Amid Covid, sense of normalcy bounces back fast: Study


New York, Jul 30 (IANS): The Covid-19 pandemic brought unprecedented uncertainty and stress but even amid the turmoil and the new pressures of work-from-home and home-schooling, millions of people were able to keep calm and carry on with the demands of the moment, say researchers.

The study, published in the Journal of Applied Psychology, shows that the human sense of normalcy is capable of bouncing back a lot faster than we might think.

"Our psychological immune system is so effective that even though we have an ongoing, persisting stressor, we start to fix ourselves almost immediately," said study researcher Trevor Foulk from the University of Maryland in the US.

The study shows that psychological recovery can take place even while a person is still in the throes of a stressful experience.

Previous research has suggested that recovery processes start only after stressors abate and can take months or even years to unfold.

In the latest study, the research team surveyed 122 employees several times each day for two weeks to explore how they experienced the pandemic.

The study began on March 16, 2020, just as stay-at-home orders and school closures went into effect across US cities and states.

The researchers focused on two manifestations of normalcy - specifically powerlessness and authenticity.

They found that on the first day of the study, just as the crisis was beginning, employees initially felt very powerless and inauthentic.

"But, over the course of even just those two weeks, normalcy started to return. People felt less powerless and more authentic - even while their subjective stress levels were rising," Foulk said.

According to the researchers, this shows employees were adjusting to their new situations and the disruptions associated with the crisis and establishing a new way of feeling normal.

"The pace at which people felt normal again is remarkable, and highlights how resilient we can be in the face of unprecedented challenges," they wrote.

The study revealed that the effect was more pronounced for more neurotic individuals - people who tend to be more nervous, anxious, depressed, self-conscious and vulnerable.

Those employees had a more extreme initial reaction to the stress, but then recovered at a faster rate.

The researchers said this is likely because employees high in neuroticism are better psychologically equipped to navigate stress so they can bounce back from it quicker.

"Overall, all employees start to feel normal much faster than most would expect," the study authors wrote.

"Our work offers a little bit of a ray of hope - that our psychological immune system starts working a lot faster than we think, and that we can start to feel 'normal' even while all of this is going on," they noted.

  

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