Pandemic Anxiety: The Ebb and Flow of Emotional Wellness

I was talking with a girlfriend about the pandemic the other day when I uttered this personal fear. “Most days, I’m okay. Working, taking care of the kids, the house, life. But sometimes I wonder…what if there isn’t going to be any getting back to normal? What if this is what life is like now?”

Even though I work in the mental health field, and know many of the tips and tricks for managing my mental state when things are turning blue inside my head, I have, like so many others, struggled to keep my emotional wellbeing above the waterline during this past year.

Like any year, there have been the usual challenges, both personal and professional, that I’ve had to process and work my way through. I’ve reframed the problems. Thought outside the box. Come at my troubles from a different perspective. And even reminded myself that when one door closes… well, you know.

And that is all well and good and important to practice. For the most part, I feel like I’ve gotten pretty good at the mental and emotional gymnastics required to just navigate life while keeping the spirits up. That’s not to say I don’t get overwhelmed, negative, and even indulge in some light self-sabotage thinking at times, because I certainly do. But long gone are those days in my teens, twenties, and early thirties where depression, bottomless self-doubt, and the crushing cognitive consequences of early programming haunted my every thought about my past, present, and future self.

As I approached life as a middle-aged woman, I worked hard to give the girl I had been a goddamn break. To take care of her. Nurture her. Let her know I know she’s been TRYING all these years and that she was already ENOUGH. She always had been. Period.

I had learned along the way of this life that if you hadn’t been given something you really needed by someone who should have handed it to you as you were growing–it was 100% okay to double back in your life and give it to yourself.

You CAN rewrite your own narrative. Upend your history. Give yourself a new back story. From there you are free to live your new present, envision that better future.

These have been VERY powerful, life-changing lessons for me. Hand to heart, both cognitive and behavioral therapy techniques have completely changed my life for the better. And while it’s not always easy, and I’m not perfect and do sometimes slip (negative self-talk, self-sabotage, etc) for the most part I’ve been able to keep my neural activity pointed toward the sun for the past ten years.

Plot twist?

Enter a pandemic.

And suddenly that new present and better future are a whole lot harder to conceptualize. Even though I’ve executed a mental trapeze act that has created a much better life circus than the one I was born into, it now seems the tent poles of our collective existence may be buckling around me. At least it sure feels that way some days.

Keeping a positive mindset can be hard under normal life circumstances. Given our current reality? It can feel naive, irresponsible…downright impossible when nothing is as it was and the only sure thing is that nothing is sure right now.

It’s no longer simply a matter of bolstering and shoring up my past self; It’s every day working to assuage the fear of what lies ahead. The road that is now unfamiliar, poorly lit, and of unexplored length. Striding down it with a healthy dose of self-confidence suddenly doesn’t feel like the most relevant of mindsets.

No. I suspect what is actually needed right now is courage, faith (the blinder, the better), a metric ton of hope, and a dizzying degree of overt kindness (for others, yes, but also for ourselves.)

Some days, the day I confessed my fear to my friend, my courage is failing me. I worry about everything: my kids, our jobs, the entirety of society as we once knew it. I lose faith in the hope of vaccines. I doubt in our ability as a society to ever work together again. Worst of all…I can’t envision what our future will be. Not mine. Not yours.

In those moments I’m all ebb, no flow.

Thankfully, learning to manage my personal demons over the years has left me with some skills for also corralling these external dragons.

First of all, I recognize I’m spiraling in the first place.

Next up, breathing. Deep, long, chest filling breaths. It’s almost a guarantee that if I’m starting to freak out about something, I’m either unwittingly holding my breath or taking shallow breaths.

Finally, I wrangle my thoughts. Typically they have flown out the window and are riding the updrafts and death drops of anxiety. I challenge my catastrophic thoughts, one by one if I have to, and lay to rest the ones that have ZERO supporting evidence or are completely based on “what-if” premises.

Honestly, usually 95% of them can be resolved this way.

For the other 5%, objectively real-world problems, I find that these are usually much more amendable by real-world problem-solving solutions once they aren’t being super fueled, and confounded, by the catastrophic thoughts and “what-if” fears. Work problems, kid problems, finance problems, house problems, problems that I feel capable of developing a plan of action for once my brain is no longer hijacked by fears along the lines of:

THE WORLD AS WE KNOW IT IS COMING TO AN END!

Other things that help:

Taking walks

Listen to, calming, music

Meditating (I KNOW…but it works)

Taking a bath

Playing/snuggling with my pets

Hugging my kids and telling them I love them

Hugging my husband and telling him I love him

Cleaning my house (I don’t think this is just me, when my spaces are clean and organized, my anxiety goes way down)

Reading books (written by OTHER people)

Watching fun, non-news related, TV and/or movies

Journaling (specifically about what I am grateful for)

Zooming with friends

It’s true, we are not living in easy times right now. It is unrealistic, and probably unhealthy, to imagine we won’t feel anxious, afraid, uncertain…maybe even terrified at times. But also we don’t have to lose ourselves entirely to the fear and worries either.

