In any crisis, you can say "I'll think about it tomorrow". It is the most famous quote from the novel "With the Winds" and has become an example of procrastination nowadays when instead of dealing with problems now it is simply postponed.
However, I think there is something useful in this saying. Unless the crisis calls for immediate action, developing solutions can really do "tomorrow" rather than act hastily.
We are what we choose to become. Every incomprehensible situation and crisis forces us to act. It is the behavior of some to sit down and mourn, to believe that almost no future is possible because everything falls apart. Come on, man! There is no problem with the possibility of the future, but with you, because in any crisis situation you feel that you are left alone and no one will not help you. You behave as you have done in the past. Although each situation is different, your behavior is typical and constant, but the result is unsatisfactory.
There have been crises in the past. What is happening now is terrible because everyone is told to be home. Not everyone can work from home. Many are losing jobs, but #stayathome. We do this to prevent the worst-case scenario.
The crisis will end, just as previous crises have ended. If I need to remind you what 2008 was like? 1998? The collapse of the USSR? The crisis of the 1980s? 1973 oil crisis? This list can be continued in the distant past, but did you really think that we would not be facing a simple financial crisis in the near future? They are as cyclical as our economic development. This time the crisis is caused by a virus and a global pandemic.
What do I mean by that? Our personal problems make it difficult to see a way out of a crisis and it is easy to give in to despair, but the air has become fresher. Not Noticed? Each crisis will end, our lives will continue, as has happened thousands of times. Everyone has to believe in a better future because it is your personal faith and conviction that will determine your actions.
Picture source: pexels.com