Psychological belief after the Pandemia of Coved-19: Did the human brain change forever?

* This article is from The Guardian and translated to its readers in Albanian from Periscope. When the bubonic plague spread across England in the 17th century, Isaac Newton fled Cambridge, where he was studying and moved to Linkelshire for the sake of his family's safety. Newtons did not live in an apartment [...]
When the bubonic plague spread across England in the 17th century, Isaac Newton fled Cambridge, where he was studying and moved to Linkelshire for the sake of his family's safety.
The Newtons did not live in a narrow settlement; they tasted the large garden with many fruit trees. In those uncertain times, when we take steps with ordinary life, our mind freely wiped out routines and social distractions. And it was in this context that a single apple dropped by the branch grabbed more than any apple that had fallen earlier. We have a plague gift. And so, how's your pandemic coming along?
In various ways, this is likely a question that we are all asking ourselves. Even if you have experienced disease, have moved away, lost a relative or even a job, taken a pet or divorced, ate or exercised more, spent more time in the shower, or carried the same clothes every day, it's an inexorable truth that the pandemic has changed. But since, that? And when are we going to have the answers to these questions because there's definitely going to be a time when we're going to make our own balance? What could be the psychological impact of living in the pandemic? Will it change us forever?

<x) Epidemia and Society: From Black Death to Tashmen.
Snowden has spent 40 years studying pandemics. And last spring, as soon as his phone went crazy with calls that wanted to know what the story about Covid 19 said, all of his life was sitting on his lap. He was infected with coronarys.
Snouden believes that Coddy-19shi was not an ordinary event. All pandemic “torments societies through the specific weak points that people have created through their connections to the environment, other species and each other,” he says. Each pandemic has its own characteristics, and the latter is similar to the bubonic plague that affects mental health. Snouden sees a second pandemic coming “like the train of the first ward of Covid-19... [is] psychological pandemic”.
Oifi O'Donova, associate professor of psychiatry at the California Institute for Neuroshcence, specialising in trauma, agrees.
“We are facing so many layers of uncertainty,” she says. The very horrible things have happened and will happen to others, and we don't know when, who or who, and yet, it's really very Cognitically and psychologically demanding. ”
The impact is being experienced in the entire body, she adds, because when people perceive a threat, abstract or concrete, they activate biological stress in response. Cortizol mobilizes glucose. The immune system is torn down, increasing levels of inflammation. This affects brain functions, making people more sensitive to threats and less sensitive to rewards.
In practice, it means that your immune system can be activated simply by listening to someone coughing around you, or simply by looking at people in masks or by spreading the blue surgical color, or by a stranger walking toward you, or even by the electric inhalation of a friend who appears in the background of the Zoom phone call.
The unique characteristics of Covid 19 play an important role in creating this sense of uncertainty.
The “disease is much more complex than previously imagined”, Snouden says.
There is no new normality. Just an escape that evolves. One more simple question, you're “? ” is heavily burdened with hidden questions (not infected?) and rarely brings any direct answers.
Thomas Dixon, an emotional historian at the University of London in Queen Mary, says that when the pandemic struck us, he was not writing the phrase “in e-mail. I hope this message finds you well. ”
Psychotherapist Filipa Perry says that “people are becoming a kind of “o-person”. The masks make us insolent.
However, no element of David-19 has dehumanized humans more than the way it has led us to experience death. Individuals become birdlike units in long and increasing numbers, of course. But before statistics are made, the dead are condemned to isolation. “They automatically depersonize,” says Snouden. He lost his sister during the pandemic. I haven't seen her, and she was with the family... the pandemic is breaking ties and saying to the people. ”
The emotional historian, Thomas Dixon, believes that the pandemic is similar to the “world war”.
I guess we'll have a global recession. There will be serious suffering and inequality of poverty. It's a world event with serious emotional consequences,” he says.
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