It’s normal to experience these emotional ebbs and flows right now, but we should never forget that we have ways of managing the tide.

My Recent Reads

So far, I’ve read three books in 2021 and I can honestly say that I feel like I’ve hit nothing but home runs with them. If you are considering buying any of these titles, please support your local bookstore!

In order of reading:

#1 The Last Flight by Julie Clark

(Sidenote, Julie Clark and I share the same publisher, Sourcebooks Landmark)

Claire Cook has a perfect life. Married to the scion of a political dynasty, with a Manhattan townhouse and a staff of ten, her surroundings are elegant, her days flawlessly choreographed, and her future auspicious. But behind closed doors, nothing is quite as it seems. That perfect husband has a temper that burns as bright as his promising political career, and he’s not above using his staff to track Claire’s every move, making sure she’s living up to his impossible standards. But what he doesn’t know is that Claire has worked for months on a plan to vanish.

A chance meeting in an airport bar brings her together with a woman whose circumstances seem equally dire. Together they make a last-minute decision to switch tickets—Claire taking Eva’s flight to Oakland, and Eva traveling to Puerto Rico as Claire. They believe the swap will give each of them the head start they need to begin again somewhere far away. But when the flight to Puerto Rico goes down, Claire realizes it’s no longer a head start but a new life. Cut off, out of options, with the news of her death about to explode in the media, Claire will assume Eva’s identity, and along with it, the secrets Eva fought so hard to keep hidden.

#2 The Midnight Library by Matt Haig (audio edition)

(I listened to this one on my commute to and from work. I thought the reading, by Carey Mulligan, was wonderfully executed.)

Somewhere out beyond the edge of the universe there is a library that contains an infinite number of books, each one the story of another reality. One tells the story of your life as it is, along with another book for the other life you could have lived if you had made a different choice at any point in your life. While we all wonder how our lives might have been, what if you had the chance to go to the library and see for yourself? Would any of these other lives truly be better?

In The Midnight Library, Matt Haig’s enchanting new novel, Nora Seed finds herself faced with this decision. Faced with the possibility of changing her life for a new one, following a different career, undoing old breakups, realizing her dreams of becoming a glaciologist; she must search within herself as she travels through the Midnight Library to decide what is truly fulfilling in life, and what makes it worth living in the first place.

#3 The Wife Upstairs by Rachel Hawkins

(A fun, fast paced Jane Eyre retelling. I finished this one in a day! This is Rachel Hawkins first novel geared toward the adult reading market.)

Meet Jane. Newly arrived to Birmingham, Alabama, Jane is a broke dog-walker in Thornfield Estates––a gated community full of McMansions, shiny SUVs, and bored housewives. The kind of place where no one will notice if Jane lifts the discarded tchotchkes and jewelry off the side tables of her well-heeled clients. Where no one will think to ask if Jane is her real name.

But her luck changes when she meets Eddie Rochester. Recently widowed, Eddie is Thornfield Estates’ most mysterious resident. His wife, Bea, drowned in a boating accident with her best friend, their bodies lost to the deep. Jane can’t help but see an opportunity in Eddie––not only is he rich, brooding, and handsome, he could also offer her the kind of protection she’s always yearned for.

Yet as Jane and Eddie fall for each other, Jane is increasingly haunted by the legend of Bea, an ambitious beauty with a rags-to-riches origin story, who launched a wildly successful southern lifestyle brand. How can she, plain Jane, ever measure up? And can she win Eddie’s heart before her past––or his––catches up to her?

With delicious suspense, incisive wit, and a fresh, feminist sensibility, The Wife Upstairs flips the script on a timeless tale of forbidden romance, ill-advised attraction, and a wife who just won’t stay buried. In this vivid reimagining of one of literature’s most twisted love triangles, which Mrs. Rochester will get her happy ending?

Cover Reveal: THE SECRET NEXT DOOR

Today I’m excited to share the cover for my new book, The Secret Next Door, which will be releasing from Sourcebooks on November 9th, 2021.

Subscribers to my newsletter got to see this first. If you’re not already a subscriber, please consider joining! You’ll always get my latest news first and I have special monthly giveaways (like books or gift cards to your favorite book retailers) as a special thank you for subscribing.

Here’s the sign-up form. I look forward to seeing you as a member of that community!

From my publisher:

It’s the perfect neighborhood, filled with not-so-perfect people.

Alyson Tinsdale is giving her son the childhood she never had: a stable family, loving home, and a great school in a safe neighborhood. When they move into the home of her dreams in one of Denver’s most sought-after developments, Alyson works hard to fit in and impress the other mothers.

