One minute, he was his boisterous self, belting out one Mandopop song after another at home. The next moment, he was crying like a baby.
Missing You Every Day – a poignant tune by the late Taiwanese singer-songwriter Chang Yu-sheng – was playing.
Surprised by his sudden tears, freelance photographer Tay Kay Chin, 54, mentioned the episode to a friend who bonds with him over JJ Lin songs and K-dramas.
"She assured me that it is okay to let down our guard once in a while, especially in this difficult period," he posted on Facebook.
"We agreed that music just has this strange power to move people, especially now."
He has also cried while watching the space docu-drama Apollo 13 (1995), during the uplifting scenes of the astronauts finally making their way back to Earth, he tells The Sunday Times.
There is "no shame" in weeping, he believes. "I feel absolutely 'shiok' after crying and, occasionally, I will burst out laughing at my silliness."
STOLEN MOMENTS[hhmc]
Crying is normal, especially during the coronavirus pandemic, experts say.
Tears can soothe, among several benefits, in this unusual season when people are experiencing anxiety and loss.
Conversely, not being able to express emotion may be more worrying, they caution, even if tears are deemed very private in Singapore and many societies.
HELPLINES[hhmc]
• National Care Hotline: 1800-202-6868
• Fei Yue Community Services: Register for online counselling at www.ec2.sg
• Touch Community Services TouchLine: Call 1800-377-2252 or e-mail [email protected]
• Care Corner Counselling Centre: 1800-353-5800
• Silver Ribbon: 6385-3714, 6386-1928 or 6509-0271
• Institute of Mental Health's Mental Health Helpline: 6389-2222
• Samaritans of Singapore: 1800-221-4444
Placing Covid-19 cathartic crying in perspective, clinical supervisor Jasmine Yeo from Safe Space, a digital platform that facilitates online counselling, says: "One unspoken devastation of the coronavirus pandemic is the stolen moments across the globe."
There are no baby showers and no large send-offs for funerals. Weddings are postponed and hugs are deferred.
"The disruption to our routine and normality of life contributes to this universal uneasiness and sadness we all are feeling," she notes.
Ms Mandy Tay, a visual storyteller who produces commercials, sobbed for lost time with her Swedish beau.
Last December, the two travel lovers met for the first time in Lebanon. Since then, she had visited him twice in Sweden and he was planning to fly here in early April.
That did not happen, of course, and it was hard, especially without him around at her milestone 40th birthday this month.
"But I think I was suppressing all of it, keeping myself busy. I was doing okay – good, in fact. But when the circuit breaker was extended to June 1, I burst out crying for the first time," she says.
"I think I was frustrated and wrung out of my unrealistic hopes that we would see each other again very soon."
MENTALLY WELL[hhmc]
Crying more easily now, or feeling depressed, does not mean one is mentally unwell.
Dr Morrison Loh, head of the medical directorate at Raffles Health Insurance, says crying is "a release of emotion" for some people – to relieve stress from Covid-19 uncertainty, for instance, or to share the joy of someone dear who recovers from the virus.
When the pandemic is prolonged, it saps our mental resilience. There's a sense of helplessness and people become burnt out, sad and tearful.
PROFESSOR KUA EE HEOK, a senior consultant psychiatrist at the National University of Singapore's department of psychological medicine
In non-coronavirus situations, people may get emotional over a job loss, examination results or a child's birth.
"However, this does not mean we are suffering from any mental condition," he says.
"Patients with true mental illness undergo long periods of such emotions and are unable to come out of it, leading to the presence of physical symptoms and loss of daily functioning," he explains.
The reality is that crying is one coping mechanism among many. "Some feel relief through crying, others through eating, drinking alcohol, exercising or talking to someone else."
Culturally, crying is often deemed a sign of weakness, says Ms Sarah Poh, a mental-health counsellor and founder of The Therapy Platform, a therapy booking platform.
"It is normal to cry when we feel hurt or when we feel someone's hurt. However, there is a negative association of crying with 'not being strong enough' or being 'like a child'. These negative associations result in shame."
Root out the shame, she counsels. "I think for people to feel comfortable in expressing emotion, we first have to deal with the emotion of shame, which is largely a culturally evoked emotion."
Mental-health professionals are more concerned about those who cannot cry, as they may be repressing their feelings and suffering psychologically.
"When crying no longer makes sense to the person, it is a clear sign to seek professional help," she says.
In the same vein, psychiatrist Kua Ee Heok says: "People with difficulties in expressing their emotion often see a doctor for physical health symptoms like headache, chest discomfort and insomnia, which are somatic symptoms of underlying anxiety or depression."
DOCTORS UNDER STRESS[hhmc]
So it seems like a healthy sign that Prof Kua has met Covid-19 front-line doctors and nurses whose eyes welled up in tears when they reflected on their heavy burden of care and their fears.
In a recent Zoom meeting, he spoke on anxiety to 370 doctors.
"Crying is therapeutic, for it unbottles your pent-up emotions of sadness, frustration and fear," says Prof Kua, a senior consultant psychiatrist at the National University of Singapore's department of psychological medicine.
One doctor he encountered felt "crushed" and had "knotted" feelings, he recounts. She was also sad, disappointed and even angry when a friend avoided her for fear of contamination.
"She is better now after a session of counselling and is back at work with good family support," he says.
"Doctors feel they have to remain stoic in the most demanding and distressing situations."
Some psychiatrists, including Prof Kua, who is the Tan Geok Yin Professor in Psychiatry and Neuroscience at the university, offer pro bono counselling to doctors under stress.
BREAKDOWN BENEFITS[hhmc]
Recently, a New York Times column carried the click-bait headline, Crying In Your Car Counts As Self-Care. The story normalises crying, among an array of actions to find headroom and even joy in dispiriting times.
Dr Loh from Raffles Health Insurance, a member of the Raffles Medical Group, describes two overarching sets of benefits.
• The "self-soothing" effects of crying on individuals. This reduces stress and enhances mood.
•The effects of a person's crying on other people. This promotes empathy and social bonding.
Notably, when athletes cry in triumph or defeat, or when prominent people get misty-eyed, they may form connections with the public.
He cites the examples of former British Prime Minister Theresa May, who cried during her resignation speech last year, and National Development Minister Lawrence Wong, who was moved to tears in Parliament on March 25 when he spoke about the fight against Covid-19.
In this light, Dr Loh says: "I think we should be more open to public displays of emotions. Singaporeans are still, in my opinion, considered a culturally reserved population."
FEELING WORSE[hhmc]
He acknowledges that some laboratory studies show that subjects feel worse after crying. This may be because the physical act of crying results in the "over-stimulation" of the crier's flight-or-fight response.
"Hence, the physical act of crying actually can have a negative physiological impact, but the individual might feel better after crying," he says.
Whether crying is cathartic depends heavily on the person who is crying, he notes, and also the reason for the tears.
In a study published in The Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology, researchers found that 70 per cent of people who looked back on recent crying episodes reported that their tears brought solace. But about 16 per cent experienced negative reactions from others, which made them feel worse.
Context plays a role. Being comforted by someone and reaching a new understanding of the event that caused the weeping are cathartic, according to the study. But experiencing shame is less likely to be so.
In context, Dr Goh Kah Hong, head and senior consultant of psychological medicine at Khoo Teck Puat Hospital, says: "Like laughter, cryingRead More – Source
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