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I was wrong about coronavirus, and I admit it: Why you should too

I was wrong about coronavirus, and I admit it: Why you should too 1

But just like trying to argue politics with facts, information campaigns often create the opposite effect: more resistance. As a writer with a focus on emotions and trauma, I know this firsthand. When someone is made to feel wrong, they interpret the message as “something is wrong with me.” This engages the part of the brain that governs the “fight, flight or freeze” reaction, causing a person to metaphorically run or shut down.

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