Facing the New Normal
As I start to write this article, the news of the Omicron variant of COVID-19 virus is the main news in media. By the time this article reaches you, the context of COVID-19, might have changed, for better or worse, I do not know. But one thing is sure, we are living in uncertain times. Most nations and experts were sure that we are turning around the bend, only to be disproved again, like the multiple times over the last few months. As of today, ongoing uncertainty seems to be the new normal. Uncertainty that comes out of a new normal of living with the virus.
Epidemics can end two ways - transmission is
well controlled and new cases come down to zero, and the epidemic is history. The other is, the disease becomes an ongoing
part of the infectious-disease landscape, or an endemic. The shift from
pandemic to endemic entails a number of practical considerations for managing
the epidemic and the way we live. But the shift is also psychological, as we
will be deprived of the satisfaction that a clean pandemic end point would
bring. Instead, societies will have to adapt to living alongside COVID-19 by
making some deliberate choices about how to coexist.
Pandemics and endemics, in the past, have forced
communities to move to newer ways of living and engaging in the world. Other
major disruptions of life too have created new normal ways of engaging. Biblical
stories are interesting examples. Adam and Eve had to build a new life in a new
normal world outside Eden. Noah, Daniel and friends are examples of people who
had to pick up the pieces and chart a new course, post flood and in captivity.
The
influenza pandemic of 1918-1919 killed more people than the Great War, known
today as World War I, at somewhere between 20 and 40 million people. More
people died of influenza in a single year than in four-years of the Black Death
Bubonic Plague from 1347 to 1351. Nationalism pervaded as people accepted
government authority.
This allowed the public health departments to easily step in and implement
their restrictive measures. The war also gave science greater importance as
governments relied on scientists, now armed with the new germ theory and the
development of antiseptic surgery, to design vaccines and reduce mortalities of
disease and battle wounds. The medical and scientific communities developed new
theories and applied them to prevention, diagnostics and treatment of the
influenza patients. Similarly the black death saw the origin of hospices and
later the hospitals that we know of now.
The current pandemic that we are going
through, with all the devastation it has left, has been traumatic for most of
us. The physical effects of the virus, with high mortality, morbidity and many
families losing their loved ones is the most evident. The economic, and the
broader social impacts, the job losses, the migrants who have lost their livelihood,
the relational issues with increasing domestic violence, etc. has been in the
news and some of us might have experienced it too. Education related challenged
and the impacts on the system, the children and parents, is yet another major issue.
Cross cutting through all these is the mental wellbeing related issues.
A recent
Lancet article reviews this well. The
COVID-19 pandemic has taken a toll on people's mental health. Yet, the global
extent of this impact remains unknown. The authors estimated a significant
increase in the prevalence of both major depressive disorder (with an estimated
additional 53·2 million cases worldwide—i.e., a 27·6% increase) and anxiety
disorders (76·2 million additional cases—i.e., a 25·6% increase) since before
the pandemic. Increased prevalence was seen among both males and females across
the lifespan. These findings are all the more concerning because depressive and
anxiety disorders were already leading causes of disability worldwide.
But at the same time, if you look around there
has been many positive changes and trends emerging around us. The challenges
that we as individuals, communities and humanity at large have faced, have been
opportunities to engage in a new way. New Normal was a well-known terminology in
business circles but has become the current buzz word. Most large organizations have ongoing
research and strategy development teams looking at, sector by sector, what the
new normal would look like. They engage in defining and understanding the new normal
and coming up with strategies to limit the spread of disease at the same time
mitigate impact on other sectors. Some of them have gone ahead and coined terms
like “Next Normal” or “Next Possible” as buzz words, to drive a new direction
for tomorrow.
A few trends are highlighted here. This is not
a comprehensive list, but just a glimpse into the massive changes that are
happening around us.
Faced with uncertainty and facing our
mortality, the core issues of our life, existence and meaning, are in most
people minds, though not publicly discussed. Questions like, if life is so
uncertain and I do not have control of my life, how should I live, who am I, what
am I in the world for, how can I find significance, have never been asked the
way they are being asked this season.
Such
questions are leading to many looking at job, career and work in diverse ways.
Large numbers of people are leaving formal work sector and are exploring more
flexible ways of engaging. A Microsoft study discovered that 41% of
workers worldwide are considering quitting their jobs described as the ‘Great
Resignation’.
The study shows that Gen Z is struggling more than other generations. Work life balance, being valued by managers,
sense of belonging, a trusting and caring community at workplace, meaningful
advancement of careers, flexibility and autonomy are what people are looking
for. If this is
not there, they are moving out to set up startups on their own.
For organizations
and companies COVID-19 has brought on an even higher awareness that you cannot
have healthy people on an unhealthy planet or workplace. So, companies are
looking at climate change, healthy work environments recognizing that if they
do not address these, that they may not have a competitive advantage in the
market.
With social and
physical distancing becoming a norm, Technology has become the driver of all
engagements whether at personal, community, work or social levels. Digital systems
and AI based algorithms helping in decision making and work has taken over many
fields, including health care. Digital natives, children and young people find
this easy, but digital immigrants, the seniors struggle with this.
So how should
we face and live in such a world? It was Darwin, who said, it is not the
strongest of the species that survives, nor the most intelligent; it is the one
most adaptable to change.
If we need to live lives as salt and light in
this world, we need to cultivate some mindsets and lifestyles. Daniel and his
friends in Babylon are a good case study to reflect on. Faced with a new normal
they did a few things. They did not shy away from embracing the changes around
them. They learnt the new language, immersed themselves in the new context and
culture and lived lives of influence. They built their knowledge and expertise
in new ways of engaging and excelled themselves in the spheres of engagement.
They built their lives with a long-term perspective, Daniel serving three empires
and four emperors over 70 years. But they held on to the core values and their
faith as foundations. They supported each other, as they faced challenging
contexts and situations.
A changing context of the world and new normal
emerging around us, is a call for us to live such lives. Return and renew our
commitment to the core foundations of our faith and values that should
undergird our lives. At the same time, accept and embrace change and excel in
new ways of engaging. We need to live our lives with a long-term life perspective
– a long obedience in the same direction. Rooted in our relationship to God build
our dependence on the faith community that we are part of, to support and be
supported in our journeys. Remember, God is still on the throne and in control.
Such people and communities will continue to be salt and light in a world that
is changing and losing its saltiness and light.
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