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		<title>The Only &#8220;Cure&#8221; for Social Anxiety Disorder and Achieving Social Freedom</title>
		<link>https://www.towerofpower.com.au/social-anxiety-disorder-cure</link>
					<comments>https://www.towerofpower.com.au/social-anxiety-disorder-cure#comments</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Joshua Uebergang aka "Tower of Power"]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 13 Apr 2011 01:12:32 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Confidence and Fear]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[ACT]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Big Talkers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[CBT]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[cognitive restructuring]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Emotional Intelligence]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[emotions]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[fear]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[fear of rejection]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Happiness]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[mindfulness]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Russ Harris]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social anxiety]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Steven Hayes]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[values]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.towerofpower.com.au/?p=245</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[It&#8217;s a paradox that what got you reading this article is maintaining your problem. The word “cure” is what creates your social anxiety disorder. I cringe at saying cure in the title of this article, but it displays a breakthrough point modern therapists have discovered: attempts to remove social anxiety cause it to persist. You <!-- more-link -->[&#8230;] <a href="https://www.towerofpower.com.au/social-anxiety-disorder-cure" class="more more-link">Read more</a>]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><span class="dropcap">I</span>t&#8217;s a paradox that what got you reading this article is maintaining your problem. The word “cure” is what creates your social anxiety disorder. I cringe at saying cure in the title of this article, but it displays a breakthrough point modern therapists have discovered: attempts to remove social anxiety cause it to persist.</p>
<p>You can do a <a href="https://www.towerofpower.com.au/social-anxiety-disorder-test">social anxiety test</a> to learn if you have a disorder, but it&#8217;s likely you suffer from a social anxiety disorder having tried to treat it for years. Your infatuation with anxiety and curing it go hand-in-hand. What you resist persists making <a href="https://www.towerofpower.com.au/why-problem-solving-doesnt-solve-the-problem-and-the-real-solution-to-permanent-change">problem-solving ineffective</a>.</p>
<p><iframe width="480" height="360" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/86wmCyT6VdA?rel=0" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe></p>
<p class="caption">Watch the video above for the start of this article and the only social anxiety disorder cure</p>
<p>From a young age we&#8217;re tricked to believe in emotional regulation. We believe adults are mature, stable, and happy because of emotional control. “Stop crying and being a baby.” “Don&#8217;t be angry.” And of course my dreaded, “Don&#8217;t be a scaredy cat.” Emotional regulation has lead to your search here today as you try discover the cure of your social anxiety.</p>
<p>What are the affects of battling your anxiety? What&#8217;s the secret to better socialize and start living a meaningful life?<span id="more-245"></span></p>
<h2>The Hidden Danger of a Social Anxiety Disorder</h2>
<blockquote><p>Cowards die many times before their deaths.<cite>William Shakespeare</cite></p></blockquote>
<blockquote><p>To understand the world one must not be worrying about one&#8217;s self.<cite>Albert Einstein</cite></p></blockquote>
<p>Social anxiety affects you on the outside. You&#8217;re in a conversation looking at someone, but really you&#8217;re looking within, monitoring what&#8217;s going on. “Am I getting more anxious? Is my nervousness dropping? What do they think of me?”</p>
<p>A battle with a social anxiety disorder is life-limiting. Imagine yourself at a banquet of delicious meats and foods on the table with anxiety sitting beside you. If you battle anxiety, both hands grasp the knife and fork for weapons as you focus on slicing anxiety to death. Anxiety sometimes gets hit yet morphs into a more intense form. You swing harder only to tire yourself out – all the while you miss a delightful moment of treats.</p>
<p>Your battle with anxiety consumes plentiful amounts of energy that diverts your mind and body from activities, daily tasks, and relationships meaningful to you. If someone was to choke you right now, of all the things you could do (look out the window, scratch your head, laugh), you&#8217;d be obsessed with one: breathing again. Fighting anxiety is like being choked as it narrows your repertoire of behavior. There&#8217;s a banquet to enjoy in life instead of fighting anxiety.</p>
<p>In conversation you can focus on learning what someone does for a career, how your friend spends free time, or listening to make someone feel heard to live out a value of being friendly. At the moment though, you fight anxiety. This makes a social anxiety disorder an awkward problem. If you have the disorder as characterized by a resistance to anxiety, you&#8217;re not present in the conversation and people notice it.</p>
<p>I created an <a href="https://www.towerofpower.com.au/anxiety-disorder">anxiety video and infographic</a> to help you better understand what it&#8217;s like to have an anxiety disorder in today&#8217;s world:<br />
<iframe width="640" height="360" src="//www.youtube.com/embed/eoKtz8IoROE" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen="allowfullscreen"></iframe></p>
<figure id="attachment_795" class="alignnone full-width-mobile thin"><img decoding="async" class=" size-full wp-image-795" src="https://www.towerofpower.com.au/images/infographic/anxiety-disorder.jpg" alt="Anxiety disorder infographic" /></figure>
