Los Angeles Times

Delta anxiety begone

WORRIED THE COVID-19 VARIANT WILL PAUSE LIFE AGAIN? THIS TIKTOK THERAPIST CAN HELP YOU COPE

- Illustrati­on by Ross May Los Angeles Times; photo from Courtney Tracy BY JULISSA JAMES

THE TAIL END of summer 2021 has in many ways taken on the chaotic vibes of early 2020, when we had a sense that COVID-19 would change our lives drasticall­y but we didn’t know how, when or for how long. That familiar stomach lurch, the confusion, panic and uncertaint­y — the WTF of it all — is back with a vengeance thanks to the Delta variant.

And now, some would say, it’s even worse.

For months we were barreling back toward a life that felt vaguely familiar, full speed ahead into our new ideal of freedom. Now we’re pressing pause again, praying to the pandemic gods that another full stop isn’t on the horizon.

Over the last year and a half, doctor of clinical psychology and licensed clinical social worker Courtney Tracy has emerged as one of the leading voices in a thriving community of TikTok therapists giving advice on everything from dealing with intrusive thoughts to navigating the emotional fallout of COVID-19. (She’s also one of the most satisfying to watch: Who doesn’t love seeing a therapist drop an F-bomb from time to time or dance to Soulja Boy?)

Posting under the handle @the.truth.doctor, the SoCal native has built a community of more than 1.6 million followers on the app with a refreshing willingnes­s to get personal — citing her own experience­s with severe anxiety, drug use and borderline personalit­y disorder when advising her followers.

The heightened fears and anxieties around Delta can be attributed to the fact that it’s often harder to lose something twice, Tracy explains. “There’s this period of processing that’s necessary,” she says. “I think that there was this sense of hope in the last couple months that we were going to have time to process. Now, not only are we back in grief but we’ve also lost hope.”

She sat down with The Times to help us wade through the emotional murkiness of this new wave in the pandemic, and to answer the question on our minds: “How do we cope with the fear that life will once again pause at any moment?”

How do we begin to acknowledg­e our emotions around the Delta variant?

It is, and has been, and likely will continue to be, extremely f— overwhelmi­ng. The main reason for that is because as a human species, our brain tries to have stability. We do it internally with homeostasi­s, trying to stabilize our systems — which are never perfectly stable — and externally, we try to manage it with what’s going to happen next, how much is the future similar to the past and how am I going to survive. Through this pandemic, we’ve lost the ability to stabilize. What’s hitting us the hardest during this Delta variant time period is it’s sometimes harder to lose something a second time.

For a while we thought we were in the clear; now things have changed. Is emotional whiplash a thing? How do we deal with it?

It’s totally a thing. I worked in addiction for eight years and one of the most powerful phrases is knowing the difference between what you can and cannot control — and accepting that. There isn’t really a way to get through this time period other than generally accepting that we are mortal, and that we exist on a planet that is uncertain and unpreceden­ted things happen. When we push away things that we wish were not happening, oftentimes we’re also pushing away the emotions attached to those things. As we accept what’s happening, we open up the door to experience what we’re feeling about it, and that not only makes us move more in the direction towards healing but also can prevent being traumatize­d.

How do we become OK with not being in control?

We do things all day every day that we think are in our control but they’re actually not. Part of it is realizing that we’re more capable of accepting things that are out of our control and living and working with them than we ever realized. Once we realize that we can actually live with things out of our control, we get our sense of agency back.

The emergence of the Delta variant is retriggeri­ng a lot of the losses we felt in 2020 . What’s the best way to process that?

Having double grief is definitely harder. There’s this period of processing that’s necessary, and I think that there was this sense of hope in the last couple months that we were going to have time to process. Now, not only are we back in grief but we’ve also lost hope. It starts with acknowledg­ing that we’re in it and then learning what those stages of grief are — that’s what’s going to normalize anyone’s response to what’s happening.

We deal with mixed messages all the time — say, in relationsh­ips. How do we deal with pandemicre­lated mixed messages?

The way that I like describe our relationsh­ip to society and the government is like they’re our parents. And we are in a [messed] up relationsh­ip with our parents. We absolutely are getting mixed messages. We don’t know which direction they’re going to step for us to know which direction we are going to step. Do we need to walk on eggshells or can we be fully open and transparen­t? Can we trust? When we’re dating someone and we’re getting mixed messages, what usually makes us decide that we’re not interested in that relationsh­ip is that we’re not gaining any sense of support, sense of love and a sense of being seen and understood. What’s hard, though, is that we can leave that relationsh­ip — and with our parents, we could stop talking to them if we wanted to — but we can’t leave the pandemic.

How do we continue living even though life feels like it’s hanging in the balance?

Well, if we’re stuck in a trauma response, it’s really hard. But there are really small things that we can do. Humans are motivated by these hits of dopamine, usually through interperso­nal relationsh­ips, through achievemen­t at work, through nice dinners at restaurant­s and hugging the people that we love. When we don’t have access to all of those things, we often lose motivation. We have to combat that simply by getting up and moving our body.

How do we fight the urge to do everything “while we still can” and burning ourselves out?

The sounds like a scarcity mindset. And I think it really sells ourselves short. When we do that, we are living in the distrust of the world around us — and while we need to be vigilant about what’s occurring around us in our environmen­t, we need to find ways to trust that things will get better and to build that hope.

But how do we build hope when the future feels so uncertain?

I think that it starts with finding avenues of good things that are still happening in the world.

I always say, “Close your eyes and imagine that all these things are happening right now in this very second: There is a deer smelling a flower, there is a baby being born, there’s people saying ‘I love you’ for the first time, there’s people getting married, there’s people deciding who they truly are in their identity and feeling freer than ever.” We can shift our perspectiv­e away from this scarcity — this fear-ridden, anxietypro­voking mindset of, “We are in a global pandemic and it’s never going to go away.” We are in a global pandemic, and there’s still a lot of goodness going on in the world.

How do we cope with the fear that life may again pause at any moment?

Realize that we’re not experienci­ng this alone. That is a really important starting point. The first thing is having a daily routine. We are living in uncertaint­y and instabilit­y since this pandemic is so open-ended — a daily routine helps ease our anxiety and makes us feel like we’re more in control of our survival. Daily exercise is also really important — and for people who are physically disabled, breathing can help, eye movement can help. Any fear, anxiety, anger — any emotion that we experience — is stored in the body just as much as in the mind. Lessening watching TV on COVID too, because as long as you know your precaution­s and what you need to do, there’s no need to watch the numbers rising. Then staying connected. I talk a lot about existentia­l crises, and the reason people find themselves in existentia­l crises because we don’t talk enough about our mortality. I think we need to acknowledg­e that we are alive, we exist, and part of that is so that we can connect with other humans.

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