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I Asked 100 People What They Learned From Lockdown

Created time
Aug 7, 2022 12:06 AM
Author
dev.to
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Genre
Book Name
I Asked 100 People What They Learned From Lockdown
Modified
Last updated December 26, 2023
Summary
I Asked 100 People What They Learned From Lockdown is an article from dev.to that offers insights from individuals who were affected by the pandemic. It discusses themes such as how people dealt with their physical and mental health under restrictions, how their productivity levels changed, and how the pandemic reshaped their view of the world. Key learnings include: ā€¢ People had to adapt to the situation and opportunities to use technology to adjust their work environment. ā€¢ Many felt the physical and mental effects of prolonged isolation, but also experienced new pathways for personal development. ā€¢ People found new ways to stay connected with family and friends, and discovered a deeper appreciation of time, nature, and freedom. This article is a valuable read for UX designers as it provides insight into how people have been affected by external situations and changes, and how they have adapted to them. As a UX designer, it can be beneficial to understand how people handle change and use technology to their advantage. If this article interests you, you should check out related books such as The Design of Everyday Things by Don Norman, Lean UX by Jeff Gothelf, and Information Architecture by Louis Rosenfeld.

šŸŽ€Ā Highlights

started off feeling like a holiday, but now, more than a year in, its initial charm has definitely worn off.
it started off feeling like a holiday, but now, more than a year in, its initial charm has definitely worn off.
Having a routine is severely underrated. I never realised just how much I needed one until my overall physical and mental health took a complete nosedive.
power and importance of habits is heavily emphasised in ā€œAtomic Habitsā€ by James Clear, the ability to make an action ā€˜second natureā€™ and be able to do it subconsciously is something that I have found incredibly useful!
spend time on your hobbies because they will make you happy
get more work done and learn new skills to improve myself.
I had a crazy amount of free time during peak COVID and didnā€™t utilise it how I should have.
Write. Things. Down. It helps keep yourself accountable.
taught me that I can manage myself effectively, even without the structure that school and university provides.
some may have crumbled under the vast amounts of ā€˜free timeā€™, others made use of the extra hours and put them towards something meaningful.
the days where you arenā€™t motivated and donā€™t feel like getting to it are the days that really count.
The other thing I started to practice was talking to strangers more.
have a really big problem with overthinking and analysis paralysis. I realised
A lot of people seemed to have issues in this department ā€” overthinking, planning paralysis, procrastination, sound familiar?
my main concern was that it would
working from home is not necessarily a good thing (and is possibly more bad than good). I was always skeptical about the concept because my main concern was that it would be a breeding ground for fraud. This turned out to be true, but thatā€™s another story.
happens to be massively detrimental to your productivity. As it turns out, being at home in a place
being at home in a place with a lot of distracting things you would rather do instead of work while struggling with procrastination isnā€™t really a recipe for success
You can do 90% of the work without going to office if youā€™re working on computers.
Stay active even though there was barely a reason to get out. Iā€™m now in serious pain (neck/ā€‹back) and Iā€™m trying to undo what Iā€™ve done to myself.
Donā€™t waste time and energy on people who donā€™t bring anything productive or positive to your life.
My friendly exchange in conversation with the 7/ā€‹11 cashier is the highlight of my day sometimes
Iā€™ve always valued having a small, but stable group of friends to surround myself with, which has been an absolute god-ā€‹send during the past year.
As soon as lockdown started, I fell into the boat that if I donā€™t come out of lockdown with a new skill or business that Iā€™ve failed. So I learned to love myself more,
I get genuinely annoyed at myself if I donā€™t get enough work done or put things off until the last minute.
Iā€™ve learned that my standards were simply too high to be maintained consistently, and every now and then I should cut myself some slack.
having goals for each day makes your rest feel earned.
People couldnā€™t even agree to wear masks during a deadly, highly contagious viral outbreak because itā€™s not what theyā€™re used to doing,
what people belief doesnā€™t matter nearly as much as how they behave because holy shit there is no end to the cognitive dissonance that human beings are capable of.
Red wine can replace orange juice with breakfast and it has a longer shelf life.ā€¦
First lesson: Never attempt to eat a bat,
donā€™t stress about whatā€™s out of your control, sometimes it just ā€œis what it isā€.
Society is just a bunch of social constructs stacked on top of each-other, and weā€™re fully capable of changing those constructs at any time.
The only barrier is getting people to agree to do it, and they will fight you at all costs,
every time I encounter a problem, I will always try to ask myself now: Is this worth the stress? Will this even matter 1, 5, 10 years from now?
I used to fixate over little things that now seem so pointless and small when you consider the bigger picture.