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<p><!-- Please call pinit.js only once per page --><script src="//assets.pinterest.com/js/pinit.js" async="" type="text/javascript"></script></p>
<h2>How Anxiety Experts Cure a Social Anxiety Disorder</h2>
<blockquote><p>If we take the generally accepted definition of bravery as a quality which knows no fear, I have never seen a brave man. All men are frightened. The more intelligent they are, the more they are frightened.<cite>George S. Patton, World War II general</cite></p></blockquote>
<blockquote><p>Fear is natural. Be with it.<cite>Thomas Leonard, founder of CoachVille</cite></p></blockquote>
<p>I picked up a social anxiety disorder at 14 years old. I&#8217;m now 27 years old and don&#8217;t consider myself cured. “What?! You can&#8217;t teach people then you jerk!”</p>
<p>The moment you consider yourself treated from social anxiety or other forms of anxiety is when you&#8217;re vulnerable. It&#8217;s the same mind-trap as wanting to banish anxiety.</p>
<p>Stephen Hayes, co-creator of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), was a psychologist when he developed a panic disorder. In an <a href="https://www.towerofpower.com.au/bigtalk/">interview I did with him</a>, he applied advice from cognitive therapies like cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), but they felt to him as if he had spat into a hurricane.</p>
<p>Here&#8217;s one example. CBT uses the term “cognitive restructuring” to be more rationale about anxiety-inducing situations. Shifting a thought of “I&#8217;m going to look like an idiot at the party” to “I&#8217;m extremely nervous at this party, but I&#8217;ll leave in one piece tonight and probably make some new friends!” wasn&#8217;t very helpful for him. You may have tried the same restructuring that helped in the short-term only to find the spit flying back at you soon after.</p>
<blockquote class="alignright" style="width: 30%;">The problem and infatuation with removing anxiety go hand-in-hand.</blockquote>
<p>One day Dr Hayes became an assistant professor when he was in a department meeting watching the professors angrily fight with each other. He raised his hand to ask a question, but couldn&#8217;t make a sound come out of his mouth. After 30 seconds, no sound was made and the meeting resumed.</p>
<p>“That event,” says Dr Hayes, “is not what created my anxiety disorder.” If you get humiliated talking to a hot blonde, it doesn&#8217;t mean anxiety will be with you for the remainder of your life. It can start an internal battle where you fight the internal experience of anxiety. You start to project the experience where you see yourself fainting and dying in the future.</p>
<p>Imagine a young boy freely running around a playground. Suddenly he falls into a dark, dirty hole called “anxiety”. It&#8217;s not his fault he fell into the hole. How the hole got there doesn&#8217;t matter because it&#8217;s just there.</p>
<p>The child is scared of the black ditch because one day he heard bad creatures live in the dark. Afraid of this, he quickly decides to escape by digging. 10 minutes later he looks up to see no progress so he digs more dirt out and digs faster. Sweat beads down his forehead.</p>
<p>One hour of strenuous digging later, he glances up with his glassy eyes only to see he&#8217;s further from freedom. He is more afraid than before.</p>
<p>Has digging hard (attempts to conquer anxiety) freed you? I doubt it has because you&#8217;re reading this article hoping to cure a social phobia. Have a pad and pen handy because in this article I&#8217;ll ask you to do a lot of tough and fulfilling work that&#8217;s counter-intuitive to what you&#8217;ve done most of your life.</p>
<h2>How to End Suffering Forever</h2>
<blockquote><p>We are more often frightened than hurt; and we suffer more from imagination than from reality.<cite>Seneca, 1st century Roman philosopher</cite></p></blockquote>
<blockquote><p>God, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, Courage to change the things I can, And wisdom to know the difference.<cite>The Serenity Prayer by Reinhold Neibuhr</cite></p></blockquote>
<p>Anxiety sufferers believe anxiety causes pain and must be gone before they can live a meaningful life. Self-talk of social anxiety sufferers include: “Before I can talk with that girl, I need to feel confident”, “I need to be comfortable to get on stage and speak”, and “I can&#8217;t make friends as long as I&#8217;m a nervous wreck”.</p>
<blockquote class="alignleft" style="width: 30%;">Anxiety sufferers believe anxiety causes pain and must be gone before they can live a meaningful life.</blockquote>
<p>You may believe you can&#8217;t make friends or chat with cute girls until this yucky thing that is anxiety disappears. That&#8217;s what you&#8217;ve been lead to believe by <a href="https://www.towerofpower.com.au/myths-and-dangers-of-self-help">self-help gurus</a> who pronounce you have to think and feel a certain way to achieve a goal. Georg Eifert and John Forsyth, co-authors of <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.com%2FAcceptance-Commitment-Therapy-Anxiety-Disorders%2Fdp%2F1572244275&#038;tag=toptop-20&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1789&#038;creative=9325" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">Acceptance and Commitment Therapy for Anxiety Disorders</a></em>, wrote something worth burning into memory: “Feeling good is not a requirement for living good.”</p>
<p>When you believe you must feel good to live good, you battle anxiety. The truth is: anxiety doesn&#8217;t cause pain – your struggle with anxiety creates undue pain.</p>
<p>Suffering forms from pain and nonacceptance according to Linehan, author of <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.com%2FTraining-Treating-Borderline-Personality-Disorder%2Fdp%2F0898620341&#038;tag=toptop-20&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1789&#038;creative=9325" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">Skills Training Manual for Treating Borderline Personality Disorder</a></em>. Ultimate suffering is suicide, an attempt to end pain from nonacceptance. You suffer when you don&#8217;t want to be hurt, when you don&#8217;t want to be anxious, when you don&#8217;t want to fear.</p>
