Why Are We Struggling Now?
The transition into fall is especially hard this year. Here’s why.
This morning, I woke up exhausted. In fact, everyone in my house did.
When my husband went upstairs at the usual time to give the kids breakfast, he found everyone still asleep. The 8-year-old. The 5-year-old. Even the cat.
This is not the norm.
It’s still relatively warm in Brooklyn. Though the temperature has begun to drop, it’s been reaching the 60s and 70s most days. The sun has been shining. It’s been glorious, actually. And yet we’re all dragging.
Over text and when I’ve run into parent friends in the neighborhood for the past two weeks, there’s been lots of talk about kids not listening, seeming blue, acting out, less enthusiastic than usual about school.
We ask each other, “How are you?” And, most of the time, the answer is something approximating, meh.
So, what’s going on? Why are we all so demoralized?
It’s tempting to blame Mercury Retrograde and spotted lanternflies for everything, but the truth is, astrological aspects and invasive species aside, transitioning from summer to fall is often challenging. There’s a sense of moving from freedom to confinement, from openness to inwardness. As Ali Greco, PsyD, director of user experience at mental…