I used to fixate over little things that now seem so pointless and small when you consider the bigger picture. I re-read ā€˜The Subtle Art of Not Giving a Fuckā€ by Mark
I used to fixate over little things that
I used to fixate over little things that now seem so pointless and small when you consider the bigger picture. I re-read ā€˜The Subtle Art of Not Giving a Fuckā€ by Mark Manson, and second time around, the key ideas really stuck.
https://dev.to/torbet/i-asked-100-people-what-they-learned-from-lockdown-5god
generally tend to realise the true value of simple things once we lose them.
running into familiar people every day makes the pandemic feel less awful.
Appreciate that youā€™re able to wake up the next day and be given the chance to breathe in fresh air and have the sun kiss our skin. Thousands of lives who are no longer with us wonā€™t ever get to wake up again.
Because all.the proof in the world doesnā€™t necessarily change behaviour,
started off feeling like a holiday, but now, more than a year in, its initial charm has definitely worn off.
it started off feeling like a holiday, but now, more than a year in, its initial charm has definitely worn off.
Having a routine is severely underrated. I never realised just how much I needed one until my overall physical and mental health took a complete nosedive.
power and importance of habits is heavily emphasised in ā€œAtomic Habitsā€ by James Clear, the ability to make an action ā€˜second natureā€™ and be able to do it subconsciously is something that I have found incredibly useful!
spend time on your hobbies because they will make you happy
get more work done and learn new skills to improve myself.
I had a crazy amount of free time during peak COVID and didnā€™t utilise it how I should have.
Write. Things. Down. It helps keep yourself accountable.
taught me that I can manage myself effectively, even without the structure that school and university provides.
some may have crumbled under the vast amounts of ā€˜free timeā€™, others made use of the extra hours and put them towards something meaningful.
the days where you arenā€™t motivated and donā€™t feel like getting to it are the days that really count.
The other thing I started to practice was talking to strangers more.
have a really big problem with overthinking and analysis paralysis. I realised
A lot of people seemed to have issues in this department ā€” overthinking, planning paralysis, procrastination, sound familiar?
my main concern was that it would
working from home is not necessarily a good thing (and is possibly more bad than good). I was always skeptical about the concept because my main concern was that it would be a breeding ground for fraud. This turned out to be true, but thatā€™s another story.
happens to be massively detrimental to your productivity. As it turns out, being at home in a place
being at home in a place with a lot of distracting things you would rather do instead of work while struggling with procrastination isnā€™t really a recipe for success
You can do 90% of the work without going to office if youā€™re working on computers.
Stay active even though there was barely a reason to get out. Iā€™m now in serious pain (neck/ā€‹back) and Iā€™m trying to undo what Iā€™ve done to myself.
Donā€™t waste time and energy on people who donā€™t bring anything productive or positive to your life.
My friendly exchange in conversation with the 7/ā€‹11 cashier is the highlight of my day sometimes
Iā€™ve always valued having a small, but stable group of friends to surround myself with, which has been an absolute god-ā€‹send during the past year.
As soon as lockdown started, I fell into the boat that if I donā€™t come out of lockdown with a new skill or business that Iā€™ve failed. So I learned to love myself more,
I get genuinely annoyed at myself if I donā€™t get enough work done or put things off until the last minute.
Iā€™ve learned that my standards were simply too high to be maintained consistently, and every now and then I should cut myself some slack.
having goals for each day makes your rest feel earned.
People couldnā€™t even agree to wear masks during a deadly, highly contagious viral outbreak because itā€™s not what theyā€™re used to doing,
what people belief doesnā€™t matter nearly as much as how they behave because holy shit there is no end to the cognitive dissonance that human beings are capable of.
Red wine can replace orange juice with breakfast and it has a longer shelf life.ā€¦
First lesson: Never attempt to eat a bat,
donā€™t stress about whatā€™s out of your control, sometimes it just ā€œis what it isā€.
Society is just a bunch of social constructs stacked on top of each-other, and weā€™re fully capable of changing those constructs at any time.
The only barrier is getting people to agree to do it, and they will fight you at all costs,
every time I encounter a problem, I will always try to ask myself now: Is this worth the stress? Will this even matter 1, 5, 10 years from now?
I used to fixate over little things that now seem so pointless and small when you consider the bigger picture.
I used to fixate over little things that now seem so pointless and small when you consider the bigger picture. I re-read ā€˜The Subtle Art of Not Giving a Fuckā€ by Mark
I used to fixate over little things that
I used to fixate over little things that now seem so pointless and small when you consider the bigger picture. I re-read ā€˜The Subtle Art of Not Giving a Fuckā€ by Mark Manson, and second time around, the key ideas really stuck.
https://dev.to/torbet/i-asked-100-people-what-they-learned-from-lockdown-5god
generally tend to realise the true value of simple things once we lose them.
running into familiar people every day makes the pandemic feel less awful.