<p>Fearless is unnecessary to have a great social life. You don&#8217;t need to be fearless to contribute. You can be fear-ridden and live a meaningful life. “You don&#8217;t need to think this way or feel that way to be free of social anxiety,” said Dr Hayes. “Instead of wanting social anxiety to disappear and then you can be with yourself and others, it turns out you can go directly and quickly to the end if you compassionately hold your insides.”</p>
<p>Anxiety does not mean something is wrong you – it&#8217;s the approach of battling anxiety that causes suffering. Sexual abuse is one unfortunate event in life that causes trauma yet it doesn&#8217;t always lead to being broken or living a sexually suppressed life. Victims of sexual abuse can feel anxiety in sexual situations yet live as they please. Psychological health is not the absence of trauma, pain, and negative experiences.</p>
<p>The difference between a free outgoing person and someone shy is not the experience of anxiety, but if the anxiety is held onto, battled with, and pushed away. Escapism constricts your social life because your internal experiences are inescapable. You cannot run from yourself. Drop the mindset of “curing anxiety” altogether. “I&#8217;ve learned to never say no to anxiety,” said Dr Hayes in my interview with him. “If anxiety wants to show up, it&#8217;s perfectly welcome to do so.”</p>
<p>My question to you is: are you willing to make room for anxiety to be in your life?</p>
<h2>Why Doing What You&#8217;re Anxious About Works</h2>
<blockquote><p>There is no coming to consciousness without pain.<cite>Carl Gustav Jung, founder of analytical psychology</cite></p></blockquote>
<blockquote><p>For a long time it had seemed to me that life was about to begin – real life. But there was always some obstacle in the way. Something to be got through first, some unfinished business, time still to be served, a debt to be paid. Then life would begin. At last it dawned on me that these obstacles were my life.<cite>Fr. Alfred D&#8217;Souza in <span style="font-style:normal">Happiness Is A Journey</span></cite></p></blockquote>
<p>Do the thing you&#8217;re anxious about and anxiety will rot away. That&#8217;s a <a href="https://www.towerofpower.com.au/5-truths-about-fear-what-fear-doesnt-want-you-to-know">truth of fear</a> and a better lesson self-help teaches. The underlying message is to conquer fear and anxiety, which contradicts what you learned so far.</p>
<p>Firstly, fear and anxiety differ. Fear promotes action in the present while anxiety anticipates the future. You can fear being punched in the head by a muscle-jacked boyfriend if you approach a hot girl and he pushes you, but worrying about being punched by that guy before you approach is anxiety.</p>
<p>Fear and anxiety reduce when you experience what you&#8217;re afraid of. Neither emotion is worse than the other. A skydiver will likely fear his tenth jump less than his first and a guy who approaches a hundred women will be less anxious than if he approached none. This is exposure and it works at living with anxiety.</p>
<p>You didn&#8217;t learn to ride a bike by reading or thinking about it. You crashed, you fell, you got hurt. There&#8217;s no other way than direct experience to ride a bike.</p>
<p>“Exposure therapy” has you repeat contact with what you fear in a safe environment until the fear is extinct or minimized. If you&#8217;re petrified to leave the house, it might begin by putting your head out the window, sitting on your verandah, or walking around the garden. If you&#8217;re afraid of cafes, day one could be to order a coffee, day two is to order a coffee while holding eye contact, while day three also gets you to ask how the barista’s day is going.</p>
<p>How can you use exposure to step into your social phobia? List three steps on a pad. It could be: 1) go to a mall and sit down, 2) make eye contact with 10 people who pass you, and 3) say “Hey” on the tenth person.</p>
<p>You may feel your heart increasing right now with just the thought of exposure. Don&#8217;t battle it. The battling is what causes suffering. Be mindful of your increased heart-rate and shallow breathe. Be okay with it. Continue to write your three steps.</p>
<p>The discomfort experienced signals your evolution. Something different is happening in your life right now! Remember Jung&#8217;s words: “There is no coming to consciousness without pain.” Whenever I feel discomfort, I acknowledge a transformation – an evolution – is occurring inside me that&#8217;ll produce a different a result to what I&#8217;ve had in the past.</p>
<p><em>Be careful making exposure another cure to social anxiety</em>. Cognitive therapies use exposure to reduce anxiety and treat symptoms, but ACT uses it with the purpose of getting you to be okay with feeling anxiety. That&#8217;s a big difference.</p>
<blockquote class="alignright" style="width: 30%;">Make doing what you&#8217;re anxious about a feeling experience that enriches life.</blockquote>
<p>Anxiety is natural so it makes sense to not suffer with attempts to conquer it. <a href="https://www.towerofpower.com.au/services">Bootcamp students</a> get a great feeling experience from exposure therapy. We might go to a bar or club with no intent but to be there. The student says “Hey!” to a group and keeps walking. The goal is to be okay with feeling afraid of meeting people so you can live a purposeful life. The belief you shouldn&#8217;t be afraid of new people only increases suffering.</p>
<p>If you do what you worry about to remove anxiety, is that another short-term tool to battle anxiety? I suggest you use exposure not to reduce anxiety, but to experience anxiety, feel how it&#8217;s normal, and believe a purposeful life is possible with it. Anxiety is natural so be with it.</p>
<p>Lesson: make doing what you&#8217;re anxious about a feeling experience that enriches life.</p>
<h2>How to Free Yourself From the Fight with Social Anxiety</h2>
<blockquote><p>One cannot simultaneously prevent and prepare for war.<cite>Albert Einstein</cite></p></blockquote>
<blockquote><p>He who knows when he can fight and when he cannot, will be victorious.<cite>Sun Tzu, author of <span style="font-style:normal">The Art of War</span></cite></p></blockquote>