Bonnie Sloan is the neighborhood matriarch. With her oldest son headed to Yale, and her youngest starting kindergarten, Bonnie is now pursuing her own long-held political aspirations. But it’s her middle child, Elijah, and their private family struggles, that cast a shadow over her plans.

When the open space behind some of the most expensive homes gets slated for development into an amusement facility, the neighborhood becomes deeply divided. The personal pressures and community conflicts ratchet with every passing day, but it’s when a thirteen-year-old is found dead beside the lake, that simmering tensions boil over into panic.

Gossip flows, lies are exposed, and accusations are made as cracks run through the community’s once solid foundations. The neighborhood’s faith in exterior appearances is eclipsed by the secrets every house keeps.

Rebecca Taylor, author of Her Perfect Life, returns with this fast-paced, engrossing novel that reminds us that nothing is ever as perfect as it seems.

Preorder your copy today!

Add The Secret Next Door to your Goodreads “want to read” list!

Add The Secret Next Door to your Book Bub wish list!

Update: The Secret Next Door

I’m excited to share that I have finished with the major edits for The Secret Next Door and we are now moving on to copy edits!

*happy dancing*

I have also seen the concept for the cover design and I’m thrilled to say that I will be able to share the final version within the next couple of weeks. This is the fun part when all those hours and hard work start to come together and I know I’m close to being able to hold the finished book in my hands.

And share it with my readers!

If you haven’t yet added The Secret Next Door to your Goodreads “Want To Read” list, here’s the link.

I know that the October release date seems like a long way off, but that time is really going to fly. Especially once I start working on all the marketing and promotion.

My only wish is that, this time, I’ll get to schedule and attend some in-person signing events since ALL of that got canceled for Her Perfect Life because of the pandemic.

Fingers crossed.

In personal news, it’s looking like I might be up for receiving the vaccine here in the next 1-2 weeks. I can’t wait.

Book Club Read: Her Perfect Life

As you may have guessed from my Monday post, I’m sometimes behind the curve with regards to the latest and greatest reads. I generally buy many of the most buzzed-about books in any given year but they often sit on my shelves, side table, or every other horizontal surface in my house waiting for the stars to align between us.

I own books enough for my lifetime and the next. But I LOVE to buy them and have faith I will eventually get to them.

I usually do.

Many book clubs, including mine, are looking for the titles to fill their 2021 calendar. May I suggest Her Perfect Life? I will say, I really did have book clubs in mind when I wrote it. It’s a page-turner for the busy reader but doesn’t skimp on the rich character development and emotional depth.

Testimonial from one of my five star Amazon reviews: T. Crane “This book should be on every book club list to read.”

So if you’d like to add it to yours this year, here’s the link to my publisher’s page with all retailer options.

And, if your book club does decide to read it and you would like me to show up virtually to join you, send me an email: rebecca@rrtaylor.com and we’ll get it scheduled.

From my publisher:

“Will command readers’ attention and hearts with this engrossing tale of two very different sisters.”-Library Journal 

“I couldn’t put it down!”-Shelley Noble, New York Times bestselling author 

“I was captivated until the very end!”-Courtney Cole, New York Times Bestselling Author 

“It felt like sneaking a read of someone’s fascinating private diary–and being completely powerless to put it down.”-A.G. Henley, USA Today bestselling author

“Compulsively readable from the first page. -Kelly Simmons, author of One More Day and Where She Went

A page-turner that keeps the reader wanting more until the very last page.”-Alison Hammer, author of You and Me and Us

“A beautifully written and intricate novel”- Anita Kushwaha, author of Secret Lives of Mothers and Daughters

Reclusive Clare Collins crafts her novels like she crafts her life: perfectly. So the world is stunned when the famous author is found dead on the beach from a self-inflicted gunshot — the morning after her latest book hits the shelves.

Her sister, Eileen, is at a loss. Clare led a charmed life: success, mansions, money…why would she throw it all away? But while reading through her sister’s latest–and greatest–novel, Eileen discovers a clue that unravels the fiction and reveals the painful truth. Suddenly, the life that Eileen had envied doesn’t seem so sparkling . . .

Her Perfect Life is a page-turning debut that reminds us that no matter the success, everyone has secrets. And some are more devastating than others.

My Top Five: Books I Read in 2020

2020 was the first year I ever participated in the Goodreads Reading Challenge. At the beginning of 2020, I decided I would try to read one book a week so I set my goal at 52 books.

Well, I didn’t read 52 books but I did read 25 (and purchased many, many more than that!), and considering I was also launching Her Perfect Life, writing The Secret Next Door, working a full-time job, and trying to navigate a pandemic, I’m going to call that pretty good.

If you’d like to see my full Goodreads list, here is the link.