Appreciate that youā€™re able to wake up the next day and be given the chance to breathe in fresh air and have the sun kiss our skin. Thousands of lives who are no longer with us wonā€™t ever get to wake up again.
Because all.the proof in the world doesnā€™t necessarily change behaviour,
started off feeling like a holiday, but now, more than a year in, its initial charm has definitely worn off.
it started off feeling like a holiday, but now, more than a year in, its initial charm has definitely worn off.
Having a routine is severely underrated. I never realised just how much I needed one until my overall physical and mental health took a complete nosedive.
power and importance of habits is heavily emphasised in ā€œAtomic Habitsā€ by James Clear, the ability to make an action ā€˜second natureā€™ and be able to do it subconsciously is something that I have found incredibly useful!
spend time on your hobbies because they will make you happy
get more work done and learn new skills to improve myself.
I had a crazy amount of free time during peak COVID and didnā€™t utilise it how I should have.
Write. Things. Down. It helps keep yourself accountable.
taught me that I can manage myself effectively, even without the structure that school and university provides.
some may have crumbled under the vast amounts of ā€˜free timeā€™, others made use of the extra hours and put them towards something meaningful.
the days where you arenā€™t motivated and donā€™t feel like getting to it are the days that really count.
The other thing I started to practice was talking to strangers more.
have a really big problem with overthinking and analysis paralysis. I realised
A lot of people seemed to have issues in this department ā€” overthinking, planning paralysis, procrastination, sound familiar?
my main concern was that it would
working from home is not necessarily a good thing (and is possibly more bad than good). I was always skeptical about the concept because my main concern was that it would be a breeding ground for fraud. This turned out to be true, but thatā€™s another story.
happens to be massively detrimental to your productivity. As it turns out, being at home in a place
being at home in a place with a lot of distracting things you would rather do instead of work while struggling with procrastination isnā€™t really a recipe for success
You can do 90% of the work without going to office if youā€™re working on computers.
Stay active even though there was barely a reason to get out. Iā€™m now in serious pain (neck/ā€‹back) and Iā€™m trying to undo what Iā€™ve done to myself.
Donā€™t waste time and energy on people who donā€™t bring anything productive or positive to your life.
My friendly exchange in conversation with the 7/ā€‹11 cashier is the highlight of my day sometimes
Iā€™ve always valued having a small, but stable group of friends to surround myself with, which has been an absolute god-ā€‹send during the past year.
As soon as lockdown started, I fell into the boat that if I donā€™t come out of lockdown with a new skill or business that Iā€™ve failed. So I learned to love myself more,
I get genuinely annoyed at myself if I donā€™t get enough work done or put things off until the last minute.
Iā€™ve learned that my standards were simply too high to be maintained consistently, and every now and then I should cut myself some slack.
having goals for each day makes your rest feel earned.
People couldnā€™t even agree to wear masks during a deadly, highly contagious viral outbreak because itā€™s not what theyā€™re used to doing,
what people belief doesnā€™t matter nearly as much as how they behave because holy shit there is no end to the cognitive dissonance that human beings are capable of.
Red wine can replace orange juice with breakfast and it has a longer shelf life.ā€¦
First lesson: Never attempt to eat a bat,
donā€™t stress about whatā€™s out of your control, sometimes it just ā€œis what it isā€.
Society is just a bunch of social constructs stacked on top of each-other, and weā€™re fully capable of changing those constructs at any time.
The only barrier is getting people to agree to do it, and they will fight you at all costs,
every time I encounter a problem, I will always try to ask myself now: Is this worth the stress? Will this even matter 1, 5, 10 years from now?
I used to fixate over little things that now seem so pointless and small when you consider the bigger picture.
I used to fixate over little things that now seem so pointless and small when you consider the bigger picture. I re-read ā€˜The Subtle Art of Not Giving a Fuckā€ by Mark
I used to fixate over little things that
I used to fixate over little things that now seem so pointless and small when you consider the bigger picture. I re-read ā€˜The Subtle Art of Not Giving a Fuckā€ by Mark Manson, and second time around, the key ideas really stuck.
https://dev.to/torbet/i-asked-100-people-what-they-learned-from-lockdown-5god
generally tend to realise the true value of simple things once we lose them.
running into familiar people every day makes the pandemic feel less awful.
Appreciate that youā€™re able to wake up the next day and be given the chance to breathe in fresh air and have the sun kiss our skin. Thousands of lives who are no longer with us wonā€™t ever get to wake up again.
Because all.the proof in the world doesnā€™t necessarily change behaviour,