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I know someone whose husband is a nurse in a hospital system in GA that was recently diverting patients and out of ICU beds. They are steadfastly insistent on downplaying it entirely. "The majority of patients aren't COVID patients." "It turns out that was fake news. My husband asked someone at the hospital and they said they weren't out of ICU beds." I'm going to guess they are waiting for refrigerated morgue trucks outside the hospital? A hospital system so crashed that COVID patients ARE the majority?
They are heavily invested in downplaying it and I think this has everything to do with protective mechanisms. I know they are actually anxious people. They are handling the fear with avoidance and not facing reality.
I'm struggling with my own personal anger at so many people doing this. Maybe I'm not being entirely fair in doing that? The problem is when those in charge of handling the situation are doing the exact same thing it prevents everyone else from facing facts and adjusting. Basically everyone else outside of the U.S. can't see what we are dealing with except those in the thick of it?
Very well said. I do think that people who are quite anxious about CoVid invent all stories to tell themselves. These stories come to be "truth" in their world and their local culture. They unfriend everyone who has a different story, more or less.
The Department of Health and Human Services and especially the broken CDC are supposed to stand for facts and science.
Can you imagine people being asked to do all the various things they did during WW2? (Including obey draft notices, but also rationing, wartime work assignments, and of course, certain health measures).
You are right: if the people "in charge" are anxiously making things up, too, then the whole system collapses.
Civilization is a delicate bubble and when it collapses (when normal expectations can no longer be met) a lot of people go psycho. I do believe everyone is capable of a brief psychosis (for example, if a dinosaur or even a crocodile appeared at my window, I'd probably start screaming my head off and have no coherent thoughts whatsoever).
Paranoia and anxiety go hand and hand. I think most of us are paranoid right (ranging from minor to major), but many of us handle it by trying to learn more, protect ourselves, hunker down and fight the thing in the only way that seems to work (quarantine and social distancing).