<p>Creatures relate to things based on their attributes like speed, color, and size. Humans do too but we can abstract these perceptions. We often do not take a fast beating heart for what it is: a fast beating heart. If your heart thumps hard, you may infer you&#8217;re about to have a panic attack. Once you learn to categorize something within, it seems like a thing. Anxiety to you seems real and dangerous.</p>
<p>In the past century since Darwin&#8217;s work, we&#8217;ve categorized anxiety as an unhealthy emotional affect of worry. Anxiety is seen as bad due to the surge of pop-psychology books in the 80s, positive-thinking tapes in the 90s, and now blogging in the 21st century where anyone can chant self-help advice. Western society teaches you to master your emotions, control your thoughts, and move from unpleasant states through manipulation.</p>
<p>Answer these questions to do with categorizing emotions:</p>
<ul>
<li>Is “joy” good or bad?</li>
<li>Is “sadness” good or bad?</li>
<li>Is “anxiety” good or bad?</li>
</ul>
<p>You probably answered “good”, “bad”, and “bad”. But is it bad to be sad when your friend dies? Is it bad to be anxious when you&#8217;re in a new environment and meet someone you don&#8217;t know?</p>
<p>The <a href="https://www.towerofpower.com.au/myths-and-dangers-of-self-help">self-help myth</a> and belief that anxiety is bad cause you to try cut it out like a parasite from your body. You read endless articles on dealing with social anxiety, post in forums desperately seeking help, and beg for anything to alleviate you of this disease. <em>All this makes you more anxious</em>.</p>
<p>You fight anxiety because of the belief and categorization it&#8217;s bad. You can also take this control approach because it&#8217;s an adaptive method to survive in the external world.</p>
<p>You fear climbing a high cliff for survival and pain reduction. Bruce Chorpita, Professor of Psychology at UCLA, and David Barlow, Professor of Psychology at Boston University, in a 1998 study called <em><a href="http://www.childfirst.ucla.edu/1998%20Development%20of%20Anxiety.pdf" target="blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">The Development of Anxiety</a></em> confirm a control approach to make life right is important to healthy well-being. Nothing is unhealthy about avoiding an unchained dog growling loudly or taking an aspirin to alleviate a headache.</p>
<p>Problems arise when control is used at an extreme level as rigid thinking and behaving do not work. Not approaching a cute girl because you&#8217;re nervous does not work. Calling in sick because you&#8217;re afraid to give a presentation does not work. Saying you&#8217;re not in the mood to go to party does not work when you&#8217;re really staying home to avoid your fear of dancing. It&#8217;s once you avoid crossing a bridge because your friend jumped off the Golden Gate Bridge that control doesn&#8217;t work.</p>
<p>Anxiety and other feelings like anger typically understood as “bad” are not bad. They typify human experience. The belief you need to think and feel positive all the time is inhuman. Emotions don&#8217;t have an off and off switch. Our emotional spectrum of fear, sadness, happiness, anger, and disgust (Darwin&#8217;s five emotions) makes you human. Those who accept and experience the five emotions and their lesser ones without defense are healthy.</p>
<blockquote class="alignleft" style="width: 30%;">Anxiety and other feelings&#8230; typify human experience.</blockquote>
<p>Here&#8217;s a quick exercise to do in this moment. Try to make yourself happy. Give yourself a minute. Now try to make yourself anxious. Give yourself another minute to create this state.</p>
<p>Did you make yourself happy or anxious? You didn&#8217;t directly create the emotion. You induced either by remembering a happy or anxious memory, which created the emotion. You experienced something that triggered happiness and something else that lead to anxiety. Emotions like anxiety naturally arise from experience and cannot be easily controlled like a power switch.</p>
<p>One point I must make clear is regulating actions of an emotion is completely different to emotional regulation. It&#8217;s okay to accept the one second of anger when your son doesn&#8217;t wash the dishes, but it isn&#8217;t okay to abuse him about it. You have the power to control the action-side of anger by breathing to gain clarity, thinking about the need that caused your anger, and being assertive.</p>
<h2>A Breakthrough Model for Social Freedom</h2>
<blockquote><p>He who is brave is free.<cite>Seneca</cite></p></blockquote>
<blockquote><p>Man is free at the moment he wishes to be.<cite>Voltaire, 17th century writer on social reform</cite></p></blockquote>
<p>You now know to not resist anxiety. If you try to not think of a pink elephant, you&#8217;re stuck thinking about a pink elephant. What should you do instead of obsessing about the pink elephant that is anxiety?</p>
<p>Before we can answer this, let&#8217;s first understand what you were trying to achieve by removing anxiety. Here&#8217;s a quote from my special member&#8217;s only report <em>The Only Cure to Social Anxiety</em>, available in part three of <em><a href="https://www.towerofpower.com.au/bigtalk/">Big Talkers</a></em>, where for the first time this breakthrough model of social freedom is revealed and simply applied to socializing:</p>
<blockquote><p>You&#8217;ve heard the terms “social anxiety” and “fear”, but what words are their opposite? You probably think terms like “calmness” is the opposite to “social anxiety” and “confidence” is the opposite to “fear”.</p>
<p>You&#8217;ve been “working on yourself” for a few years now and banish fear in pursuit of confidence. You try to erase anxiety in pursuit of calmness. Such actions are driven by the belief that an opposite – more ideal – state of anxiety exists. This belief drives your fear in social situations.</p></blockquote>
<p>You can see this traditional model to deal with social anxiety below:</p>
