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Critical to all this "normalcy" during such an <a href="https://ift.tt/3aBXS9Q" target="_self">abnormal time</a> are <a href="https://ift.tt/3aGxr3b" target="_blank">video conferencing software</a> like Zoom, the brand often used as shorthand to describe video conferencing technologies in general. Other popular options include GoToMeeting, Microsoft Teams, UberConference, Skype and Google Hangouts.

So Why Are We Tired?

<p>"It's Zoom fatigue," reported <a href="https://ift.tt/2RpERkv" target="_blank">DigiDay</a>. "As millions of people stay indoors due to the coronavirus outbreak, business and pleasure [have] both moved to the virtual realm. That's meant that nearly every single interaction most people are having is happening online — and whether it's because of its ease of use or its ensuing ubiquity, it's mostly happening on Zoom."<br></p><p><a href="https://ift.tt/3cITNSR" target="_blank">USA Today</a> described the new form of exhaustion as "the feeling of tiredness, anxiousness or worry with yet another video call."</p><p>"I'm feeling more drained at the end of the day versus our days in the office," said ad agency president Erin Riley to <a href="https://ift.tt/2RpERkv" target="_blank">DigiDay</a>. "It all starts to blur together," Riley added, describing her ninth — or so she thinks — Zoom meeting of the day.</p><p>"When we're on all these videos calls all day long, we're kind of chained to a screen," said Suzanne Degges-White, a licensed counselor and chair of counseling and counselor education at Northern Illinois University, to <a href="https://ift.tt/3cITNSR" target="_blank">USA Today</a>. "It's just psychologically off-putting. I've got to show up again but the thing is, we're not really showing up anywhere," she said.</p><p>Many factors contribute to why video conferences have become so overwhelming and exhausting, but there are things we can do to ease the stress.</p>

Technological Factors

<p>Poor sound quality is one of the biggest mistakes in virtual working — whether with video or without, reported <a href="https://ift.tt/2VYMdyc" target="_blank">Psychology Today</a>.<br></p><p>"If it takes effort to hear people speak, the game is up," the article noted. "Invest in sound technology so that brains, wherever they are, can [focus] on each other's ideas, not on the intrusive thought, 'When will the sound get any better?'"</p><p>"Silence creates a natural rhythm in a real-life conversation. However, when it happens in a video call, you become anxious about the technology," Italian management expert Gianpiero Petriglieri told <a href="https://ift.tt/2wUhatk" target="_blank">BBC</a>. These unintended silences make us subconsciously uncomfortable. </p><p><span></span>The sheer format of video calls also creates an impersonal communication experience. Degges-White described it as creating a structure to conversation like email where one person speaks and everyone waits to reply, reported <a href="https://ift.tt/3cITNSR" target="_blank">USA Today</a>.</p><p>"That's not normally the way we do social interactions," she said. "It's not that easy give and take." Side conversations are lost and more reserved participants may never get a word in, reported <a href="https://ift.tt/3cITNSR" target="_blank">USA Today</a>. Speakers also miss out on verbal cues and affirmations from listeners who are often all muted.</p>

Mental Factors

<p>Up to 85 percent of communication is made up of body language, reported <a href="https://ift.tt/2zsSdGu" target="_blank">Psychology Today</a>, which gives context and depth to verbal communication being shared. Much of that gets lost or distorted in video communication, reported <a href="https://ift.tt/3cITNSR" target="_blank">USA Today</a>.<br></p><p>Video conferences also require more focus than face-to-face chats, Petriglieri told <a href="https://ift.tt/2wUhatk" target="_blank">BBC</a>, because we have to work harder to process non-verbal cues we do catch, like facial expressions, the tone and pitch of the voice, and body language. Paying more attention to these consumes a lot of energy. "You cannot relax into the conversation naturally," he said to BBC.</p><p>Mental focus is also an issue, either being too much or too little on video calls.</p><p>"There is a different quality to our attention when we are online," wrote mindfulness expert Steven Hickman in <a href="https://ift.tt/2JM1jQl" target="_blank">Mindful</a>. "It's this pressure to really be on and be responsive," said Vaile Wright, the American Psychological Association's director of clinical research and quality, reported <a href="https://ift.tt/3cITNSR" target="_blank">USA Today</a>.</p><p>Marissa Shuffler, a workplace well-being professor at Clemson University, noted that our "awareness of being watched" when we're physically on camera adds stress. She said, "When you're on a video conference, you know everybody's looking at you; you are on stage, so there comes the social pressure and feeling like you need to perform. Being performative is nerve-wracking and more stressful," reported <a href="https://ift.tt/2wUhatk" target="_blank">BBC</a>.</p><p>"On a video call, it feels necessary to be smiling all the time. It's just the sense that our words can't stand on their own. And as a black woman, I need to not be seen as angry, or just have resting bitch face. So I'm smiling. And I'm tired," Kat Vellos, a UX designer, told <a href="https://ift.tt/2RpERkv" target="_blank">DigiDay</a>.</p><p>Another tired video conference participant called this forced facade "Wearing that 'happy girl' mask," reported <a href="https://ift.tt/2zsSdGu" target="_blank">Psychology Today</a>. "In the real work world, we can find moments where we can let our mask drop, but during interminable work meetings, we feel like we have to keep on that mask as long as our video image is on the screen," the participant said.</p><p>There are also background concerns about not turning on the video screen. Leaving a profile picture or avatar up with your camera off can lead to being viewed as "absent," even if the microphone is on and you're actively contributing to the conversation, noted <a href="https://ift.tt/2zsSdGu" target="_blank">Psychology Today</a>.</p><p>Riley told <a href="https://ift.tt/2RpERkv" target="_blank">DigiDay</a>, if someone doesn't have their video on, or something else is going on, there's a strange unsaid "What are you hiding?" feeling.</p><p>On the opposite end of the spectrum, many are totally distracted on group video calls.</p><p>"Frankly, people try to multitask," author Celeste Headlee told <a href="https://ift.tt/2X9mrIi" target="_blank">Salon</a>, "So while you have Zoom open, you also have Twitter open, and 90 other tabs and your email, and your cell phone is sitting there. Your brain is running from one thing to another, to another, to another, to another. And it's stressing you out."</p><p><a href="https://ift.tt/3eBjLte" target="_blank">The Convivial Society</a> noted, "It's especially exhausting to be continuously dropping a conversational thread and picking it up again. Something as seemingly benign as a notification flashing on the screen, even if we don't attend to it for more than a split second, can throw us off the thread of thought, and the momentary work of trying to pick it up again takes a mental toll."</p><p><a href="https://ift.tt/2sH9gl9" target="_blank">Wired</a> reported that despite the temptation, you can't multitask without it being "glaringly obvious." This means that video calls are also more time-consuming, adding to the stress of already-busy schedules.</p>

