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Q&A: Why is my social anxiety so bad?

Roxana Alexandru Season 1 Episode 17

What's keeping your social anxiety alive and kicking? Why is it so bad?

In this episode of Social Anxiety Q&A, we will talk about what's going on behind the scenes. We'll recap the root cause of social anxiety so we understand the foundation, and then I'll let you in on why I think your social anxiety is still hanging around. I'll use a plant analogy and a mad scientist called Joe to get to the bottom of it.

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Before we go into this week’s episode, I want to do a quick refresh of what we discussed in the last one: the root cause of social anxiety. I use this information to build my case in this episode, so we must keep it in mind.

Ok, so, as discussed, the root cause of social anxiety is a mix of the following:

  1. Predisposition (biological factors that include genetic predispositions, brain chemistry, brain structure, and family history of anxiety)
  2. Environment (external circumstances such as childhood trauma and negative experiences such as bullying and social rejections)
  3. Temperamental (individual personality traits and temperament, for example, being more introverted)
  4. Psychological (cognitive distortions or thought errors, negative self-image)

In today’s episode, we will answer the question: “What’s keeping your social anxiety alive and kicking?”

Because sure, you’re now aware of how it came to be, but you are not exactly sure why it’s so front and center in your life. Isn’t getting to the root cause of something the usual fix with everything in life? 

Toy isn’t working, find out the battery died, replace the battery, and ta-da, problem solved!

Unfortunately, when it comes to humans, it’s a bit more complicated than that. We’re going to break it all down by using a plant analogy.

So to fully understand the analogy, let’s bring back the 4 main factors that make up the root cause of social anxiety and connect them to the process of growing a plant:

  1. We have the seed which represents the predisposition to social anxiety.
  2. The soil represents the environment that influences the development of social anxiety.
  3. The water represents psychological factors (negative thoughts and cognitive distortions) nurturing social anxiety.
  4. And the roots which represent life experiences that contribute to the growth and entrenchment of social anxiety

You can always come back here to re-align yourself if you get lost!

Now, imagine there’s a mad scientist called Joe, who designed a personalized seed that has the potential to grow into an evil plant that releases poisonous air each time they experience social anxiety. And with each inhale of this poisonous air, the person’s social anxiety worsens. Wonderfully evil, right?

And since Joe is that evil and figured out how to do that, he chose you as his first testing subject because he wants to see how much poisonous air your plant can make. Not sure what his goal is, but it probably has something to do with world domination and controlling people.

Anyway, he whipped this up and planted the seed in your backyard. As far as you know, he was just a nice gardener who came to clean up your yard. Little do you know, there’s an evil plant about to sprout.

At any given moment, these combined elements (the seed, the soil, water, and the sun) can bring the plant to life. The seed itself (because of Joe’s evil genius) holds tiny blueprints tied to your biological factors; a personalized mixture of genetics, temperament, and family history.

But just because the seed is planted doesn’t mean it will grow. A seed needs the proper nutrients and conditions to germinate, and this is where the soil plays a huge part. The soil comprises childhood experiences, family dynamics, and social and living situations.

Joe hoped you’d have the right soil in his yard, else his experiment would have failed! So, the seed is there, and the right soil is in place. Given that you’re caring for the garden (representing your life), you regularly water your soil.

As it’s watered, the seed absorbs the water to swell in size. The water, in this case, is thought errors. The seed, if it’s not watered enough, will not reach its full potential. In this case, that would be a positive thing.

But let’s say you did water it enough with your negative thoughts. If the soil, representing your life experiences, is filled with supportive and positive influences, the plant won’t grow. However, the plant starts to grow if the soil is "toxic" due to negative experiences.

But given that we’re here talking about social anxiety, I will assume that the seed is in the right type of soil to grow into an evil plant. So the seed is planted, watered, and growing.

The seed enters a latent or hidden stage at this point in the process. It’s breaking down and digesting the compounds inside of it. This is why many of us would say that we don’t remember having social anxiety as a child and that it developed later.

While it’s doing its thing, you’re experiencing life and getting hit by it. Punched in the stomach one day and gossiped about the next. With each experience you have, the roots grow stronger, strengthening the seed. This is when your experiences impact your social anxiety, increasing the frequency of your negative thoughts. And since the plant is evil, the more it’s watered, the faster it grows.

With time, if there’s no help to remove the seed or awareness that there is one in the first place, it will grow wildly into a fully-blown plant that is out of control. This growth is often unnoticed until the plant has invaded your life to such an extent that it's hard to ignore. Many of us didn’t know we had social anxiety until way later.

We felt like we didn’t know “how to do life” like everyone else.

So, all these things came together, and now you have this plant that’s made its way into your house you can’t get rid of because the roots run through your floor and are intertwined with your furniture. By this point, it’s not a cute plant anymore, but like an overgrown weed wreaking havoc in your home.

Not only is it in the way, but years of its poisonous air have seeped into your home, and you’re drenched in it along with all your belongings. It feels like you’ll never be clean of it.

