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Thursday, April 07, 2022

Why People Are Acting So Weird? by Olga Khazan in The Atlantic

I've asked this question myself, numerous times. According to this piece, so much of this tracks back to the pandemic in combination with other factors like “high-stress, low-reward” situations associated with the loss of jobs, well-being, and tragically, loved ones, in combination with greater drug use and drinking, mental illness and trauma. Fewer services for mental illness and addiction have been costly. 

At the most general level, the pandemic itself has impacted societal bonds and established a kind of unsettling, "anomie," or normlessness, as once theorized by sociologist Émile Durkheim whose work pointed to the impacts of rapid social change in society. Check out this incisive quote herein:

"The turn-of-the-20th-century scholar Émile Durkheim called this state anomie, or a lack of social norms that leads to lawlessness. “We are moral beings to the extent that we are social beings,” Durkheim wrote. In the past two years, we have stopped being social, and in many cases we have stopped being moral, too."

I trust that we will have all learned the massively important message of this pandemic that no one is an island and that we all need each other and how that's not only a good thing, but part and parcel to what it means to be human. The good news is that these manifestations of not just "weirdness," but violence, will subside as the pandemic itself subsides. Like you, I hope and pray that we don't have to go through this again as the pandemic's impacts will no doubt reverberate for decades to come.

-Angela Valenzuela

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