Yay! 2021 is here. Are you still in lockdown? well... I am! and guess what? there hasn't been just one lockdown – we all have had our own experience back from 2020... Some people were forced into months of unbroken solitude, others trapped for weeks with an estranged spouse... some saw it as a positive experience – a welcome opportunity to slow down, to go out for walks and chilling with a loving partner, or simply enjoy quality time with the children. But whichever way the lockdown was played out by you, there has been one near universal aspect to the past months: it abruptly disrupted our daily routines and living arrangements in ways that would not normally occur. Will this strange time have left its mark on us, not just superficially, but deep down? As we venture out tentatively, do we do so with our personalities somehow altered? And if so, how will our new selves cope as we begin to mix and travel once again?
Anecdotal evidence seems to suggest that we are not going back to the way we were... I know that I’ve been feeling less stressed due to less rushing around at least in some respects, but also I have felt more withdrawn and introverted... Friends of mine (also not too adversely affected) agree they feel different – more reflective, perhaps, but also less sociable (and easily irritable).
But while many of the experts agree that the pandemic, and the accompanying lockdowns, have already changed our personalities, they also noted that it’s very difficult to say exactly how much people will have changed and in what ways. But I am sure that if you look around, you will see that evidence is crystal clear. In my very own case (as a teacher) I have struggled with the indifference. Firstly it goes around with some parents that had no clue on what their children were doing during the whole academic year and they even had the nerve to complain against us (even knowning that there is clear evidence of the countless times we tried to reach him/her out). Secondly... The irritability of our bosses (no matter where you work), has certainly turned upside down our perception towards work-time during lockdowns. I mean, it's not okay only seeing the dark side of things and not pulling out those great things we have managed to convey with our role through difficult times. Being particularly a teacher under has been totally demanding, missunderstood, and simply unappreciated! (I must add). Thirdly, The senseless ideas carried out by governements specially in non-developed countries like mine, where the ministry of education hasn't understood that conditions for face-to-face education with children are too far to be reached out, but yet they keep pushing teachers to their limits and schools to do things that are certainly unreachable and where thousands of resources are needed and they barely take such responsibility. And last, but not the least: The indifference of some of our students. Don't get me wrong, I know exactly that many of them are doing the things very nicely and I couldn't be prouder of them, but there is this little group of bright-minded souls that hasn’t understood that education changes and therefore, you need to find a way to take the best off online lessons although the process might look difficult. But the one thing that hurts the most is that they barely interact with us... Teaching is a process that needs continuing feedback, you might get it by talking, by chatting, by asking or simply by raising a "digital hand", but we barely experience such participation. I know that I should consider myself a gifted-teacher, as students with me try so hard to do their best, but it is certainly not repeated with the rest of the subjects. So "are they really aware of the damage they might cause when this comes to an end?" believe me, I have tried to let them know it countless times, but only a few got the message.
Anyway, I think that for people with a supportive partner, whether you might be a student, a teacher or someone working from home, then the intense period of the lockdown might have offered a welcome opportunity for personal growth. By contrast, for people stuck indoors for months in an unhappy relationship or being harassed by their families, the effects on their personalities are sure to be have been negative.
If we have been changed somehow by lockdown then as restrictions around the world are eased, a natural next question is whether and how we can change back again? Can we return to our old selves? Do we even want to? or do we feel okay with this new "US".For my part, I’m definitely feeling less inclined than before to socialise, even at a safe distance, but totally empowered to not let others sidetrack me from where I want to go, or simply not accepting bad words in a world that already seems to be so hurtful. I do appreciate the fact that I have learned to value myself, my work and those around me even more than before, and I have lost sympathy to those who see the dark-side of things and who are not even capable of accepting their own faults but to see the faults of others with capital letters.
To make the long story short, if you are reading this... then I invite you to look for the beauty in simple things of your everyday lives, to look for the smile of those who are happy to have you around, or simply be happy of not being part of the group of people that have lost a beloved one and yet they are still coping with the pain. Life is about choices... and I already took mine when I decided to look for the beauty in dark times.
