A recent article in The Atlantic by Arthur C. Brooks ( How to Protect Your Happiness This Election Season) discusses how watching political, divisive, hard news can decrease happiness. The article refers to a fundamental Buddhist truth taught 2500 or so years ago, about the detriment of having attachments, in particular, attachment to opinions:
I have lived through a dozen or so presidential elections (excluding early childhood). While they were all more or less acrimonious, it feels like emotions are more intense in this one, at an unprecedented level. It's happening during multiple crises, with our nation at peak levels of divisiveness.The Buddha himself named this attachment and its terrible effects … in the Aṭṭhakavagga Sutra, when he is believed to have said, “Those attached to perception and views roam the world offending people.” More recently, the Vietnamese Buddhist sage Thích Nhất Hạnh wrote in his book Being Peace, “Humankind suffers very much from attachment to views.”
Brooks discusses relationships where hard-held, opposing opinions can be especially problematic, such as between life partners, or when differing from his or her in-laws’ opinions. It was sad but not surprising when he noted that studies show many people stopped talking to certain friends and relatives after the 2016 election due to political views.
Stop watching political news and engaging in related social media.
Every time we see/listen to a TV news story, or worse, engage with one played on Youtube or in social media, where we add our own comments or reply to (argue disparagingly with) those of others, we engage and experience negative emotions. Emotions like anger, frustration, disgust, condescension, ridicule, and just being judgmental are all tied to our stress response, including activation of the sympathetic nervous system. In fact, negative emotions are one of the easiest ways to recognize that we are in a stressed state.
One of the unique elements of this election, as unfortunate as that may be, is the polarization and divisiveness of US voters, and this is widely visible, thanks to social media and the plethora of news sources, real or fake. The difference between now and even 30 years ago is tremendous: multible 24-hour cable news stations, widespread internet use via "smart" phones with built-in cameras, texting, email, and of course, Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, etc. Combined with pandemic isolation and fear, high unemployment, and social unrest, the media can get overwhelming, and is stress triggering.
What we talk about is our focus in the moment. And what we focus on affects our stress level, for good or bad.
It also instructs your brain, "This is what I like to focus on, so be on the lookout for more!"
Perhaps that is not the best mission to give you brain right now.
Brooks’s article cites a recent (2017) Dutch study on how hard news with a political slant affects happiness. The researchers “found that on average, well-being falls 6.1 percent [emphasis added] for every additional television hard news program watched a week. They explained this by noting the dominance of negative stories on such programs, and the powerlessness viewers might feel in the face of all that bad news.”
Anybody besides me experiencing the occasional sense of powerlessness lately?
Why let our happiness fall an extra 6.1% for each story we watch? Dang, no wonder so many people are grumpy, morose, and depressed.
Perhaps, for a day, for a few weeks, decide to not check that FB or twitter account, not to play that political video or news story. Just for this moment, this one day, these a few more weeks.
Then make sure you calmly vote when it’s time to do so.