Unworried. Dr. Gregory Popcak
alt="Image"/> Identify a situation that causes you anxiety. Write it in your notebook.
2. Reattribute.
3. Respond.
The goal of this exercise is to: 1. Help you identify the real source of your anxiety (your body, not your environment); 2. Re-engage your calm-down nervous system so you can respond rather than react to stressors; and 3. Identify one simple step you can take to effectively respond to the problem situation. This process will allow you to, one step at a time, take control of your anxiety and respond more thoughtfully and productively to life’s stressors.
Chapter Three
Getting on My Nerves — The Psychology of Anxiety
The more you understand the different factors that work together to create our experience of anxiety, the more avenues you have to address and overcome it. In the last chapter, we explored how anxiety begins as an experience inside your body, and we identified some basic strategies that can help you get your body back under control. Now we are going to briefly explore how your thought-life can also be a significant contributor to your level of anxiety and begin to look at different psychological strategies that can help anyone experience greater peace regardless of the level of anxiety they might be experiencing in their lives.
Psychological and Emotional Factors
Although we often don’t realize it, when something happens to us, it impacts us on several different psychological and emotional levels at once. Let’s pick a simple illustration. Suppose you text a friend and you don’t get a response. As a result, you begin to experience some degree of anxiety.
The First Layer — The Event
From a psychological perspective, the first layer of experience is the event itself. You texted a friend and didn’t get a response. As a result, you are aware of a feeling of nervousness and dread. But why? Most people answer this question by simply describing what happened, as if that explains everything. “I just told you! I texted my friend and didn’t get a response! How could I NOT feel anxious and upset?”
The problem is that this statement assumes that everyone would feel the exact same way about this event as you do. Although many people feel anxious when a friend doesn’t text them back, some people feel angry, some people are curious, and others don’t give it a second thought. Even among those who get anxious, they might be more or less anxious than you. The real question is, what is causing your unique emotional reaction?
The Second Layer — Self-Talk
To answer this question, you have to go a little deeper. The second layer of any emotional experience is self-talk. Self-talk is the internal narration of your life. We aren’t always paying attention to it, but our mind is always engaging in some kind of self-talk as a way of telling us what our current experience means to us, what we should make of it, and how we should respond to it based on past experience. One good example of self-talk are those internet memes that show a person thinking two different thoughts: the thing they say to be polite and the thing that they really think.
Karen texted Julia an adorable cat video. Julia didn’t respond.
Karen smiled and said, “It’s fine …”
It was NOT fine.
To get at the particular self-talk that attends a specific emotional event, rather than asking, “Why do I feel this way?” which tends to simply lead to circular reasoning (i.e., “I feel this way about the event because the event happened!”), it’s better to ask yourself, “What does it mean to me that this event happened?” Or even, “What does it say about me that this happened to me?” Both of these questions do a better job of helping us tune in to the self-talk that underlies our anxiety.
“What does it mean to me that Julia didn’t respond to my text?”