<figure id="attachment_508" class="aligncenter full-width-mobile thin"><img decoding="async" src="https://www.towerofpower.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2011/04/anxiety-confidence-continuum.png" alt="The old model of social confidence where you try to cure a social anxiety disorder" width="485" height="70" class="size-full wp-image-508" srcset="https://www.towerofpower.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2011/04/anxiety-confidence-continuum.png 485w, https://www.towerofpower.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2011/04/anxiety-confidence-continuum-300x43.png 300w, https://www.towerofpower.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2011/04/anxiety-confidence-continuum-460x66.png 460w, https://www.towerofpower.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2011/04/anxiety-confidence-continuum-220x32.png 220w, https://www.towerofpower.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2011/04/anxiety-confidence-continuum-160x23.png 160w" sizes="(max-width: 485px) 100vw, 485px" /><figcaption>The old model for fixing social anxiety: move from socially anxious to confidence</figcaption></figure>
<p>Continuing on in the report:</p>
<blockquote><p>What if I told you an opposite term didn&#8217;t exist? What effect would that have on your belief system and actions?</p>
<p>If social anxiety and fear had no opposite, you wouldn&#8217;t pursue another state. You wouldn&#8217;t seek out calmness to move away from it&#8217;s polar opposite of social anxiety. You wouldn&#8217;t seek out confidence to move away from it&#8217;s polar opposite of fear.</p>
<p>With anxiety and fear being their own states with no opposite, you couldn&#8217;t make them transform or disappear into another state. They would simply exist because it&#8217;s natural.</p></blockquote>
<p>What does the new model look like then?</p>
<p>If anxiety is a natural experience to be held, the other end of the “confidence spectrum” becomes freedom. You&#8217;re free to experience what you feel!</p>
<blockquote class="alignright" style="width: 30%;">The problem is not anxiety, but the desire to avoid anxiety.</blockquote>
<p><em>Freedom is not an alleviation of barriers, but complete acceptance of them</em>. You don&#8217;t have to like the barriers. You don&#8217;t have to like anxiety. It&#8217;s your choice if you drop the tug-of-war rope with anxiety and allow it to be there.</p>
<p>The problem is not anxiety, but the desire to avoid anxiety. Attempts to move from social anxiety towards confidence, calmness, even freedom – whatever it maybe – snares you in the same trap of fighting anxiety. This new model of socializing and living happy aims to not push you from social anxiety towards social freedom, but to move you to accept social anxiety, which is freedom.</p>
<figure id="attachment_509" class="aligncenter full-width-mobile thin"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" src="https://www.towerofpower.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2011/04/anxiety-avoidance-value-based-living-model.png" alt="The new model of social confidence" width="500" height="88" class="size-full wp-image-509" srcset="https://www.towerofpower.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2011/04/anxiety-avoidance-value-based-living-model.png 500w, https://www.towerofpower.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2011/04/anxiety-avoidance-value-based-living-model-300x53.png 300w, https://www.towerofpower.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2011/04/anxiety-avoidance-value-based-living-model-460x81.png 460w, https://www.towerofpower.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2011/04/anxiety-avoidance-value-based-living-model-220x39.png 220w, https://www.towerofpower.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2011/04/anxiety-avoidance-value-based-living-model-160x28.png 160w" sizes="auto, (max-width: 500px) 100vw, 500px" /><figcaption>The new model for social anxiety: move from avoidance to value-based living</figcaption></figure>
<p>You can quickly comprehend how free you are by asking: “Where&#8217;s my focus when anxiety arises?” The free person sees what&#8217;s important to them (value-based living) while the anxiety sufferer battles with anxiety (desire to avoid social anxiety).</p>
<p>A girl who thinks everyone analyzes her is not socially free – she will be afraid to speak and socialize. Another girl who says what she feels and speaks her mind even when she&#8217;s afraid is socially freer than the first girl. Social freedom is therefore the absence of a desire to avoid social anxiety. The later girl lives a freer social life because she knows anxiety and fear is okay to exist. How can you too live a free social life once and for all?</p>
<h2>How to Live a Meaningful Life and Treat a Social Anxiety Disorder with ACT</h2>
<blockquote><p>Has fear ever held a man back from anything he really wanted?<cite>George Bernard Shaw, recipient of the 1925 Nobel Prize in literature</cite></p></blockquote>
<blockquote><p>Courage is not the absence of fear, but rather the judgment that something else is more important than fear.<cite>Ambrose Redmoon, rock band manager and writer</cite></p></blockquote>
<p>You don&#8217;t decide to feel anxiety – you decide to live a meaningful life. Pain exists either way. The push-pull of fear and love is expected if you move towards what you care about like friends and social freedom. Your decision is not whether you feel anxiety, but if you want to reflect on your past and feel proud. How do you go about this? You use the ACT formula.</p>
<p>The ACT formula below is part of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy. CureTogether.org, a place where patients of almost any health problem come together to share their self-experiments, found Acceptance and Commitment Therapy to be one of the most effective yet hidden solutions for <a href="http://curetogether.com/blog/2011/08/29/6100-patients-with-anxiety-report-what-treatments-work-best/" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">anxiety treatment</a>.</p>
<p>Three components exist to start living a meaningful life when you suffer from social anxiety: Accept, Choose Directions, and Take Action.</p>
<p><span class="bigletter">A</span><strong>ccept</strong>. Follow the serenity creed by accepting what you can and can&#8217;t change. If you get anxious around attractive women because you&#8217;re short and you think women find shortness unattractive, as erroneous as that belief is, you can&#8217;t change your height and need to accept it.</p>
<blockquote class="alignleft" style="width: 30%;">Your decision is not whether you feel anxiety, but if you want to reflect on your past and feel proud.</blockquote>
