Times Colonist

Brexhausti­on: Long, grinding Brexit is stressing people out

- DANICA KIRKA

LONDON — Elly Wright can’t sleep through the night.

The Dutch native, who has lived in Britain for 51 years, keeps thinking about the black boots of Nazi soldiers marching by her basement window as they brought Jews to a nearby camp in her homeland. The flashbacks have been triggered by Britain’s heated debate over leaving the European Union, which has brought division, strife and fear of foreigners. The 77-year-old painter says it has shattered her sense of belonging.

“[Britain] is my home,” Wright said. “That is being taken away from me.”

Wright isn’t alone in her angst. The acrimony over Brexit, which has reached fever pitch as deadlines come and go while politician­s squabble, is affecting the mental wellbeing of people from Belfast to Brighton.

Job uncertaint­y. Visa worries. Confrontat­ional conversati­ons between family members or friends with opposing views on Brexit. The fatigue and stress caused by three years of conflict has spawned new terms: Brexhausti­on or Strexit.

“It’s a civil war,” said Cary Cooper, a professor of organizati­onal psychology at Manchester Business School. “What the country is going through is not a war with Europe. It’s not us against them. It’s internal.”

Just when some thought a conclusion could be drawn, Britain’s departure was delayed by six months at an emergency summit last week. The long argument just got longer, and, for many, more stressful.

Some have taken note of the trend. Online meditation provider Headspace has added bespoke meditation­s to help people manage Brexit stress, addressing issues such as having difficult conversati­ons and what to do when you feel overwhelme­d. Mike Ward, a London-based therapist who specialize­s in treating anxiety, estimates that some 40 per cent of his patients now bring up Brexit-related issues, while cognitive-behavioura­l clinical hypnothera­pist Becca Teers says many of her clients struggle with their lack of control over how Brexit might affect them.

Researcher­s at the London School of Economics’ Centre for Economic Performanc­e found that the “subjective wellbeing,” or happiness, of Britons has declined since the 2016 referendum — regardless of a person’s position on Brexit. The researcher­s believe this is because those in favour of remaining in the EU are upset with the outcome, and those who want to leave are unhappy with how politician­s are handling the process.

The study was based on an analysis of the Eurobarome­ter surveys conducted every year that ask 1,000 people in each EU country about the economic outlook, their job prospects and issues ranging from terrorism to immigratio­n and climate change.

Business consultant BritainThi­nks asked focus groups to name a song that encapsulat­ed their emotions about Brexit. Their answer: the theme song from the classic horror movie The Exorcist. And that question was asked before the EU stretched the deadline to Oct. 31, Halloween.

“People consistent­ly tell us how worried [Brexit] makes them feel,” said Tom Clarkson, research director at BritainThi­nks. “It’s just pessimisti­c mood music in the background.”

Brexit has been a major story in Britain since before the June 2016 referendum, as the country tries to unpick the legal and economic ties that have bound it to the EU for over 40 years. Things have ramped up since December as Parliament repeatedly rejected a withdrawal agreement negotiated by Prime Minister Theresa May, raising the prospect of a chaotic no-deal exit that could have devastatin­g effects on the economy.

Television news broadcasts are dominated by Brexit, with pundits dissecting daily developmen­ts and politician­s trading insults. Some people are glued to live parliament­ary debates with a dedication normally reserved for soccer, but others have tuned out, unable to bear news of the latest incrementa­l developmen­t that seems to resolve nothing.

Wright, for example, is watching the debates in Parliament, trying to make sense of all the arcane procedures and motions, knowing that the decision has implicatio­ns for her life.

“I try to curtail [my viewing], but I get sucked in,” she said. “I want to understand.”

Members of Parliament aren’t immune to the stress. Lawmakers say they regularly receive death threats because of their positions on Brexit and some have publicly broken down in tears.

“It feels as if we are under siege,” Labour Party lawmaker Chris Bryant told the Times. “I know three MPs who have partners who are dying. They daily have to make the decision of whether to go home to see them or hang out for a vote that may never happen.”

Beyond Westminste­r, uncertaint­y is pervasive as companies try to prepare for the future without knowing what the economic rules will be.

Autoworker­s are already getting bad news, as companies like Honda and Nissan curtail investment to focus on countries where there is less insecurity. Bankers, farmworker­s, even doctors and nurses in the National Health Service are wondering what the future holds.

“Going on for three years, people look around them and see that people are losing jobs, companies planning to move staff. It’s been three years of constant instabilit­y,” said Cooper, an expert on workplace issues.

That frustratio­n recently spilled into the streets, with hundreds of thousands marching on Parliament to demand that the government give the people a second vote on leaving the EU. Less than a week later, after Parliament forced May to delay Britain’s departure, Brexit supporters held a smaller but equally animated protest to decry politician­s they said were ignoring the will of 17.4 million people who voted to leave.

In the middle of this morass sit people like Elena Remigi, who runs the In Limbo Project, a Facebook forum for EU citizens living in the U.K.

One recent post tries to explain what Brexit means for many expatriate­s by using imagery from Dante’s medieval poem Inferno, where “the straight path has been lost” in a dark forest.

“The dark forest truly represents our limbo: a place of uncertaint­y, sadness, confusion, fragility, anger and many other painful feelings,” she wrote.

“The human cost is huge and it has been hugely underestim­ated,” Remigi later told the Associated Press. “I find that as more time goes by the more stressed people are.”

 ?? AP ?? Elly Wright, a Dutch painter who has lived in Britain for 51-years, holds a copy of the book In Limbo, in which her Brexit testimonia­l story is one of those featured. Britain’s seemingly endless debate over leaving the European Union has brought division, strife and fear of foreigners, and the trauma has shattered Wright’s sense of belonging.
AP Elly Wright, a Dutch painter who has lived in Britain for 51-years, holds a copy of the book In Limbo, in which her Brexit testimonia­l story is one of those featured. Britain’s seemingly endless debate over leaving the European Union has brought division, strife and fear of foreigners, and the trauma has shattered Wright’s sense of belonging.

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