Coronavirus has taken a toll on Americans’ mental health. In fact, according to a recent Kaiser Family Foundation poll, nearly half of adults say the pandemic has had a negative impact on their mental health.
So how can you help yourself get through this difficult time?
“Many times during the day, I remind myself of all I’m grateful for, because I know gratitude is the biggest antidote to the stress and disconnection so many of us are experiencing now,” said Arianna Huffington, the CEO of well-being and productivity platform Thrive Global and founder of The Huffington Post.
Huffington recently chatted with Know Your Value founder and “Morning Joe” co-host Mika Brzezinski about how we can build resilience, her life under quarantine, the future of work and much more:
Mika: Where and who are you quarantining with?
Arianna: Right now, I’m sheltering in place at my home in Los Angeles with my daughters and my sister.
Mika: How has it been, and what do you find is the most challenging part of this for you? What have you been doing to cope with this challenge?
Arianna: It’s challenging, of course, so many times during the day I remind myself of all I’m grateful for. Because I know gratitude is the biggest antidote to the stress and disconnection so many of us are experiencing now — and that living in a state of gratitude is our gateway to grace and a vital part of our well-being. Gratitude reminds us that we are not alone, and this is not forever.
I am working hard to bring Thrive’s solutions to companies and individuals. I love my work and the main thing for me has been managing all our Thrive employees scattered all around the world. A lot of the things that Thrive is about — how can we show up at work and in our lives really recharged and connected with our own wisdom, with our own sense of creativity and empathy — are now indispensable. They’re no longer just nice things to have, because when we are frazzled and when we are exhausted, it’s very hard to be empathetic and it’s very hard to be creative and deal with the growing stresses of living in these very uncertain times. And when we are reading constantly about the latest coronavirus news all that adds to that generic atmosphere of stress.
Mika: What surprising things have you learned about yourself during this time?
Arianna: It’s not surprising to me but it might be surprising to others: I really am an introvert! I’ve always known this about myself, but life in quarantine has proved it beyond a doubt.
Mika: How do we best approach a shift in mindset to this unpredictable timeframe and new landscape?
Arianna: We approach it by acknowledging that the goal is not to return to the pre-pandemic “normal” but to emerge into a world that is better, fairer and more compassionate than the one we leave behind.
Because the pandemic has made it all too clear that we cannot continue to live and work the way we have — breathlessly and always on. The casualties of this way of living have been proliferating for years: the skyrocketing increase in chronic diseases like diabetes and hypertension; the increase in mental health problems like depression and anxiety, the increase in stress and burnout, which the World Health Organization identified as a workplace crisis last spring.









