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Medium featured Dyson Anthony Mancini piece "Potential Positives Amidst a Major Tragedy"
With more than 882,068 cases and 44,136 deaths worldwide (as of this writing), the coronavirus pandemic has exacted a staggering toll on human life. It has also exacted a psychological toll. Anxiety about infection, concern for vulnerable family members, and stress from disrupted routines have profound implications for everyday psychological functioning. Social isolation, a necessity for containing the virus, can exacerbate these anxieties. Inactivity from remaining at home can as well. Worse, many people have lost their livelihoods and face uncertain futures, dwindling retirement savings, and difficulties supporting their families, while others are forced to work under dangerous conditions. All of this is a potent recipe for emotional distress.
Although these risks are real and the prognosis potentially grim, the long-term psychological consequences of the pandemic are not at all clear. As my own research has found, acute stress can have surprisingly beneficial consequences on psychological functioning. It stimulates cooperation, trust, and affiliation. It can bind people together in common purpose. It can make us sensitive to others in ways we weren’t before. It can even directly improve psychological functioning.