Social Factors

<p>Shuffler told <a href="https://ift.tt/2wUhatk" target="_blank">BBC</a> that often we feel obligated into these video calls. She queried whether we are joining the endless cooking, birthday parties, catch-ups and virtual happy hours because we want to, or because we feel like we ought to. Obligations, she noted, means more time that we're "on" as opposed to truly relaxing and being ourselves.<br></p><p>Big group calls can feel particularly performative, Petriglieri warned the BBC. "People like watching television because you can allow your mind to wander – but a large video call 'is like you're watching television and television is watching you,'" he noted.</p><p>The branding of a video call as fun or social also doesn't erase years of conditioning, explained Petriglieri. "It doesn't matter whether you call it a virtual happy hour, it's a meeting, because mostly we are used to using these tools for work," he said to <a href="https://ift.tt/2wUhatk" target="_blank">BBC</a>.</p>

Physical Factors

<p>"With no delineation of work and home, most people I know are on calls all day," Reema Mitra, a New York brand strategist told <a href="https://ift.tt/3cnACO7" target="_blank">OneZero</a>. This has caused many to feel the need to be more available and accessible to work than if they had set hours at a separate workplace, a Japanese study recently found, reported <a href="https://ift.tt/3ciZh6B" target="_blank">Psychology Today</a>.<br></p><p>The blurred boundaries affect our own personal health and well-being, adding to general anxiety and potentially "obsessing" over work responsibilities, <a href="https://ift.tt/3ciZh6B" target="_blank">Psychology Today</a> reported. <a href="https://ift.tt/2wiUO4E" target="_blank">Psychology Today</a> noted that without commutes, water breaks and chats with co-workers, many are finding their bodies beat down by the constant video calls. We are spending more time sitting and in front of our screens than before, which takes a physical toll in addition to the mental stresses.</p>

Solutions

<ul> <li>Limit video calls to ones that are truly necessary. Make turning video-on optional. Use your phone when necessary, allowing yourself to move around, doodle or sit outside in the sun, suggested <a href="https://ift.tt/2wiUO4E" target="_blank">Psychology Today</a>.</li><li>Turn on your camera when you join a meeting so others can see you and "know" you're there, but turn it off after that. Turn it on to speak, but off when you're listening, suggested <a href="https://ift.tt/2zsSdGu" target="_blank">Psychology Today</a>.</li><li>Take some time during meetings to check in with others before getting to work. "Spend some time to actually check into people's well-being," Shuffler told <a href="https://ift.tt/2wUhatk" target="_blank">BBC</a>. "It's a way to reconnect us with the world, and to maintain trust and reduce fatigue and concern."</li><li>Don't multitask. Treat it like a real conversation, and divert your eyes if needed. Get up and get water or look away from your screen, suggested <a href="https://ift.tt/3eBjLte" target="_blank">The Convivial Society</a>.</li><li>Wright suggested taking breaks in between calls to allow our brains to switch gears, and creating a separate physical space where you take work video calls and personal video calls, reported <a href="https://ift.tt/3cITNSR" target="_blank">USA Today</a>.</li><li>Respect that workdays begin and workdays end, meaning shut down your computer screen (before re-opening it if you're going to start surfing, Zooming, gaming, etc.) and change into casual clothing, said <a href="https://ift.tt/3ciZh6B" target="_blank">Psychology Today</a>. "This means that you should get out of your jammies in the morning before you begin your work shift, by the way."</li></ul>

Finding Balance

<p>The barrage of life lived through Zoom has become, for many, a "physically, cognitively, and emotionally taxing experience" as our minds try to make sense of this new reality, reported <a href="https://ift.tt/3eBjLte" target="_blank">The Convivial Society</a>. The solution is not to avoid video-conferencing altogether, but to recognize its benefits and limitations as we consciously strive to create healthier relationships with our screens and connect to the people behind them.<br></p>

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