Managing a polycrisis, a situation where multiple large-scale crises interact and amplify each other, requires a different mindset than handling isolated problems. It may describe overlapping issues like economic instability, climate stress, constant threat, and long term dealings with unusual events.
At a practical level, you can think of managing polycrisis across three layers: cognitive (how you think), behavioral (what you do), and systemic (how you position yourself in the world).
“SHARE INFORMATION SELECTIVELY: NOT PANIC DRIVEN.”
1. Cognitive: Avoid Overload and Distortion
A polycrisis overwhelms attention systems and can trigger chronic threat perception.
- Limit input bandwidth: Constant exposure to crisis information amplifies anxiety loops.
- Prioritize signal over noise: Not all crises are equally relevant to your life.
- Use cognitive diffusion (from Acceptance and Commitment Therapy): observe catastrophic thoughts without fusing with them.
Instead of “everything is collapsing,” shift to:
“Multiple systems are under stress, but not all of them affect me equally or immediately.”
2. Behavioral: Build Stability Under Uncertainty
You may not be able to solve a polycrisis, but you can stabilize your functioning within it.
- Create micro-certainties: routines, habits, predictable anchors
- Train adaptability: exposure to controlled uncertainty (new environments, skill-building)
- Reduce fragility: diversify income, skills, and social support
This aligns with ideas from Antifragile, instead of just resisting shocks, you benefit from variability.
3. Emotional Regulation: Prevent Chronic Threat Mode
Polycrisis often induces a low-grade, persistent stress response similar to ambient anxiety.
- Practice down-regulation (breathing, somatic grounding)
- Avoid “globalizing” fear (turning specific risks into total doom narratives)
- Maintain agency perception, the sense that your actions still matter
Chronic exposure without regulation can resemble patterns seen in Generalized Anxiety Disorder, even if it’s situational.
4. Strategic Thinking: Shift from Optimization to Resilience
Old models focus on efficiency; polycrisis demands resilience and redundancy.
- Redundancy, efficiency (backup plans, savings, multiple options)
- Scenario thinking instead of prediction
- Decentralized decision-making (don’t rely on one system or authority)
5. Social Layer: Strengthen Networks
In polycrisis, isolated individuals are far more vulnerable than connected ones.
- Build trusted relationships
- Engage in mutual aid or local community
- SHARE INFORMATION SELECTIVELY: NOT PANIC DRIVEN
Historically, communities, not individuals, navigate overlapping crises best.
6. Meaning Framework: Avoid Existential Drift
Polycrisis can destabilize belief systems and create nihilism.
- Anchor in values-based action
- Separate global uncertainty from personal purpose
- Maintain long-term orientation even in unstable conditions
7. Reality Check (Important)
You don’t “solve” a polycrisis at the individual level. Anyone claiming total control over it is oversimplifying or selling something.
What is realistic:
- You can reduce personal vulnerability
- You can increase adaptability
- You can stay psychologically stable while others destabilize
- Shervan K Shahhian