Jewish mental health professionals like Rubenstein say they have seen an
unprecedented increase in stress, sadness and other negative feelings
that clients are directly tying to the election and its aftermath.
Their testimonies speak to a larger trend: A
January study by the American Psychological Association found that more
than half of all Americans cited the political climate as a very or
somewhat significant source of stress.
Elections usually lead to discontent from the
losing side, but not anxiety and depression, said Sam Menahem, a
psychologist based in Fort Lee, New Jersey.
“Every election people might talk about it a
little bit, they don’t like the candidate that won, but it doesn’t make
them more anxious or depressed,” said Menahem, who has been practicing
psychology for 44 years. “They didn’t get their way, whether it’s a
Republican or a Democrat, but I’ve never seen anything like this —
never.”
He estimated that 60% of his patients were “experiencing exacerbation or worsening of symptoms after the election.”
Indeed, the APA survey found that the average
stress level saw its first “statistically significant increase” since it
was first conducted a decade ago: from 4.8 to 5.1 on a 1-10 scale in
the period of August 2016-January 2017.
Much of the anxiety can be traced to the
surprise victory of an unusually polarizing candidate over the apparent
front-runner and more conventional politician, Hillary Clinton. Jewish
voters supported Clinton over Trump by a margin of 3-1. Consequently,
they are overrepresented among people disappointed by Trump’s victory.
As to the degree of that disappointment,
mental health professionals and patients point to all the things that
make Trump unconventional: his impulsive tweets, his thin skin, his
embrace of various conspiracy theories, his lack of political experience
and the apparent chaos surrounding his inner circle in his first months
in office, to name a few.[...]
Political polarization has spilled into
people’s personal lives, threatening to tear apart close relationships,
said Nancy Kislin, a social worker in Chatham, New Jersey.
Kislin said that she had clients who had ended romantic relationships based on disagreements over Trump.
“I’ve never seen this before,” said Kislin,
noting that she had worked in private practice for 13 years, during the
presidencies of George W. Bush and Barack Obama.
Seth Grobman, a clinical psychologist in
Davie, Florida, said patients have ended relationships with family
members and friends due to post-election political disagreements. To be
sure, political polarization isn’t the only factor in play, he said,
noting that widespread social media use was also to blame.[...]
Well, at least they didn't blame Mr. Trump for poisoning wells, using children's blood to bake with, having all the money, and being spawn of the devil.
ReplyDeleteOh, the poor poor snowflakes.
ReplyDeleteTell me again, are snowflakes the people who get annoyed at protesters who "can't accept democracy" or at people who call Trump a racist or who think that everyone they disagree with (usually an acronym like FBI, CIA, GCHQ, EU, UN, BDS, all Muslims) threaten their very existence?
ReplyDeleteActually the Right are far bigger snowflakes. You try telling them something they don't like, like Obama was a good president or Netanyahu is wrong about something, and see what happens.
ReplyDelete