Opinion and Advice, Uncategorized

Over-rule Overthinking – How I Learned to Manage my anxiety

Anxiety is one of those things that all of us have experienced, and, when it conflicts with our everyday life, we might get a diagnosis. Social anxiety, generalised anxiety disorder, panic attacks, agoraphobia…. as time goes on, anxiety is becoming more and more commonplace, made aware of, and diagnosed. I’ve suffered with anxiety for most, if not all, of my teenage and adult years, and while I’ve never been diagnosed with anything, I don’t need a weatherman to tell me it’s raining, and I let it stop me doing what I wanted for a large portion of my life.

One particular incident that sticks in my mind is being scared to go to school. I had no reason to be, but I was at home in my living room staring at the front door, in tears. It was completely random, and probably happened three times during my whole time at secondary school. Another time was when I had a panic attack at the front of class during a presentation. But I’ve discussed my fear of public speaking before.

So how do you get out of letting anxiety rule you to the point of not going out, simply because your heart races at the very idea? Anxiety and panic manifests in so many different scenarios for people; going to class, going to work, before a big life event like a wedding, or when confronted by the very thing we are most afraid of without really knowing why. The key is to confront your fear, but in a measured, structured way. Of course, this process is different for everyone. It might be a case of defining a list of what we’d like to achieve and working through each item, step by step.

First and foremost, anxiety is defined by worry, panic and negative thoughts. The typical cycle begins with a event, that typically triggers a negative thought and that leads to a feeling. Often this will lead to us fearing similar events. One example might be to be among work colleagues, and you say something; maybe it was a joke that no one laughed at, or you stated a fact and were told you were wrong. I use this example because I used to be terrified of saying something wrong incase I was seen as stupid, and would get flustered any time I was ever even responded to. In this case, you might get embarrassed, you heart might beat hard and your palms become sweaty. Later that night it is likely to run around in circles in your head like an old film on a loop.

So How Might You Break Out of this Behaviour?

1. Narrow down your fears – it can be easy to let your anxiety bleed into everything you do. Fear of social situations can cause one to become scared of going out in general, even to the local shop. Anxiety in the form of phobias can have a huge impact on whether we go out to certain places. If someone is scared of heights, this may greatly diminish the likelihood of boarding an aeroplane. But where does the fear stem from? It might be such a long standing fear that it might be impossible to tell, but consider instead what makes you anxious about these situations. Do phone calls make you nervous? Why is that? Is it because you’re not able to see the facial expressions of the other person? If you scared of dogs, can that be rooted to an experience?

2. Separate rational from the irrational – the most known definition of a phobia is an “irrational fear” of a situation or object we might come across in our every day life. Now, there are so many different phobias around now that it’s impossible to know what all of them are. Some, I believe, are fully rational. Fear of heights, blood and confined spaces are all rational in my opinion, because they all present a real danger. Not all fears are to be overcome; anxiety is an evolutionary technique of self preservation to keep ourselves safe, and if we perceive something as being dangerous, such as a large spider, while it might pose a real threat to ourselves if we don’t live in countries like Austrailia, it is there for a reason.

3. Set your boundaries, and respect them – don’t do anything you don’t want to do, but if you have to, work up to it. This might be meeting with a large group of friends as an end goal for someone with social phobia. Start with a phone call with a friend, or perhaps a video chat. You’re in your own comfortable space, in your own comfort zone, and you can leave whenever you like. If you need to, have a reason to leave prepared. Maybe the doorbell went, or you have something cooking.

4. Talk, and listen – anxiety is far more common than anyone might think. The cruelty (and the saving grace) is that everyone has experienced anxiety, and its highly isolating effects. It’s so easy to feel alone during a panic attack, and we might avoid potentially helpful experiences in case they trigger one. But talking can help, if you’re talking to someone who’s willing to be open about it. Thankfully all of my friends, close family and fiance have all had experiences with anxiety that have made them open about it, because they know. They know the value of talking about it, of describing each feeling and why they felt it.

5. Challenge yourself – once in a while, you’ve just got to think, well, fuck it. My big step was going somewhere alone. I really tried with the cinema, but try as my logical mind did, I still pictured being the only tragic person alone watching The Phantom Thread at Cineworld in an empty auditorium, a single shadow. So on that day, I figured I’d do something else equally daunting, and potentially more empowering; going for lunch in a restaurant by myself. I had my book, it was wonderful. The weather was lovely, I had no rush in me because I had a half day at work. Bliss. I couldn’t be stopped after that until…well, you know. And by the way, if anyone if unentertained enough by their eating companion to notice and judge you for being alone, don’t worry. They’re most likely envious that they haven’t got the confidence to do it.

