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Covid

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How are people so calm about Covid?

417 replies

BumbleWumble · 04/07/2020 05:16

I have written several posts now and been told my reaction is not normal and that I need help for my mental health as I am suffering from health anxiety.

But how do you come to terms with coexisting with this disease, possibly forever if no vaccine is found? A highly contagious disease that you run the risk of catching everywhere you go and might kill you. Even if it doesn't you might be left with severe incapacitating organ damage. Or you might get the long haul version that goes on for months at least. Since the disease is so new no one actually knows if people with this form actually ever get better.

This doesn't seem an equivalent risk to say driving a car. It seems that eventually most people will contract it. True, many people would have a mild version then recover, although even the mild version is supposed to be a nasty experience. But a vast number of people would either die, be left with terrible lasting damage or be ill for months, possibly permanently. Also it's not known whether lasting immunity is conferred, so you might initially get a mild version then get a more severe version at a later date. And as well as this, there is the constant fear of loved ones getting it and that you might pass it on to them. Or that you might unknowingly infect any one.

In addition to this, our quality of life will be awful. As well as the threat of the actual virus constantly hanging over us, social distancing will remain necessary and we will never be able to freely interact with other people ever again. People will not be able to be close with family and friends. There will be no proper socialising, no events where people gather. There will be fear every time an indoor space has to be shared with others. Indoor workplaces especially will be a major risk forever more. As will public transport.

We will just lead a terribly bleak existence knowing that at some point we will likely catch the disease regardless with a relatively high chance of a terrible outcome. Or if not us then a loved one.

I don't understand how people aren't more concerned about this and put it on a par with other daily risks such as driving a car. It is so terrible the whole world has come to a halt over it, and if no vaccine is found quickly, is going to have a catastrophic impact on humanity as a whole as far as I can see.

I realise there will be no choice but to get on with life, but I do not know how to do this without an ever present sense of anxiety and dread. I can think of little else and if this is to be the future then I fear the rest of my life consisting of terrible fear waiting for it to get me and loved ones.

I feel utter despair and terror. It's like a nightmare with no end.

OP posts:
110APiccadilly · 03/10/2020 21:58

I've already had to face up to my mortality twice. Both times with something that was more likely to kill me than Covid.

We will all die of something.

Socialising will come back and social distancing will vanish, because it's against human nature. People used to live with the threat of smallpox (mortality rate 30%, very dangerous to children, compared to the Covid with mortality rate

LethargicLumpOfLockdownLard · 03/10/2020 22:05

I'm pretty sure childbirth was a greater risk to me than covid ever will be.
We've got something like a 30% chance of getting cancer, I'm more concerned about that and even then I'm not that worried, because something will kill me eventually.

Delatron · 03/10/2020 22:13

Because we can accurately assess risk.

I had a serious post partum haemorrhage after child birth and lost lots of blood.
I’ve had breast cancer at a young age with pretty bad odds.

I’m not personally bothered about COVID.

Delatron · 03/10/2020 22:14

Chance of getting cancer is current 50% for all of us. I’d worry more about that if I were you...

HunkyPunk · 03/10/2020 22:38

Something's going to get you,
With so many ways to die.
Natural disasters,
And how do those planes fly?
Beware when you go swimming.
Try not to cross the road.
Do your best, when winter's hard,
To dodge the viral load.
Something's going to get you,
So enjoy life while you can.
Make the most, we'll all be toast
At some point - that's the plan.
Cancer, stroke and heart attack,
Diabetes, flu.
Something's going to get you,
And it's going to get me too.

Buckwheat80 · 03/10/2020 22:41

The overwhelming majority of people get it and recover.
I'm in a statistically low risk group.
I do what I can minimise risk on a micro level but don't see any point about worrying about stuff on a macro level that I have no control over.
It's just one of countless things in life that can kill you.

If I get it, I get it. C'est la vie.

KitKatastrophe · 04/10/2020 04:17

I do what I can minimise risk on a micro level but don't see any point about worrying about stuff on a macro level that I have no control over
Absolutely this. There is no point in worrying about things I cannot control.

