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Weariness sets in as pandemic enters third year with no end in sight

Carleen Anderson, lead cake decorator at Twiggs Bakery & Coffeehouse, adds finishing touches to a strawberry and cream cake.
Carleen Anderson, lead cake decorator at Twiggs Bakery & Coffeehouse on Adams Avenue in University Heights, decorates a strawberries and cream cake Friday.
(Howard Lipin / For The San Diego Union-Tribune)

‘Right now, the fatigue is coming into an all-time high’

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Whether you are vaccinated or unvaccinated, the recent surge caused by the highly transmissible Omicron variant probably feels like a cruel joke as it pushes the pandemic into its third year. And it’s taking a toll.

“Right now, the fatigue is coming into an all-time high, having to do this Groundhog Day over and over and over again,” said Cathryn Nacario, CEO of National Alliance on Mental Illness of San Diego and Imperial counties. “And everybody’s just exhausted.”

Nacario, who also is president of The Mental Health Contractors Association of San Diego County, said mental health providers in large and small agencies have shared similar experiences, with clients who feel frustrated and confused by shifting guidelines issued by county, state and federal agencies.

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“It’s a weekly changing moving target that’s taken its toll on everybody,” she said. “It has people completely over the top. There’s also desperation of, ‘When is this going to be over with?’”

After completing a 12-hour shift the day before, San Diego clinical psychologist Michelle Carcel said anxiety levels had dropped last year as infection rates decreased and businesses reopened, but they’re on the rise again.

“We’re seeing this across the board,” she said, adding that the back-and-forth rules of how to function during the pandemic have added to stress levels.

That frustration was summed up in a recent Instagram post by Twiggs Bakery and Cafe co-owner Dan Stringfield.

“I’m fighting that ‘here we go again’ feeling,” he wrote in a post about learning that two orders for wedding cakes had been canceled with less than a week’s notice because the ceremonies had been postponed due to COVID-19.

“We got through it before,” the post continued. “We’ll get through it again, though this time we’re dead inside. Joking. Sort of. This too shall pass.”

Reached at the bakery’s North Park location, Stringfield said orders for eight birthday cakes also had been canceled in the past few weeks.

“It’s not like we’re going to go bankrupt, but it’s this ‘deja vu all over again’ feeling,” he said.

While frustrating and stressful, things have been worse. Toilet paper has not disappeared from shelves as it did in the early days of the pandemic, theaters and restaurants are open, and there are no long lines to get into Costco and other stores.

But as bad as 2020 was, there was a sense then that the ordeal was temporary. Now it feels never-ending.

“I think it’s almost at a scarier crisis level because we did fall into a little complacency,” Nacario said. “You know, ‘Things are getting better, it’s going to be over, 2022 is going to be great.’ And then everybody got kind of backhanded with this, and it’s deflating.”

And the stress isn’t just about the pandemic, Carcel said.

“This is in combination with other things going on,” she said. “We’re also seeing changes in our economic situation, financial situations. This is happening in a political way as well. So we’re seeing a little bit of a resurgence in anxiety and depressive symptoms in a lot of people.”

Inflation hasn’t been this bad in 40 years, the supply chain disruption is affecting everything from tacos to auto parts, and the country seems more politically divided than ever. People who had looked forward to vacations are making other plans as thousands of flights have been canceled because of staffing shortages caused by Omicron cases.

Locally, thousands of people are affected by a trash strike that began before Christmas, capacity at hospital emergency rooms is at a critical level, and traffic that had disappeared at the start of the pandemic is back with a vengeance.

“There’s a lot of external factors that are influencing people‘s overall mood, and that’s triggering for people who have trauma histories,” she said.

While anxiety levels may have reached an all-time high, Carcel said the stress has been building for some time. Her practice is at capacity, and she said she hasn’t taken a new client in months.

Carcel said people who had developed ways to handle stress are seeing those skills and strategies wane during the new surge.

Meditation is a form of stress relief for many people, and Dharma Bums Buddhist Temple co-founder Jeff Zlotnik said classes in the practice have soared during the pandemic.

“They’re afraid, they’re uncertain, and I think scared with what they’re dealing with now,” he said about people who have begun meditating. “And that’s led people to seek something for their mental and emotional health.

“In short, there’s a tremendous increase in people we’re seeing, and it’s a stress level that I’ve never seen in my life. And we’ve been running this temple for 15 years.”

The University Heights temple was closed for about 17 months, but meditation classes continued virtually. Zlotnik said participation soared, with the temple’s YouTube channel reaching 22,000 hours in December.

As coronavirus cases dropped last year, the temple reopened in July. With Omicron cases on the rise, it closed last week.

“Here we go for round two of being shut down completely,” Zlotnik said.

Going back to online sessions was the right thing he do, he said, adding that 15 people have thanked him for thinking of their health and safety. Ironically, attending meditation classes in person was causing people to stress out, he said.

“Even though people are tired of being shut out, they’re just more comfortable not being there in person,” Zlotnik said.

The high stress levels have been particularly hard on school-age children and their families, said neurophysiologist Joanna Savarese.

“Because it’s been so inconsistent over the last few years, the kids haven’t been able to stabilize,” she said. “You’re kind of going in and out. We were going into lockdown, and then we weren’t. And some schools were online and some weren’t. Some schools had masks and some schools didn’t. There’s just a lot of inconsistency in the educational system right now because of COVID.”

Savarese is owner of San Diego BrainWorks, and last week she launched The Forum at San Diego BrainWorks, an intensive outpatient program for adolescents that she started after seeing a strong need in the community.

“We’re focusing on all adolescent mental health issues, and we’re also working with families managing themselves, managing their kids, managing communication, coping strategies and support,” she said.

The isolation of distance learning added to the pressure of students to perform, she said, and attending classes at home added more pressure on parents who had to observe them. That could be especially exasperating for parents with children who have learning challenges and mood issues, she said.

“It put a lot of added pressure on parents who also work and need to manage their own lives,” she said about how all family members are affected by distance learning during the pandemic.

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