"I love that you've brought this to attention. An extensive database of uncommon but resistant and hardy plants/foods could be developed and organized by climate. Ease of growth and processing should also be taken in to account. I will try to…"
A crash course in changing the world.
1. | Self-Preservation: The first reaction to a disaster is fear and initial anxiety. People are afraid. They seek information. They do what is necessary to figure out how to save themselves. |
2. | Group Preservation: With the right information provided, there is a tremendous effort—usually guided by what we call pro-social behavior—to help others. |
3. | Blame Setting: This involves internalizing and many psychological consequences fall in place during this stage. With disasters, we talk a lot about emotional responses, about change in normal activities. This leads into efforts to try to figure out who is to blame and to do something about it by addressing the vulnerabilities and strengths that we have that resulted in that hazard becoming a disaster. |
4. | Justice Seeking: This involves externalizing. It's part of seeking redress and leads to taking action against the perceived perpetrators of the disaster. |
5. | Renormalizing: Individuals and groups adapt to the threat. I am surprised that I (and relieved) that denial didn't make the list. It is difficult for me to internalize this because I have never been directly in the path of a pandemic. I would be interested in seeing a timeline of a disaster and seeing how long each plays out and whether the same feelings are more or less experienced by all in the community. |
© 2024 Created by Alchemy. Powered by
You need to be a member of Urgent Evoke to add comments!
Join Urgent Evoke