what’s coming next can make FOMO even worse.

“What people who struggle with anxiety and people who struggle with FOMO particular­ly struggle with is this idea that uncertaint­y is somehow dangerous, when in reality it’s not,” he says. “It’s just that that physiologi­cal arousal and the thoughts that I have about the uncertaint­y enhances the emotional experience, which makes it worse.”

So what can you do about quarantine FOMO?

Fortunatel­y, there are ways to mitigate FOMO for a more pleasant quarantine.

One is shifting your social media consumptio­n from a passive experience to an active one. Anik says that can be done by interactin­g with people on social media rather than just scrolling absentmind­edly.

Wolkin recommends engaging in “mindful media” by following accounts that trigger positive emotions and unfollowin­g ones that cause FOMO. She’s also a “huge fan” of gratitude journals, in which you write down things you’re grateful for.

“You’re taking the attention away from lack and redirectin­g it towards a greater sense of abundance,” she says. “It’s hard for the brain to focus on what we thought was a complete lack when we can bring a sense of what we do have into our constant focus.”

Anik also proposed an alternativ­e to FOMO: JOMO, or “the joy of missing out.” She says that can be achieved by finding happiness in the present moment, in whatever you may be doing.

And, of course, remember you are trying your best. These are unpreceden­ted times, and just making it through the day is more than enough.

“It’s more than OK to literally just survive. You don’t have to have a ‘productive pandemic,’ “Wolkin says. “In some ways, we’re all missing out.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY GETTY IMAGES ?? FOMO, aka the fear of missing out, is alive and well in quarantine, according to mental health experts.
PHOTOS BY GETTY IMAGES FOMO, aka the fear of missing out, is alive and well in quarantine, according to mental health experts.
 ??  ?? What Lalin Anik found in her research is that FOMO, like many things in 2020, hasn’t gone away. It’s just moved online.
What Lalin Anik found in her research is that FOMO, like many things in 2020, hasn’t gone away. It’s just moved online.
 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Looking for a way to combat your quarantine FOMO? Neuropsych­ologist Jennifer Wolkin says she’s a “huge fan” of gratitude journals, in which you write down things you’re grateful for.
GETTY IMAGES Looking for a way to combat your quarantine FOMO? Neuropsych­ologist Jennifer Wolkin says she’s a “huge fan” of gratitude journals, in which you write down things you’re grateful for.
 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? In addition to the abundance of virtual events, social media remains a major trigger of FOMO while in quarantine.
GETTY IMAGES In addition to the abundance of virtual events, social media remains a major trigger of FOMO while in quarantine.

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