At best, uncertainty is a difficult emotional state. We live in a world of routines, reliable cause-and-effect, and pattern recognition. We don’t need to test gravity every time we take a step, which is a good thing. We make assumptions about how people we know well (or people in general) are going to behave, based on their past actions. (Erratic behavior, whether due to mental illness, substance abuse, or misreading body language, can be traumatic, especially for children.) We anticipate many things, from the functioning of traffic lights to our own digestion to the reaction of a deer suddenly come upon in a meadow, based on our understanding of “how things work.” We use these strategies all the time without thinking about it. Having a reasonable sense of how events will unfold frees up mental (and physical) energy and gives us a sense of control over our lives.
Unexpected things happen, of course. Most of the time
they’re ordinary bumps and bruises like burned dinner, a sprained ankle, a
higher-than-normal electricity bill, or a traffic ticket. They can be terrible: 9-11, a hurricane, the
wildfires that swept through my part of the country a couple of years ago and
resulted in my family evacuating for a month. A death in the family. Often we
have little or no advance warning: it’s over, leaving us stunned or horrified or
grief-stricken. We don’t get to vote on what happened, we only get to pick up
the pieces afterwards. At other times, we have advance notice, like the
wildfires or other weather events (but not earthquakes, lived through a couple
of big ones, too) or Covid-19. We grab the kids and the pets and get out of
town; we wear masks and stay home, and so forth. Even if there’s nothing we can
do to protect ourselves, we often have a pretty good idea how things are going
to go. Not always, of course. I remember staying glued to local news while
camped out in our hotel room, anxiety eating away at me as the fires got closer
to our house; I’d go to sleep certain that in the morning, our place would be
ashes (but it survived with only a little storm damage).
I think war is fundamentally different. On a day-to-day
basis, for those in the fighting zones, it must be like a monstrous union
between the Chicxulub impact, the 1906 San Francisco earthquake, and the Black
Death. Adrenaline fight-or-flight panic overload survival time, one blast at a
time. But for those of us watching the catastrophe unfold from afar, anxiety takes
over as the dominant emotion. Watching one horrific event after another taxes
our ability to pay attention to the present moment, and that is normal. It’s in
our DNA to anticipate what will happen next. In our minds, we flee to the
future.
Where will Russia strike next? What weapons will they
use? What can we do to shield Ukrainian civilians? Will anything come of the
peace talks? What will China—or India—do?
Enter the pundits and op-ed writers, predicting everything
from the economic collapse of Russia and Putin being deposed, to Russia
bludgeoning Ukraine into surrender to plots, to assassinate Zelenskyy to even
wilder speculations. They speculate about increasingly grim futures: Is this
a prelude to nuclear war? The collapse of Russia and a worldwide recession?
We gobble up the columns, even though they often leave us feeling even more
anxious and wretched than before.
Why do we do this to ourselves?
I think the answer lies in how predictability lowers anxiety,
and the greater the stakes, the stronger the allure of a promised outcome.
Not-knowing is a hellish limbo, and all too often it’s more intolerable than believing
an authoritative voice with a fixed answer, no matter how grim.
I’ve started avoiding those opinion pieces. I see headlines
while I’m scrolling through news, but I’m getting better at not clicking on
them. Instead, I remind myself that masking anxiety with visions of doom is not
likely to help anyone, beginning with myself. The truth is that I don’t have a
crystal ball—and for sure the pundits don’t, either.
Working myself into a lather harms impairs my ability to
think clearly. It cannot affect the outcome of the war.
Powerlessness is hard, and in evolutionary terms it’s
dangerous. But when it is our true condition, the best way to manage it is by
seeing it for what it is, and then finding ways to make a big difference in our
own lives through good self-care and a small difference in the world.
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