17 Comentarios
From bad to worse, if before I had a deprovable lifestyle but with decent moments now is the worst, I changed too much in this pandemic and I am falling without any brake (Matias Lopez)
ResponderEliminarPersonally, yes, my lifestyle before all this confinement was very different from what it was before. As a person, this confinement has helped me to know myself and grow as a person, to learn to spend time with myself and my family and enjoy those moments, making them the most valuable for me regardless of all the bad things that are happening on the outside, I always try to see the positive side. (Valentina Concha)
ResponderEliminarI don't know if the definition would be different, rather I feel strange with myself to the point of not knowing what to want (tomás zepeda)
ResponderEliminarmy life and how i see life has changed a lot since the cuarantine started, after all the things that i been through i get easily irritable and explosive with the things that people say that bother me and i get too much sensitive when i remember good times that happen before the lockdown.
ResponderEliminarThe confinement has changed my day to day a lot, I went from going out to play with my friends to soccer, going out for a run to spending all day on the computer playing online with my friends, which physically and mentally It has affected a lot. (Benjamin Pizarro)
ResponderEliminarTo be honest, I don't know if I can say that I have felt a change if not on the contrary I have improved, because I was able to get to know myself better and at the same time find hobbies, but obviously I miss going out for a walk.
ResponderEliminar(Gabriel valles pedraza)
Yes, quite a lot my personality and how I relate to others has changed, before I was warmer to others, even if they didn't deserve it, and I supported others before myself, but thanks to the lock-in I have learned to appreciate how significant life is and how you live it every day. I no longer worry about so many things, and I have learned to know myself and how I really am, since we ourselves are our own company.( Catalina Meneses)
ResponderEliminarall that in my ver own and personal life have changed in some form, i have lost persons and activities, but we are here after all (tomas duran)
ResponderEliminarI think that my life has changed like that of many, I would not know whether to say if I am different from what I was, since I have not completely compared myself to how I was before the confinement and then, the vision I have about myself is that I have not had a big change in personality when making the comparison. (Emi)
ResponderEliminarMy life was not affected by this confinement because I have always been a lonely person, the only change that could be is not being able to go out in nature.
ResponderEliminarin confinement i actually affect my life i am no longer who i Used to be because i can no longer do what i Used to do (Ignacio olivares)
ResponderEliminarThe truth is that the confinement has changed me a lot because before this, I always used to go from here to there and because of this my routines have changed enough. It's super sad not even being able to go to exercise quietly in a green square or place because all the people start looking at you in a strange and contemptuous way. Also lately I have not been able to share with many friends and family what is very depressing because those moments, no one will give them back to you. Anyway, all this has become routine and we are getting used to it. (Daniel Vasquez)
ResponderEliminarClearly the confinement has made me change in many aspects both psychologically and physically, I think that every time I am learning things from this confinement and I am discovering things that in the future can serve me myself(José olivares)
ResponderEliminarIf my life has changed to how it used to be before, now I feel very different from before(mayte valdivia)
ResponderEliminarSince the pandemic began, we have had to learn to find ourselves and be locked up if we can live with other people other than those who live with you, from my point of view, my perception of looking at life and getting ahead changed a lot. (Misael rojas)
ResponderEliminarThe truth is that my life didn't change much, I keep doing everything I did before, I keep leaving my house a little bit, or I only go to my best friend or to my partner the same as before, what may have changed a bit is my personality, when the confinement began I was going through a difficult time and with the quarantine increased and super strong things happened that at this moment are much better (Kandra)
ResponderEliminarI think that my life has not change that much, sometimes I miss in-person classes or seeing my friends and hugging them. but I remember the important situation in which we find ourselves and how dangerous it would be and how insecure I would feel, and I feel fortunate to be able to be at home safe with my family. Because this is a survival test
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