Post pandemic ‘normality’

I was talking with my family last night about the way the pandemic has impacted on us. Three of us have an autism diagnosis, and one of us is very likely autistic but not diagnosed. When the lockdown started we were all to some degree relieved to have an ‘excuse’ to withdraw from many aspects of life that we found stressful, such as going to work, seeing people, having face to face appointments with people etc etc. It meant that we could avoid a lot of stuff that we’d always found really difficult. We withdrew from society because we were being told to, and in some ways this was quite suited to our nature. However we are still finding it very hard to return to ‘normal’. My son’s social anxiety feels more entrenched than ever, and I find dealing with people and day to day problems much more stressful. It’s as if the pandemic got us into a more reclusive state of living and now we’re finding it harder to get out of our tendency to withdraw from life. Every problem feels like such a big deal now, we feel so easily overwhelmed by life. We find being around lots of people so stressful. However we also feel very isolated, despite the fact that in many ways we like being away from people. And the news is always so grim about everything falling apart - essential services like the nhs etc. The war in Ukraine. Everything feels so insecure. Everything is so expensive. When we do go out so many other people seem to look stressed and tired too. 
It all feel is so overwhelming sometimes. 
There’s this narrative that the pandemic is ‘over’, but we feel we are still really struggling to feel ‘normal’ again. It’s had a big impact on us and we’re finding it hard to mentally get back to where we were before it all happened. We were struggling even before it all though to be honest, but I think it’s made many of our problems even more difficult now. 
Does anyone else feel like this?

Parents
  • The pandemic is not over for us. I need to avoid covid as I am at high risk of long covid, as I know my immune system has a tendency to that kind of over-reaction since I got arthritis from flu caught at uni. My energy levels are so desperately bad that even a slight reduction from long covid would be  horrific (and I am already having that from peri-menopause!) And autism (with our tendency for "all the things") makes this a higher risk factor for all of us! My Dad also feels this way, as his own health conditions are bad enough without long covid on top.

    So our household and his are still effectively in some kind of lockdown! We go outside to cycle, summer is nice as we can socialise outside (except that we are in a bubble with my Dad so can go in his house) otherwise only online. I have only been indoors to the vet, the dentist, a blood test and an unavoidable pop in to the post office to renew my driving licence. And when I do, I am masked and feel unpleasantly close to panic.

    We are heartily sick of it! We get our food by click and collect and wash or quarantine it all. I don't know how much longer we can live like this. The hermit part of me does feel it can go on indefinitely, but the ADHD part is climbing the walls! And my husband is really fed up as he has no personal risk except having to bed pan me if I was the worst case. But the stats show there is still a lot of covid around and if we emerge it is only a matter of time before the inevitable since jabs do not prevent catching it nor prevent long covid. Until some reliable treatment or prevention for long covid is found I will not feel safe to emerge. By which time I am concerned about the damage which has been done to our mental states.

    So you are not alone feeling negative about the whole thing. And yes, the news is so doom-laden. I do wonder if we will be looking back on this in 20 years (if we're still alive!) and how it will seem then.

  • So sorry you're still in lockdown. My Mum was vulnerable during the first lockdown; I can't imagine what it would be like to cope with that level of anxiety for three years.

    I don't know about twenty years, but I think we become nostalgic for the past and lose sense of the reality. The 60s and 70s were turbulent decades, politically, socially and economically, yet nowadays people just think of the fashions and music.

Reply
  • So sorry you're still in lockdown. My Mum was vulnerable during the first lockdown; I can't imagine what it would be like to cope with that level of anxiety for three years.

    I don't know about twenty years, but I think we become nostalgic for the past and lose sense of the reality. The 60s and 70s were turbulent decades, politically, socially and economically, yet nowadays people just think of the fashions and music.

Children
No Data