6. Recognise the benefits – there are far more benefits to breaking free of the restricting habits. But, of course, the safety of the cocoon anxiety nets around us leaves us at little risk of danger. In this cocoon, we cannot make a fool of ourselves, cannot say the wrong thing, and probably wont have a panic attack unless we think really hard about the toll anxiety is having on our lives and our mental wellbeing. But to break out of that let’s you become more aware of your strengths and that, despite your worries, you were still able to make the push outwards.

Ways I Conquered the Rule Anxiety Had

1. Going for lunch alone

2. Going to lectures and library talks alone

3. Going on holiday without my parents (I have an absolute conviction every time I line up for check in that I’ve arrived on the wrong day).

4. Taking charge of meals with friends and family by booking myself.

5. Making phonecalls

6. Going to London alone

7. Presenting an idea to my workmates before I had time to get nervous and didn’t say a thing

Uncategorized

Stage Fright – A Perspective

When I was 14, I had my first (well, what I can recall as my first) experience of stage fright. It was during English class, and we had to separate into teams to present a fictional murder case. It was nothing to do with what we were studying at the time, which was sci fi in literature. One person from each team was selected to present the same bits of information, including the length of the slit on the fictional victims neck, before it was the next team’s turn.

I remember clearly how I turned out as the speaker, because I was the shyest in the group. I stood up, shaking, and lost all my words, and my friend was laughing in the front row. The teachers both fed the information back to me in questions, and I agreed, before sitting down, traumatised and embarrassed. I still look back at that moment of 30 seconds 13 years on with cringe and anxiety.

People reading the above and similar accounts may have different levels of relatability to this. I envy those who don’t get it, and think that this brief moment in time is not worth dwelling over. There are far, far worse things happening in the world than a panic attack starting before the laughing eyes of 20 13/ 14 year olds, and being handed a piece of paper assessing you on your performance. It was less than half, my failing being the extremely unconfident delivery. Of course, at the age of 14, we’d chosen our GCSE topics. I chose media studies over drama, so I didn’t think I’d ever need to work on my delivery of a fictional crime report.

Not long after this, we had another task in which we’d have to perform in class. This was related to the topic as we were studying monologues. I loved writing fiction, particularly the part of taking on a different perspective. I recall it being from the perspective of a teenage girl who was being ignored by everyone, and reflected and moaned about it for the whole piece. At the end, she walks in on her own wake at home after being ignored at school, not only realising that she’d died but that her father had killed her in a hit and run while on the phone a few streets away, and didn’t tell anyone. He was crying in her bedroom, and then it ended. Angsty? Extremely. Emo was a lifestyle back then. But I got very good marks for it.

But, being a monologue, we each had to prepare a performance piece and act the monologue out in front of the class. Pathetically I got my mom to write me out a note excusing me from this exercise because of a sore throat (I didn’t speak for the whole class to carry the act through) and was told by my teacher that it was, indeed, a pathetic excuse.

Since then, any hint of presenting information has brought me out in a cold sweat. I trust stage fright manifests in a number of diverse ways, but my experience is thumping heart beat and obsessively thinking about it until its over, reassuring myself that nothing truly bad will happen if it goes wrong.

But phobias, by definition, are irrational. I’d love to be able to do presentations, and I’d have loved to have been a teacher one day. Despite my fiancé’s experiences of actually being an NQT, his chosing to not pursue it further have not shattered my idealised picture of encouraging the growth of young minds.

So my thought is this. What is the value of these hateful exercises? Is it preparation for our careers? And if so, how many of our jobs have a presentation element to it? Aren’t there other skills that are infinitely more important for us to learn? Finance, CV building, understanding how the world works. The questionable relevance of what we learn at school has been discussed for a long time, anyway.

Or, are they designed to put us under pressure, to challenge us, to bring us out of our comfort zone? As a teenager, I grew up realising that some people are just comfortable with standing up in a room and talking. Why shouldn’t they be? What’s the worst that can happen?

But for others, no matter how many times they are berated for being too anxious to carry out a fairly pointless task, they will still be thinking about it the previous night, putting off sleep because they know that when they wake up, there worst nightmare is ahead of them.

Do you have any experience of stage fright? Or, if not, what’s your take on the matter? Got any tips? Note: before you say it, imagining some people naked causes more harm than good.