<p>By accepting your height, you don&#8217;t resign to the thought you&#8217;ll forever suck with women. It means you end your struggle with what is. This creates space for you to do something productive like learn the many other things <a href="https://www.towerofpower.com.au/what-women-want-in-men">women want in men</a>.</p>
<p>Acceptance is your willingness to openly live. It is not resignation to your anxiety, a feeling, or one decision. It is a choice you make to approach life each day. There may be a law you hate, but you accept it and openly live with it. Acceptance transforms your suffering into plain pain. Acceptance ends your battle with social anxiety.</p>
<p>Besides, how has resistance to anxiety gone for you? You struggle with the internal battle doing things like screen phone calls, skip parties, and shop at the least busiest of times. The anxiety temporarily subsides then explodes in another situation.</p>
<p>You&#8217;re not a bad or messed up person because of your battle with anxiety and use of strategies to deal with it. You&#8217;re just using ineffective methods. Can you see how resistance is not working for you and why this first step of “Accept” is important for you?</p>
<p><span class="bigletter">C</span><strong>hoose Directions</strong>. Where do you want to be one year from now?</p>
<p>Viktor Frankl was a man confined to life-threatening barriers yet used choice, acceptance, and values to survive then live a valuable life. Frankl was a prisoner of war transported between Nazi camps relentless as the other. Prisoners were stripped naked, called a number instead of their name, starved, placed in gas chambers, and put in dehumanizing moments.</p>
<p>Fellow prisoners committed suicide to avoid the suffering of another day with the Nazis. Some prisoners lay in bed refusing to get up as they submitted to Nazi beatings. Statistic experts estimate there was a 3% chance of survival.</p>
<p>Frankl noticed a common thread amongst those who endured the pain: they had reason to live. What did Frankl do? He stood outside to give a psychotherapeutic speech on concentration camps, studied and helped fellow prisoners, and did what he could to give life purpose. Surviving prisoners imagined reunion with families or completion of a valuable project back in their home country. No Nazi could steal a prisoner&#8217;s vision.</p>
<p>Freud said man is driven from sexual instincts. Frankl developed Logotherapy and says your deepest desire is purpose. Carl Jung echoed similar sediments saying, “The least of things with a meaning is worth more in life than the greatest of things without it.”</p>
<p>Again I ask you&#8230; Where do you want to be one year from now?</p>
<p>You may struggle to head in a direction because of your language that describes anxiety. It&#8217;s typical for anxiety sufferers to be low on life consumed with the anxiety battle. I&#8217;ve heard and said things like, “I can&#8217;t go to parties until my anxiety is fixed”, “I&#8217;d do public speaking, but I&#8217;m afraid”, and “That girl is hot and I&#8217;d like to talk to her, but I don&#8217;t want to embarrass myself”.</p>
<p>Why have you previously wanted anxiety to be gone? To be less anxious? How uninspiring! You know at some level that less anxiety through techniques, anti-depressant medication, or some other remedy <em>doesn&#8217;t create a richer life</em>.</p>
<p>How would it feel if your tombstone had written on it:</p>
<blockquote><p>[Your name] battled anxiety for 14 years. He dedicated each day to researching techniques, taking medication, and doing what&#8217;s possible to dodge anxiety-inducing situations. He had few friends, never volunteered to help the less fortunate, and never married. He was never able to lie down on the beach with the sunset and cool breeze blowing through his hair because he never conquered anxiety.</p></blockquote>
<p>Write your tombstone if you died today. We&#8217;ll get to the second part of this tombstone exercise soon.</p>
<p>Do another useful exercise for change to this new model of social anxiety. Spend five minutes now writing your list of Life Costs of Anxiety Avoidance. This list is to include the costs of what you have missed in life because you avoided anxiety. Common life costs of my students battling social anxiety include:</p>
<ul>
<li>No partner, ever</li>
<li>No fun at social events</li>
<li>No promotions at work from weak behavior</li>
<li>Abuse from strangers for awkwardness</li>
<li>The frustration from not voicing needs</li>
<li>A disbelief great goals can be achieved</li>
</ul>
<p>To further help you choose directions, ask yourself,“What values do I hold?” These values can be outside of relationships because anxiety affects your entire life. You can avoid going to university from your anxiety of being afraid to meet fellow students.</p>
<p>Values are different to goals because a goal can be achieved while a value may never end. You achieve a goal of making friends but you can&#8217;t complete the value of being friendly. Values are a path you go on. You may like to think of a value as an intention.</p>
<p>Example values are below along with questions to stimulate value-extraction and the problem of anxiety avoidance to show its affect on what&#8217;s meaningful:</p>
<ol>
<li>Example: Loving brother/sister and parent. Questions: What type of brother/sister/parent do you want to be? How do you want to be around family? Problem: I&#8217;ve avoided talking about the elephant in the room (what everyone knows is there, but ignores) and prevented a deep connection with family because it&#8217;s scary.</li>
<li>Example: Great friend. Questions: What does it mean for you to be a great friend? What is it about friendship that&#8217;s valuable to you? Problem: Skipped my anxiety by not approaching people and accepting invitations to events that&#8217;s lead to few friends and low-quality relations with current friends.</li>
<li>Example: Help people with my career. Questions: What do you care about with work? What work do you like? Problem: I&#8217;ve stayed at home to avoid my anxiety that comes from meeting with clients and co-workers.</li>
<li>Example: Learn new skills. Questions: What would you like to learn? Why learn or undergo training? Problem: Stagnation and unfulfillment from a non-acceptance of anxiety to do with failure.
