Facebook Pixel Our overreaction epidemic | Time - news - Lisez cet article sur Magzter.com
Passez à l'illimité avec Magzter GOLD

Passez à l'illimité avec Magzter GOLD

Obtenez un accès illimité à plus de 9 000 magazines, journaux et articles Premium pour seulement

$149.99
 
$74.99/Année

Essayer OR - Gratuit

Our overreaction epidemic

Time

|

November 24, 2025

REACTING HAS BECOME OUR DEFAULT—WE POUNCE, panic, and amplify distress rather than pause and regulate.

- BY MARC BRACKETT

Our overreaction epidemic

A teenager posts a selfie and spirals when it doesn’t get enough likes; a parent reads a critical email from a colleague and assumes their career is at risk; a friend scrolls social media and erupts over a post that wasn’t even meant for them.

These quick escalations reflect what I have termed an overreaction epidemic: small triggers snowball into outsize emotional responses. Perhaps predictably, the response has been extreme. After a piece I wrote about the topic ran on TIME’s website, thousands of people messaged me and commented at me on social media. Many accused me of being tone-deaf. Some argued I was asking people to “calm down” while fascism rises. “Imagine the layers of privilege it takes to gaslight people into thinking they are overreacting,” stated one critic.

Others have pushed back in the opposite direction, insisting our constant state of panic is unsustainable. As one person put it, “You can’t fight for what’s right if you’re so emotionally decimated that you're living your day-to-day in fight-or-flight mode.” Another countered: “We are not overreacting—we’re underreacting.”

All of these perspectives hold truth. And their passion highlights why we need a deeper, clearer conversation about what emotion regulation is—and just as important, what it isn’t. Let's be clear: anger, fear, and grief are not weaknesses. They’re evidence of caring. But the solution to the overreaction epidemic is emotion regulation—which will be vitally important to address our global challenges ahead.

EMOTION REGULATION IS a set of intentional, learned skills for managing feelings wisely. At its core, it’s about choosing responses that reflect our goals and values. This can include calming ourselves down before a meeting, reframing a negative thought, or expressing frustration constructively with a loved one. But no matter the emotion, emotional regulation keeps us in the driver's seat.

PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE Time

Time

Time

CO₂ Leadership Report

THE ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION Agency's Feb. 12 repeal of its “endangerment finding”—which underpins all of its noteworthy climate rules—was framed by the Trump Administration as a big win for American industry.

time to read

1 mins

March 09, 2026

Time

Time

Sentencing of Hong Kong publisher raises fears in Taiwan

WHEN A HONG KONG COURT HANDED media tycoon and pro-democracy leader Jimmy Lai a 20-year jail term on national-security grounds on Feb. 9, his son called it a “death sentence” given Lai’s age, 78, and deteriorating health. Others saw the same bleak implications for freedoms in Hong Kong—and a glimpse into what could be in store for others Beijing views as troublesome.

time to read

1 min

March 09, 2026

Time

Time

James Van Der Beek

James Van Der Beek, best known for playing Dawson Leery in the '90s teen drama Dawson's Creek, \"passed peacefully,\" his family said, on Feb. 11 at age 48, after a battle with colorectal cancer.

time to read

1 min

March 09, 2026

Time

Time

Love Story tries too hard to be The Crown for America

IF THE KENNEDYS ARE THE CLOSEST THING AMERICA has to a royal family, then Carolyn Bessette Kennedy was our Princess Diana. Like her British counterpart, she was an outsider—albeit a beautiful, stylish, blond, privileged one—to the palace intrigue that consumed the family she married into. She was stalked by paparazzi and alternately worshipped and vilified. And then she died, in her mid-30s, in a horrible accident, only to have her legacy dissected for decades to come. We never let either woman rest in peace.

time to read

2 mins

March 09, 2026

Time

Time

VARIATIONS ON A THEME

A new Wuthering Heights adaptation joins a rich history of cinematic reimaginings

time to read

5 mins

March 09, 2026

Time

Time

Why you should warm up your feet before bed

GETTING COLD FEET IS INCONVE-nient in many situations—including when you go to bed.

time to read

2 mins

March 09, 2026

Time

In the Loop

For 15 years, Dex Hunter-Torricke worked near the pinnacle of the tech industry.

time to read

1 min

March 09, 2026

Time

Time

The People VS. AI

THE GRASSROOTS BIPARTISAN MOVEMENT TO REIN IN AN INDUSTRY

time to read

15 mins

March 09, 2026

Time

Time

16 LEADERS WORKING TOWARD A BETTER, MORE EQUITABLE WORLD

TEYANA TAYLOR IS BALANCING A WORKLOAD that borders on ridiculous.

time to read

28 mins

March 09, 2026

Time

Time

Breezy Johnson The U.S. skier on winning Olympic gold, that mountain marriage proposal, and Lindsey Vonn's example

After your super-G race on Feb. 12, your boyfriend Connor Watkins proposed at the bottom of the slope.

time to read

2 mins

March 09, 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size