How
to stop absorbing other people’s anxiety
Is absorbing other people’s anxiety holding you back from hitting your goals? We pick up on emotions more easily than we realise, and secondhand stress can quickly hamper our health.
Feeling overwhelmed without due cause? Secondhand stress is tension and pressure we experience due to other people’s behaviour. Emotions are contagious – just like the flu, we can actually “catch” and absorb what others are feeling. It’s a remarkable ability we have as human beings, as we are hard-wired to empathise with those around us.
Connecting with others and caring for them is key to our survival, so it makes sense we can take on other people’s positive and negative feelings as well. ‘When those around us are feeling stressed, our instinct is to be alerted to this and to respond as if these are cues of danger,’ says Avy Joseph, an experienced cognitive behaviour therapist and director of the College of Cognitive Behavioural Therapies.
What is secondhand stress?
So, how can stress impact our health and fitness goals? ‘It’s important to think about what we mean by “stress” because stress can be “healthy stress” or “unhealthy stress”,’ says Joseph. ‘Unhealthy stress is called anxiety. While healthy stress is called concern. Anxiety is an emotion provoked by an unhealthy or irrational belief or attitude about either a perceived or a real threat or danger to you and to what matters to you. Concern is the healthy version of anxiety.’
When you are stuck in a state of anxiety, your thoughts may be preoccupied with “what if” and you are likely to avoid or seek assurance and reassurance or do something to get rid of the feelings quickly, ultimately not really solving it or getting better in the long term.
‘To be stuck in a state of anxiety, day in and day out, impacts on your health, quality of life and fitness goals for sure,’ says Joseph. ‘Long-term anxiety alone can impact your heart health, weight, increase blood pressure and cause gastrointestinal problems, insomnia, headaches, loss of libido, fatigue, muscle aches and pains to name but a few.’
Therefore, you are more likely to engage in behaviours that sabotage your goals such as avoidance, over-exercising, drinking too much, eating too much or abstaining from food. This is hardly the ideal state for focusing on goals in a positive way. In essence, anxiety is negative goal setting, and long-term anxiety can also increase your risks of developing depression and other anxiety-related disorders such as panic disorders and OCD (obsessive-compulsive disorder).
Spot the symptoms of secondhand stress
You can be anxious about anything, and you can have multiple anxieties. Secondhand anxiety is what some people call anxiety about anxiety, and anxiety about other people’s feelings. And we can make ourselves anxious about anything. The battlefield is our minds. Think about what you are thinking about, and what makes you anxious.
To recognise anxiety, check two things:
• your thoughts, and
• what your feelings are telling you to
do
If you are experiencing anxiety about anxiety, your thoughts will be focused on the feeling of anxiety itself. You may think, I shouldn’t be feeling anxious because nothing bad has happened or is happening. What you may feel like doing is stopping the feeling of anxiety quickly and you may feel like seeking assurance, avoiding your feelings rather than accepting them, you feel like calming your feelings with alcohol, over-exercising or comfort eating. Your mind will be preoccupied with getting rid of the uncomfortable feeling. Ironically, some of these unhealthy “new” habits might make you feel even more anxious. If you take up smoking to calm your nerves, for example, it can cause more anxiety if you consider the health risks going along with it. Smoking in itself is thus cause for anxiety. Or any other bad habit, for that matter.
How to deal with secondhand stress
What positive strategies can you employ for secondhand stress whilst still supporting loved ones with their anxieties? ‘Secondhand anxiety is provoked by our own unhealthy beliefs,’ says Joseph. ‘Unhealthy beliefs are dogmatic, rigid, absolutist in nature. They are based on “must”, “have to”, “got to”.’
For example, you might
feel as if…
‘I must be always in control
of my feelings, it’s awful when I can’t control my feelings, I can’t stand not
being able to control my feelings, it proves I’m weak or worthless.’
‘I must not feel
anxious and uncomfortable when I see my loved ones anxious and unhappy. I
cannot stand seeing my loved ones unhappy. I must be able to help my loved one
to feel happy, if I can’t it’s awful, I cannot bear it and proves I’m a
failure.’
It’s our dogmatic demands that provoke our feelings of anxiety. This is at the heart of solving our emotional problems. It’s called the ‘principle of emotional responsibility.’ We are responsible for our own feelings, and we are NOT the cause of other people’s feelings. This can be challenging because of expressions like ‘you make me feel anxious’ and ‘people’s disapproval makes me anxious’ are common. People even ask, ‘what makes you anxious?’. The correct answer is ‘I make myself anxious – my thoughts and my irrational fears’. We can then learn to make ourselves un-anxious. This in turn helps us to become emotional healthy and happy. As said before, this battle is in our minds.
How to cope
Eliminate
avoidance. We tend to avoid feelings,
thoughts, physiological sensations, assertive behaviours, mental images.
Develop resiliency to discomfort. Sit with your feelings. Feel them. They are your body’s natural electricity. Allow them. Use mindfulness by observing your feelings rather than relaxation techniques. Relaxation techniques to solve anxiety about anxiety will be counterproductive.
Accept that other people’s feelings are not within your control. Work on your reactions to other people’s feelings.
Be compassionate. Be kind to yourself and accept that we are human and we have feelings. This is natural. Acceptance is the first step to healing yourself from being stuck in anxiety.
Be consistent and repeat. Repeat the new way of thinking and the new behaviour in a consistent manner. This will turn into a habit at some point, and it becomes your go-to reaction. Changing attitudes and behaviour starts uncomfortably because it’s new – it’s taking you out of your comfort zone. The most difficult part of anything new – like changing your attitudes or thoughts, or learning any new habit or skill – is the beginning. You never HAVE to think & stress about everything that pops into your head – you have a choice. You can choose your own thoughts and reactions. But you can’t choose others people's.
Until next week!
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