</li></ol>
<p>Take 10 minutes to list various values. Your answers are extremely important and guide you to purposeful living. Don&#8217;t let the importance of values bog you down because you can shape your answers later on. Hold values playfully to do this exercise because life and purpose is fun!</p>
<p>If you&#8217;re yet to locate your values, go inside the pain where you struggle the most then flip it over by saying, “What would I have to not care about to not have this pain be hurtful?” If your pain is social anxiety, you may not have to care about being with people, contribution, and loving others. Values reside in fear.</p>
<p>Your Life Costs of Anxiety Avoidance list motivates you to step into anxiety while your list of values motivate and direct you where to go.</p>
<p><span class="bigletter">T</span><strong>ake Action</strong>. Once you accept what you can and can&#8217;t change and choose directions valuable to you, action is the last step. Act on your values.</p>
<p>You likely already act on your values. Your values are better clarified by what you do. If you avoid your anxiety, you probably value avoiding anxiety. With anxiety, however, it muddles what&#8217;s meaningful to you.</p>
<p><em>A commitment to take this third and last step of action is itself a value that shows you care about your life</em>.</p>
<p>Spend 10 minutes now to build an action plan that puts you on a path aligned with your chosen directions. In your action plan, list the first action-step to get you started. This is critical to build momentum and meaningfully live.</p>
<blockquote class="alignright" style="width: 30%;">Behave aligned with your values and meaningful goals.</blockquote>
<p>If you value family, a step could be to phone family members to organize a date for dinner by the end of next month. If you value being friendly, maybe a step for you is to get <em><a href="https://www.towerofpower.com.au/review-of-how-to-win-friends-and-influence-people-by-dale-carnegie">How to Win Friends and Influence People</a></em> and <em><a href="https://www.towerofpower.com.au/bigtalk/">Big Talk</a></em>. Put together a concrete action plan to get going.</p>
<p>Unless you do something different, whether it&#8217;s follow ACT or some other treatment plan, you will not generate different results in your life. When you follow these steps, you shift from emotional regulation to emotional acceptance. You go from anxiety reduction to a fully functional being with values and goals meaningful to you.</p>
<p>The “cure” to social anxiety disorder isn&#8217;t accepting anxiety to remove it. That&#8217;s the same trap. Forget curing anxiety altogether. Behave aligned with your values and meaningful goals. It&#8217;s not easy. You either be friendly or you do not. There&#8217;s no “I tried to socialize” or “I tried to be nice to people”.</p>
<p>Your willingness to live meaningfully is a choice you make through action. Feelings and thoughts come and go, but where you travel is a daily-decision acted out with your feet. Will you join me at the banquet beside anxiety?</p>
<h2>Recommended Resources About a Social Anxiety Disorder</h2>
<ol>
<li><a href="https://www.towerofpower.com.au/social-anxiety-disorder-test">Free test</a> to see if you have SAD.</li>
<li>Fellow Aussie Russ Harris, author of <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.com%2FHappiness-Trap-Struggling-Start-Living%2Fdp%2F1590305841&#038;tag=toptop-20&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1789&#038;creative=9325" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">The Happiness Trap</a></em>, has a good <a href="http://www.actmindfully.com.au/upimages/Dr_Russ_Harris_-_A_Non-technical_Overview_of_ACT.pdf" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">overview of ACT</a> I recommend you read if you want to further explore this therapy.</li>
<li>For a complete step-by-step guide to effortlessly make friends when you&#8217;re shy and quiet, get my <em><a href="https://www.towerofpower.com.au/bigtalk/">Big Talk</a></em> course.</li>
<li>Another good resource (saying so myself) is <em><a href="https://www.towerofpower.com.au/bigtalk/bonus.php">Big Talkers</a></em>, particularly part three where you&#8217;ll access my interview with Dr Stephen Hayes quoted in this article.</li>
</ol>
<h2>Question of the Day</h2>
<p>What will you do this week to live a more meaningful life instead of trying to cure a social anxiety disorder?</p>
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		<title>How to Make People Happy and Yourself Feel Great &#8211; The Science of Emotions</title>
		<link>https://www.towerofpower.com.au/how-to-make-people-happy-and-yourself-feel-great</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Joshua Uebergang aka "Tower of Power"]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 11 Dec 2008 05:43:35 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Emotional Intelligence]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Interpersonal Relationships]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Nonverbal Communication]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[acceptance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[anger management]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[argument]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[body language]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[brain]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Conflict Management]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Daniel Goleman]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[depression]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[emotional contagion]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[emotions]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[empathy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[feelings]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[group]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Happiness]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[high road]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[impulse]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[IQ]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[likability]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[listening]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[low road]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Neuro-Linguistic Programming]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[neurons]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[reframing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[science]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social intelligence]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[I just finished another midnight shift at a job I did not like. I smiled, my eyes were open, I felt good about myself. I said my usual goodbyes to a friend and sprung into my car. My friend reversed his car before I had the chance to leave my car park. He had beaten <!-- more-link -->[&#8230;] <a href="https://www.towerofpower.com.au/how-to-make-people-happy-and-yourself-feel-great" class="more more-link">Read more</a>]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><span class="dropcap">I</span> just finished another midnight shift at a job I did not like. I smiled, my eyes were open, I felt good about myself. I said my usual goodbyes to a friend and sprung into my car. My friend reversed his car before I had the chance to leave my car park. He had beaten me this time. It was an unspoken game that took place each time we left work. I waited for him to get out of the way before I reversed to make my way home.</p>
<p>As I drove, the open car park gave me an invitation to have a little fun with my car. If landscapes could talk, this one was whispering into my ear that I should spin the wheels. “Besides, it&#8217;s late at night. No one is around. It&#8217;s an open car park with no danger. Do it!” Like a vulnerable teenager succumbing to peer pressure, I accepted the invitation.</p>
<p>My foot pressed the accelerator as I spun the wheel left to get quick around the first corner. The rear tires lost their stability as the car slide side-ways. The car became an extension of my body as it mimicked my ecstatic mood. I entered the next turn and spun the wheel right. The sound of screeching tires was water fertilizing my increasing smile. Smoke filled the rims of my tires and a shot of adrenaline filled my body.</p>
