Subscribe
The Carousel
No Result
View All Result
  • Beauty & Fashion
  • Wellness & Health
  • Travel & Leisure
  • Food & Drink
  • Lifestyle & Homes
  • News
  • About Us
  • Beauty & Fashion
  • Wellness & Health
  • Travel & Leisure
  • Food & Drink
  • Lifestyle & Homes
  • News
  • About Us
No Result
View All Result
The Carousel
No Result
View All Result
Home Wellness & Health Relationships

How To Deal With Emotional Exhaustion During COVID-19

Elisabeth Shaw by Elisabeth Shaw
26/06/2020
in Relationships, Travel Advice, Wellness & Health
0
work-life balance
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

In many ways, our lives have become simpler, more reduced versions of what we have previously led. We are not having to deal with traffic, after school activities, hectic social obligations, or numerous face-to-face interactions. Yet this period has been surprisingly emotionally exhausting, and it isn’t the sort of tiredness that a good night’s sleep seems to cure.

Emotional exhaustion

Understandably, there have been many reasons for feeling drained lately. Factors at play include:

Worry – we are more worried about our families and ourselves in terms of physical safety, and concerned about how to be seen to do a good job under new circumstances, in the midst of an economic recession.

Related articles

Top Nutritionists Share Secrets To Banishing Your Junk Food Cravings

The Best Travel Destinations According to Your Numerology

Decision making – Decisions we did without thinking suddenly are consuming, whether to go to the shops or not, whether to order take away, whether to visit grandpa, have all become that much bigger.

Boundaries – how do you ensure good limits to the day? If you have hung out some washing and cleaned the bathroom as a “break”, do you owe your employer work until 8 pm to make up for it? Do you think you should be at your desk at all hours, now that there is no “going home time”? Or have you been asked to work ‘flexible’ hours which aren’t so flexible for you? Are your views on this and that of your colleagues or boss different? Those differences can in themselves be stressful.

working from home

Skill-building – in many industries, working online was brand new. Many teachers and counsellors have been entirely used to face-to-face appointments. In order to provide services, we had to become flexible and well equipped with skills and resources to do our normal jobs a new way. That means a period of “learn on the run” which can be stressful.

tired woman, emotional exhaustion

Cerebral rather than physical – there is a lot demanded of us in the online environment on a head level. It can be very sedentary, and your usual form of exercise might be unavailable to you. You might need to cut back, and so have deferred your gym membership, or have simply been too busy. This means that we feel mentality drained but our bodies are underutilised which makes us feel sluggish and anxious.

workplace, relationships

Relationships – lack of contact and external stimulation can intensify and magnify your personal relationships. Rumination and anxiety are very exhausting and can be relentless. Being is close proximity with your partner might have put a strain on your relationship which inevitably will cause anxiety.

Starting to step up to the life you used to lead can be extremely daunting as well as a relief. Taking back some sense of control can be key to reducing the “noise” in your head. Here are some tips to help you get back on track:

Why You’re Feeling Unfulfilled And How To Fix It
Why You’re Feeling Unfulfilled And How To Fix It
  • Review your learnings and keep your new habits – what do you want to preserve from your time in lockdown, and what are you looking forward to putting behind you? Acknowledging your gratitude for the simple things in life like quality time with family or spending more time outdoors is a great way to help you continue your new habits.
  • Maintain boundaries – we are highly adaptive beings and will read our cues from others. Make yourself less available; others will cope. Consciously determine what is a good work day and start to work within it.
  • Keep a routine – if you have been staying up later, having an extra glass of wine, working too late and then being unable to sleep, then this will hugely influence your sense of fatigue.
  • Corral your worries – if you find yourself ruminating, call a wise friend or a counsellor and let the anxious thoughts reach a doable conclusion. Make some good, practical decisions you can live with and let yourself rest.
  • Invest in your relationships – if you find that your relationship is troubled, that might be true if there is a history to that, or it might be that you have not seen each other at your best during the COVID-19 pandemic. Fights may have escalated to worrying degrees, or you might be feeling lonelier within your relationships, or miss people no longer in your life. It is worth having a good sounding board to work these matters through and decide what needs to be done.

Relationships Australia NSW provides services and resources to individuals, couples and families who are seeking support to navigate challenges such as relationship breakdown, mental health, divorce and domestic violence. To make an appointment with a professional counsellor, please call 1300 364 277 or visit: relationshipsnsw.org.au

Elisabeth Shaw is CEO of Relationships Australia NSW and a clinical and counselling psychologist specialising in couple and family work.

5 Tips To Achieve A Good Work-Life Balance While Remote Working
Tags: COVID-19
Previous Post

Escape To New Caledonia With This Virtual Travel Experience Including A Yoga Class

Next Post

Looking At Aged Care And Dementia In A New Light With Natasha Chadwick

Elisabeth Shaw

Elisabeth Shaw

Elisabeth Shaw is CEO of Relationships Australia NSW and a clinical and counselling psychologist specialising in couple and family work.

Related Posts

healthy food
Health

Top Nutritionists Share Secrets To Banishing Your Junk Food Cravings

09/11/2025
Travel Advice

The Best Travel Destinations According to Your Numerology

07/11/2025
CurrentBody Face Mask
Beauty & Fashion

Latest CurrentBody LED Face Mask Has New Tech to Treat Acne Effectively

06/11/2025
kiwi fruit
Health

Sound Sleep to Fertility! Gold Kiwifruit’s 4 Fab Health Benefits

05/11/2025
Sustainability

How a Mindful Money Manifesto Can Help You Live More Sustainably

05/11/2025
Health

The Magic Of Essential Oils

05/11/2025

Recommended

Halloween Jack O Lantern Cupcakes With A Twist

Halloween Jack O Lantern Cupcakes

28/10/2025
Our Exclusive Chat With Pandora Vanderpump Sabo

Exclusive: Pandora Vanderpump-Sabo On Life As A Beverly Hills Starlet

07/07/2020

Recent Posts

How to Breastfeed Comfortably (For Both Mother and Baby)
Parenting

Freebirth Isn’t a Cult, It’s a Consequence of a System That Isn’t Listening

by Robyn Foyster
13/11/2025
0

By Moran Liviani, Lately, headlines have taken aim at women who choose freebirth, most recently  labelling it a “culty” movement....

Read moreDetails
Dubai Beauty

Forget Dubai Chocolate … This Beauty Brand May Be The Best Thing to Come Out of The UAE in 2025

13/11/2025
The School Lunchbox Dad

The Power Of A Packed Lunch

12/11/2025
New Beauty Products

15 Excellent New Beauty Products We Tried This Week

12/11/2025
Barramundi Ceviche

A Different (Still Very Delicious) Way To Do Seafood This Christmas

11/11/2025

Subscribe to Newsletter

Be the first to get daily fitness news & tips from JNews Fitness.

  • Beauty & Fashion
  • Wellness & Health
  • Travel & Leisure
  • Food & Drink
  • Lifestyle & Homes
  • News
  • About Us
Foyster Media Pty Ltd Copyright 2025
No Result
View All Result
  • Beauty & Fashion
  • Wellness & Health
  • Travel & Leisure
  • Food & Drink
  • Lifestyle & Homes
  • News
  • About Us

© 2025 Foyster Media Pty Ltd. All rights reserved