Using the Pandemic as Mental Training Ground

Using the Pandemic as Mental Training Ground
When life puts you in lockdown, you can use the opportunity to make your mental and material space more beautiful. Da Antipina/Shutterstock
Leo Babauta
Updated:

This neverending pandemic hasn’t been the best mental health environment for many people. It has created uncertainty, anxiety, loneliness, unhappiness, procrastination, and feelings of dreariness for large numbers of people.

That’s understandable, and I feel tremendous compassion for everyone who is suffering right now.

I strongly believe that this is an opportunity for us all, to use this difficult environment to shift something for ourselves. This can be our mental training ground if we view it that way.

We can use this environment to learn how to:
  • Focus when we’re feeling overwhelmed
  • Find joy in the middle of the ordinary and mundane
  • Have compassion for ourselves when we’re feeling difficult emotions
  • Connect with others who are feeling those same difficult emotions
  • Find a sense of meaning in everything we do
  • Relax when things are chaotic
Basically, everything that arises as a mental difficulty for us right now is a perfect opportunity to train.
The pandemic might be our greatest teacher.

The Opportunity of This Time

The truth is, all of this has always been here. We’ve always been distracted, numbing our difficult emotions like loneliness and sadness and anger with social media, food, alcohol, or other comforts. We’ve always felt uncertainty, anxiety, frustration, and overwhelm.

It’s just that this pandemic has brought it all front and center. Put it directly in our faces, so we can’t ignore it.

That’s difficult, but it’s also an opportunity—to look directly at the things we don’t want to admit to ourselves.

To become present to our emotions.

To train ourselves in compassion, gratitude, wonder, connection, meaning, and mindfulness.

It’s terrible that people are getting sick and dying, of course. We don’t want to pretend that everything is rainbows and unicorns. It’s terrible that people are turning to drugs and other unhealthy ways of coping with all of this.

But I believe in making the most of whatever is in front of us. Let’s use the opportunity of this time.

How to Train

We start first by recognizing whatever is there for us: overwhelm, distraction, loneliness, sadness, frustration, disconnect, or anxiety.

We get present with it: How does it feel in our body? Can we be with the sensations of these emotions, mindfully, gently, with openness and curiosity?

We bring compassion to ourselves—a sense of warmth and wanting happiness for ourselves.

We then try a new frame of mind. Here are a handful to try out:

Curiosity: Can we be curious about something in this moment, from the sensations of our emotions to what another person is going through? What changes for you when you practice curiosity?
Wonder: Can we view this moment (ourselves, our surroundings, other people) with a sense of awe and appreciation? With a sense of wonder at the miracle of life? How does that change things for you?
Gratitude: Can we feel a sense of gratitude for what we have in this moment, for the other person, for our eyesight? What would it be like to lose those things? Can we see the things we have through this new lens of appreciation?
Meaning: What if everything we did had a sense of meaning? What if every act could be a way to love ourselves, or to love and serve others? How would that change each act for you?
Mindfulness: Can we simply be present in this moment? Connect with a sense of broad-minded awareness to what is happening right now? What shifts for you when you do this?
Connection: Can we feel a sense of connection to others in each moment? To the light in ourselves? To the world around us? Can we realize how we’re supported by the entire world?
Empowerment: There’s a big difference between doing something because we feel we should or because we have to, and doing something because we choose to. Can you choose into each act in your day? Or choose out of it, if you really don’t want to do it? What would life be like if you were choosing to do things from an empowered place, rather than feeling like life was happening to you?

Choose one at a time, and practice it for a few days. Life in the pandemic will give you plenty of practice opportunities if you look for them. Embrace them, and train.

Leo Babauta
Leo Babauta
Author
Leo Babauta is the author of six books and the writer of Zen Habits, a blog with over 2 million subscribers. Visit ZenHabits.net
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