[Neurons] 2024 Neurons #18 THE ART OF ANXIETY
Michael Hall
meta at acsol.net
Sun Apr 21 14:45:46 EDT 2024
From: L. Michael Hall
2024 Neurons #18
April 22, 2024
Emotional Intelligence Series #18
THE ART OF ANXIETY
Anxiety-an art? Well yes we could think of it in that way. How? Let's
start from the basic NLP premise that every experience is a skill. If we
start there, then yes, anxiety can be a skill-an art. After all, some
people are really, really good at generating anxiety in their minds and
bodies on a regular basis! I have known some people who were true masters
at anxiety. They could produce anxiety in any given moment and just about
anything that you bring up.
I'm writing about anxiety as a follow-up to the last article, Emotions and
Stress. On the stress scale, anxiety is near the top. It is not yet panic
or overwhelm, but in anxiety, a person is full of nerves, hence nervous and
highly animated. What is anxiety? Most psychology books define it in the
most unusually vague way. "Anxiety is free floating fear." Don't you love
it? Free floating fear... aw ... be careful, you never know when some
"free floating fear" may blow in and drop on you!
Now "free floating fear" does imply at least one thing-the object of the
fear is unknown. You are afraid of something, but you are not clear about
what it is, where it is, how it is, etc. So being in a state of
uncertainty, there are things unknown to you, perhaps expected, and given
that, then there are things to do, but that's the hitch. You don't know
what to do. You have no control over what's going on. Think that way and
you will activate your body. You will animate your breathing, heart rate,
and nerves. You will feel nervous, upset, and you want to pace or move
around.
Now starting with an unknown fear, the next question for you is: How do you
generally relate to the emotion of fear? Are you okay with it? Are you
terrified of it? Do you experience it often? What resources do you access
to handle legitimate fears? How do you handle illegitimate fears? What
other mental and emotional states do you bring to and apply to fear? When
you answer that, you will know what meta-states you have developed about
fear, and if meta-states, then frames of mind. Do you fear fear? Do you
anger at fear? Are you ashamed of fear? Do you bring calmness to your
fear? Thoughtfulness? Curiosity?
The way you think about 'free floating fear' (and uncertainty) determines
how well or how poorly you handle anxiety. This is where the cognitive
distortions can really do a trip on you.
Consider the cognitive distortion of predicting the future. Of
course, since you can't (no one can!), you are actually projecting worries,
frets, upsets, distresses into your imagined future. People create a lot of
anxiety in this way. They project that "X will happen" and many do so
dogmatically as if it is a foregone conclusion.
Consider the cognitive distortion of exaggeration. All you have
to do is take a fear and exaggerate it. Blow it up so that you amplify the
fear and create catastrophic scenes and imagine your post-apocalyptic world.
Here catastrophizing creates lots of very toxic forms of anxiety because you
will feel even more out-of-control.
Consider the cognitive distortion of personalizing. Here you
can think about other people's problems, which are outside of your 'locus of
control,' and feel anxious about what has happened or could happen to them.
Do this and you will create a large batch of powerlessness for yourself and
if you keep doing it- then helplessness. What a great formula for anxiety!
Consider the cognitive distortion of mind-reading. Imagine
things about what others think or could think, say or could say, and then
believe in your intuitive powers to know what's inside the mind and heart of
others. Then you can feel anxious over these projected feelings that you
impose on others.
I could go on and on. Cognitive Distortions, as infantile ways of thinking,
are wonderful if you want to succeed in the Art of Anxiety. Anxiety
sometimes arise due to your low self-efficacy. In fact, the lower your
sense of knowledge and skills to competently handle some aspect of life, the
more anxiety you can generate. Conversely, the more knowledgeable and
skillful you are, the less anxiety. Also, the more you self-monitor
yourself, your life, your relationship with thoughts of judgment, the more
anxious you will be. In these cases, develop your knowledge and skills!
Get to a training. Read a book. Sign up for some coaching.
Finally, Fritz Perls commented that "anxiety is the suppression of
excitement." And believing this, he would ask his clients, "What excitement
are you pushing down and denying?" People get excited about public
speaking, they want to do it, then they push that excitement down and it
becomes nervous anxiety. Some get excited about becoming a Meta-Coach, then
deny their excitement so it shows up as performance anxiety when they sit
with a client and are watched or benchmarked. By trying to avoid failing,
they make themselves nervous which increases the anxiety. Solution: fully
embrace and accept that you could fail or mess up. Hold firm the thought
that "it's part of the process, that's all."
The bottom-line is that if you are anxious, you are thinking your way to
anxiety. And if that's the case, you can un-think that process and turn it
completely around.
SEE OUR NEW PAGE ON THE WEBSITE!
http://www.neurosemantics.com/thinking-for-humans/
L. Michael Hall, Ph.D.
Executive Director, ISNS
738 Beaver Lodge
Grand Jct., CO. 81505 USA
meta at acsol.net
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