Up@dawn 2.0 (blogger)

Delight Springs

Monday, April 19, 2021

Languishing

It's the neglected middle child of mental health, and can dull your motivation and focus. It may be the dominant emotion of 2021. [In Jamesian terms, it's an absence of "zest" or "delight"... and the antidote is to absorb yourself in challenging activities that you enjoy, resulting in the happy state of mind called "flow"...]

...Languishing is the neglected middle child of mental health. It's the void between depression and flourishing — the absence of well-being. You don't have symptoms of mental illness, but you're not the picture of mental health either. You're not functioning at full capacity. Languishing dulls your motivation, disrupts your ability to focus, and triples the odds that you'll cut back on work. It appears to be more common than major depression — and in some ways it may be a bigger risk factor for mental illness.

The term was coined by a sociologist named Corey Keyes, who was struck that many people who weren't depressed also weren't thriving. His research suggests that the people most likely to experience major depression and anxiety disorders in the next decade aren't the ones with those symptoms today. They're the people who are languishing right now. And new evidence from pandemic health care workers in Italy shows that those who were languishing in the spring of 2020 were three times more likely than their peers to be diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder.

Part of the danger is that when you're languishing, you might not notice the dulling of delight or the dwindling of drive. You don't catch yourself slipping slowly into solitude; you're indifferent to your indifference. When you can't see your own suffering, you don't seek help or even do much to help yourself...

https://www.nytimes.com/2021/04/19/well/mind/covid-mental-health-languishing.html?smid=em-share

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