Ok, here’s what we know so far:

  1. There’s an evil plant in your home:: The cycle starts with the existence of the "evil plant," which represents social anxiety.
  2. The evil plant releases poisonous air: Each time you experience social anxiety, the evil plant releases poisonous air, making you feel bad (we need to find out what this poison is made of).
  3. Negative thought patterns water the plant: Your negative thoughts effectively " water" the evil plant and enable its growth. These thoughts can also be fueled by the poisonous are making you feel bad.
  4. Roots grow stronger from life experiences: As you continue to experience life events, particularly negative or challenging ones, these experiences act like fertilizer for the plant, causing the roots to grow stronger and further entrenching the social anxiety.
  5. The evil plant grows bigger in the home: The bigger and stronger the plant gets, the more space it takes up in the home, symbolizing an increase in the severity of social anxiety.

Then the cycle begins again with the larger evil plant in the home. Each round of this cycle might make the plant bigger and your situation worse if you don’t act on it.

Joe is thrilled. The evil plant was a success. He didn’t even have to do much because you’re the one who took care of it all along.

But you’re no dummy – you’ve noticed this plant slowly taking over your home, giving you an icky feeling inside each time you get closer to it. You have a hard time breathing around it. You may not know exactly how it got there, but you know something needs to be done.

First, you need to know what you’re going up against. The plant is harmless – sure, it takes up space, but it’s the poisonous air that’s making you sick and causing the plant to grow stronger.

The poisonous air represents the immediate triggers and reactions that keep your social anxiety alive and kicking. These reactions feed the plant, exacerbating your social anxiety, which means we’re finally getting to the answer we’ve been looking for all this time.

The poisonous air is toxic shame!

See, each time you experience social anxiety, the evil plant sends a puff of toxic shame into the air. With time, the toxic shame built up. To the point where you can’t tap into your authentic self anymore. And then you end up with a crazy evil plant that’s taken over your life.

Toxic shame can lead to emotions that can make you question your worth.

According to psychiatrist Peter Breggin in his book “Guilt, Shame, and Anxiety“:

  • feeling worthless
  • worrying what others think about you
  • being afraid to look stupid
  • perfectionism in response to fearing failure
  • constant negative self-talk
  • anger in response to shame triggers

Pff, if that doesn’t sound like social anxiety…(eyes going weirdly from one side to the other)

If predisposition, environment, and psychological factors were instrumental to bringing social anxiety to life, toxic shame is keeping it alive.

At this point, it might feel like a lost cause. It’s everywhere! But there’s a way to get yourself back on track. You do not need to be stuck with this evil plant in your home and soaked in toxic shame.

Don’t tell Joe, but here’s how to get rid of the evil plant and cleanse yourself from toxic shame:

  1. Acknowledge the presence of the plant: This is the first and most important step. You have to acknowledge that the plant exists. It may be hard to accept that something so harmful has been growing inside your home, but denying its existence won't make it disappear. The alternative is to forever walk around it, even though it’s taking up so much space.

Recognizing and accepting that there's a problem is the foundation for any meaningful change.

  1. Understand its nature: Now that you've accepted its presence, you must understand what it is and how it functions. This involves understanding the elements that contribute to its growth - the seed (predisposition), the soil (environment), the water (negative thoughts), and the roots (life experiences). You also need to acknowledge the role of toxic shame in keeping it alive.

Gaining a deeper understanding of the factors contributing to social anxiety is crucial for figuring out how to manage it.

  1. Stop watering it: Remember that watering plants means engaging in negative thought patterns. You stop watering it by having different thoughts. Work on reframing your mindset. Cognitive behavior therapy can help you change thoughts and stop watering the plant.

Changing your thought patterns to stop nurturing social anxiety is an important part of the journey.

  1. Take it out of its soil: Start by changing your environment. This could mean distancing yourself from negative people, changing your lifestyle, or improving your self-esteem and self-worth.

Changing the environment and lifestyle can remove the conditions that allow social anxiety to thrive.

  1. Examine the roots: See which are healthy and which are damaged. Explore the past experiences that have contributed to the growth of this plant. This could involve trauma therapy, EMDR, or other therapeutic approaches that help to process and heal from past traumas.

Exploring past experiences is super important to understand the origins of your social anxiety and the underlying issues.

  1. Prevent future growth: Fertilize the soil with goodness. Take measures to prevent the growth of a new evil plant. Therapy, self-care practices, building a strong support system, and learning coping strategies for managing social anxiety.

Ensuring the conditions for growing social anxiety aren’t there anymore is essential to managing this long-term.

Now you know that toxic shame keeps your social anxiety alive and kicking. In a future episode, I will address this topic more in-depth.

Before I end this episode, can we take a second and imagine a world where an evil social anxiety plant exists?

In 3075, on a distant planet in the Andromeda Galaxy, the Social Anxiety Plant had become the lifeblood of society. This rare flora possessed an eerie power – if one ceased watering it, terrible misfortune would befall them. Citizens diligently tended to the plants, fearful of the consequences of neglect. As the legend went, an ancient curse would be unleashed upon those who dared to ignore their responsibilities.

Whispers of the curse spread like wildfire, each recount more bone-chilling than the last: faces morphing grotesquely, voices reduced to a mere rasp, and bodies wracked with tremors that never ceased. In this age of technological marvels and interstellar exploration, mankind remained shackled by a botanical force, their fate entwined with the care of the mysterious Social Anxiety Plant.

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