Pixxie7 · 04/10/2020 05:00

Life is a calculated risk, can you honestly say your living at the moment? Yes people need to be careful but it sounds as if you are getting it out of proportion.

TheKeatingFive · 04/10/2020 07:41

I’m low risk. My chance of dying of Covid is no greater than my chance of dying of flu. I’ve never worried about flu in my life.

I’m so much more concerned with what this is all doing to my industry - and my ability to make a living. And the impact it’s having on friends with significant mental health issues.

I think we’ll look back on all this and be shocked at the severity of the measures taken for an virus with a FR well under 1%. Perhaps not the reaction in March/April when so little was known, but definitely how we’re dealing with the second wave.

TheKeatingFive · 04/10/2020 07:46

I also find the narrative about trying to ‘prevent all Covid deaths’ strange when we could do so much more to prevent deaths from cancer, traffic accidents, heart disease, not to mention fairly innocuous causes in the developing world - but don’t bother.

Oblomov20 · 04/10/2020 07:49

It hasn't stopped me from living at all. My life hasn't changed that much. I carry on quite normally, working, )yes at home, but so what?) with a few restrictions. I didnt see my friends, then I could, now it's 6. And? Nothing I can't cope with. It's fine. The fact you state otherwise is your problem. Please get to your GP to discuss. AD's? I find it impossible to tolerate anxiety, I don't have friends with anxiety because their irrational thinking would piss me off. All your arguments are either silly, or so far fetched it's ridiculous.

Oblomov20 · 04/10/2020 07:51

If so many people really are asymptotic, then their covid can't be that bloody bad, can it?

daisychain1620 · 04/10/2020 07:58

My DH, DS and FIL have all had Covid and recovered fine. FIL was in hospital and is in his mid 70's and has no obvious lasting effects.
I am cautious and careful as I can be but it's just another disease that you have to try to avoid. Life needs to go on. I do however think it's different if you fall in the critical at risk list or you have certain conditions or illness because it would be very worrying to think if you got it then it's going to have a greater effect.

tempnamechange98765 · 04/10/2020 07:59

OP I urge you, take the anti depressants.

Would you refuse insulin if you were diabetic?

I started taking Sertraline almost a year ago for awful PND/PNA. It changed my life 100% for the better, I was able to be myself again. I was on a low dose of 50mg and I am now weaning myself very slowly off. Three weeks on half dose a day so far and no negative side effects. DURING a pandemic when life is anything but in our control - and a lot of my issues stem from loss of control. That shows how much I needed the tablets just to level myself off again.

I don't worry about COVID because I am very low risk, my DH is low risk and neither of my DC are vulnerable. My DFather I worry about slightly, but I know he is being careful and looking after himself in every way he can otherwise. There's no one else I really worry about. I don't want my DM to catch it and I would be worried if she did, but she is low risk really, other than being in her early 60's.

I do what I can to mitigate the risk, I wash my hands thoroughly after going out to a shop, when I get back from the school run or from going for a walk. I exercise outside only at the moment.

daisychain1620 · 04/10/2020 08:26

@HunkyPunk love the poem, live your life while you are fortunate to have it

IrmaFayLear · 04/10/2020 11:25

I always remember hearing someone on the radio a few years ago from a charity saying “we must prevent the deaths of elderly people” Confused

And the one who said that having no money was worse for poor people than others as they liked to buy more expensive things Confused

KitKatastrophe · 05/10/2020 12:41

@TheKeatingFive

I also find the narrative about trying to ‘prevent all Covid deaths’ strange when we could do so much more to prevent deaths from cancer, traffic accidents, heart disease, not to mention fairly innocuous causes in the developing world - but don’t bother.
Absolutely. We could do a lot more to tackle cancer and heart disease through combatting obesity. and I dont mean just saying "maybe you should buy a bike" as the government have done. It would save more lives than the covid measures have and probably cost a heck of a lot less.
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