So which were my favorite? Here’s the list in no particular order:

The Ten Thousand Doors of January by Alix E. Harrow

The Silent Patient by Alex Michaelides

The Immortalists by Chloe Benjamin

Luster by Raven Leilani

Atomic Habits by James Clear

So many of the books I read last year were stellar, but these were the real standouts for me.

As for 2021, I will participate in the Goodreads Reading Challenge again, but I’m thinking I’ll set a more realistic goal given my current schedule. With the desire to still improve on last year’s number I’m going to shoot for 30 books this year.

Email Purge

Do you ever start off doing one simple thing that then becomes an epic quest you never intended to start?

Yesterday, facing an email account with over 18,000 emails (mostly unread junk) I decided to start unsubscribing my account from a few retailers.

Which led to searching for and deleting those emails.

Which led to more unsubscribing.

Which led to more searching and deleting.

Which led to a laser focus and the need to complete this task in its entirety before I could ever sleep again.

This morning, I woke up to four new emails–FOUR! Usually, there are at least thirty just to get the day started, and those are followed by a steady stream of noise, noise, noise pinging me all day long.

So this morning, I unsubscribed from one, read one, and deleted the other two. And for the rest of today, and every day from now on, I want to avoid ever having so much junk in my email ever again.

It feels good to have a tidy email box. Like having a tidy house.

And it’s also got me thinking about contributing to the noise in other people’s mailboxes. I’m not saying I’ll never send another newsletter again–I am trying to sell some books here, after all.

But I think I’d like it to be a rare occurrence. Only when something is really, really going on around here. Like a book releasing into the world.

I didn’t realize how much the digital garbage had piled up or how much that clutter was impacting my physical energy until I got rid of it.

They’re just emails–but every one of them was competing for my time and attention, forcing me to wade through them for information and messages that I truly need.

Maybe it sounds silly, but it actually feels amazing to have it cleaned up.

Writing a New Book

With The Secret Next Door now back with my editor for second round edits, a new book idea has planted itself in my head.

I was reluctant to start this new book for some reason but I didn’t really know why.

Maybe I was a little tired from just finishing The Secret Next Door?

Maybe I was a little burned out from my day job?

Maybe it was because I was scared to commit to a new book.

All of this was true. But I think it was also because when I start a new book, there is a lot of thinking and planning for the future of that book that gets baked into the process.

As we close out 2020 it’s been difficult to think and plan for the future. I’m looking forward to 2021, I have hope that things will get better and better–a little more every month.

But it’s true that right now, nothing yet seems solid. So when I envision a future that includes a potential new book finding its place, the image is still fuzzy at best.

However, the book has begun anyway. In hope and faith.

Which is actually how any book ever really gets written anyway.

My Next Book…

I’m excited to share with you information about my next book!

I already shared this with my newsletter subscribers weeks ago, and they’ll also be the first to see the new book cover once my publisher finishes with it. If you’d like to be among the first to get these updates, here is the link to subscribe.

If you’re on the fence about subscribing, I only manage to send about one update a month. So it’s really not too crazy-making with gobs of emails.

Now, about the new book.

In my last newsletter, I shared lots of insider dirt about the original title, how I came up with it, and how and why my publisher thought we should change it. So I won’t go into all that again here. I’ll just share the title we landed on, and the current blurb (which will also likely change).

So here it is. Publication is currently scheduled for October 2021.

The Secret Next Door

It’s a perfect neighborhood, filled with imperfect people.

Alyson Tinsdale is giving her son the childhood she never had: a stable family, a loving home, and a great school in a safe neighborhood. When they move into the home of her dreams in one of Denver’s most sought after neighborhoods, The Enclave, Alyson works hard to fit in, and impress, the other mothers—despite the growing sense she’s out of her league among their affluent social clique.

Bonnie Sloan is The Enclave’s matriarch. Her family built this neighborhood. With her oldest son headed to Yale and her youngest starting kindergarten, Bonnie is now pursuing her own long-held political aspirations—a Colorado senate seat. But it’s her middle child, Elijah, and their private family struggles, that cast a shadow over her plans.

When the open space behind some of the most expensive homes in the community gets slated for development into an amusement facility, Extreme Golf, the neighborhood becomes deeply divided on the issue. The Enclave community page suddenly erupts with long-held grudges, grievances, and verbal abuse. Seemingly overnight, Alyson’s dream neighborhood has devolved into a war zone while her once stable marriage is fracturing before her.

The personal pressures and community conflicts ratchet with every passing day, but it’s when a thirteen-year-old is found dead beside the neighborhood lake, that simmering tensions boil over into panic.

Gossip flows, lies are exposed, and accusations are made as cracks run through the once solid Enclave foundations. The community’s faith in exterior appearance is eclipsed by the secrets every house keeps. 

If you’re on Goodreads, please add The Secret Next Door to your “want to read” shelf here!

To buy my book on the darknet use the archetyp market.