<p>Following the two consecutive drifts, I straightened the car and approached a set of traffic lights on the main road that would take me home. Had this been during the daytime, about seven cars would be in front of me before the upcoming traffic lights.</p>
<p>My friend who had left before me had passed through the traffic lights three seconds ago so the lights were still green. Keeping in the mood, I put my foot down to catch the green light. I would safely make it. I turned around the corner with a soft screech of the tires. 20 meters in front of me on the side of the road were two police officers beside their vehicle. Lucky me.<span id="more-105"></span></p>
<p>The police pulled me over. Opposite to what you might be thinking, I was not concerned. I was still in my elevated state. I smiled. I wound down my window and an angry officer came charging at me, yelling, “What the hell are you thinking? What the hell is going through your mind?” I paused momentarily, unaffected by his aggressive state. I said smilingly, “I&#8217;m just happy, I guess.” Not a smart response. Not a smart response at all.</p>
<p>My happy mood seemed to pour fuel on his already raging fire. “Bloody hell mate! I could just give you a ticket right now!”</p>
<p>As I thought how to approach this difficult situation, I was still happy then it hit me. I knew I should have said something else. I gulped. My mind rushed to think of some communication techniques I could use as a life boat to save me from drowning in the conversation. All that came to mind were some techniques on getting out of a speeding-ticket. I annoyed the officer enough so surely it couldn&#8217;t get worse.</p>
<p>My smile began to lower. I no longer made eye contact with the officer. The officer&#8217;s raging mood began to infect me. He was making me feel angry. It was as if my body was overcome by an emotional virus from the officer who was the virus&#8217; host.</p>
<p>I thought of the techniques to get out of a speeding-ticket and realized I was already beginning to use them. It was too late to make the officer feel safe as he approached the car, but I needed to no longer act oblivious to my mistake. I needed to show respect as officers are in a clear position of authority and often experience disrespect throughout their day that only makes them more determined to convict guilty citizens. “You&#8217;re right,” I replied. “I was stupid and careless.”</p>
<p>The officer was still enraged and continued to threaten me with a ticket. I knew he could easily write me a ticket, but he was not writing one. I kept myself aligned with the officer&#8217;s reality by remaining in a “Yes I&#8217;m wrong, stupid, and shouldn&#8217;t have done that” mood. I continued to play psychological judo, and match my mood with his own, until two minutes later he said to drive away. And oh, no ticket!</p>
<p>I drove off – though feeling pleased I had beaten a reckless driving ticket – in an irritated state. The officer had destroyed my happy mood. It took two minutes of talking with the officer to completely transform my happy state into a joyless, gloomy mood, which I remained in for another two hours until I went to bed.</p>
<h2>The Science of Emotional Contagion – How Two Minds Infect One Another</h2>
<blockquote><p>People will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel.<cite>Maya Angelou, poet and actress</cite></p></blockquote>
<blockquote><p>Any emotion, if it is sincere, is involuntary.<cite>Mark Twain, highly quoted writer</cite></p></blockquote>
<blockquote><p>You can close your eyes to the things you do not want to see, but you cannot close your heart to the things you do not want to feel.<cite>Anonymous</cite></p></blockquote>
<blockquote><p>I am involved in all of mankind.<cite>John Donne, 16th century poet</cite></p></blockquote>
<p>My story depicts your reality with emotions. Everyday you interact with people in different moods. Sometimes you are happier than people; other times they are happier than you. Emotions transfer between people. This is a fascinating peculiarity with emotions. Have you ever noticed how we feel in our interactions is not only dependent on our internal state?</p>
<ul>
<li>How did you feel when someone really annoyed began talking to you? You became more annoyed.</li>
<li>How did you feel when someone unhappy began talking to you? You become unhappy.</li>
<li>How did you feel when a depressed person shared their misery with you? You felt depressed and miserable.</li>
<li>How did you feel when a charismatic person talked to you? You felt his energy and you began to feel happier.</li>
</ul>
<blockquote class="alignright" style="width: 30%;">You can catch an emotional cold.</blockquote>
<p>Psychologists call this phenomena “emotional contagion”. It is a psychological and physiological process – a transference of emotion that can occur from mimicking body language. Elaine Hatfield, a professor at the University of Hawaii, in a study with John Carlson and Christopher Hsee, had college students watch a videotape of a man describe two very emotional experiences: his life&#8217;s happiest and saddest events. While the college students watched the tape, they were taped so the researchers could record the students&#8217; emotional responses. The students were also asked what feelings they experienced for each story at the end of the video.</p>
<p>Researchers found that students showed and expressed the recorded person&#8217;s emotions. The student&#8217;s felt happy when they watched the man describe his happiest event. The students felt sad when they watched the man describe his saddest event.</p>
<p>Hatfield and her two colleagues, John Cacioppo and Richard Rapson, in their co-authored book <em>Emotional Contagion</em>, say the psychophysiological phenomena occurs from automatically matching facial expressions, vocalics, postures, and movements. Hatfield says, “People tend to experience emotions consistent with the facial, vocal, and postural expressions they adopt.”</p>
<p>When you really listen to a friend, empathy puts you in their shoes to experience what they talk about. The friend describes an argument with an ex-partner, the yelling, the misunderstandings. You vividly see what your friend talks about. The experience lets you feel the pain your friend feels. Well-known psychologist Albert Bandura says the shared experience results in a shared feeling. That is the price of listening: not only can you catch a cold, but you can catch an emotional cold.</p>
<h2>Mirror Neurons – The Mind&#8217;s Mirror</h2>
<p>There is a scientific explanation behind how our emotions – an experience of mind and body – transfer to somebody else. In 1980s, three Italian researchers made what is said to be one of the greatest neuroscience breakthroughs in recent times: discovering the mirror neuron. Three researchers in an experiment attached electrodes to a macaque monkey&#8217;s brain. This enabled the researchers to determine what movements caused what neurons to activate. As the monkey reached for food, the researchers took note of single neurons being fired.</p>
<p>One time when the electrodes were still attached to the monkey, the researchers grabbed a piece of food themselves, then handed it to the monkey. To their surprise, the researchers saw the monkey&#8217;s neurons fire! By accident, the researchers had discovered that when they grabbed a piece of food, the monkey had the same neurons light up as if it picked up the food. The researchers came to name these neurons “mirror neurons” because they were like the mind&#8217;s mirror. The mirror neurons reflected what the person or monkey saw.</p>
<p>The finding may appear insignificant, yet the breakthrough discovery has lead to researchers to better understand autism, empathy, altruism, and general learning. Mirror neurons are responsible for tuning-in to another person&#8217;s behavior. The neurons are responsible for an awareness and shared-feeling between two people. This one type of neuron is responsible for the significant role of learning, understanding, and feeling.</p>
<h2>How to Make Others Feel Great</h2>
<p>An amazing, almost mystical link takes place to connect the brains thanks to the mirror neuron. A signal sent from either individual in the psychological connection travels via the link to similarly affect the recipient. Hatfield says, “We reflect what they feel.”</p>
<p>Smile at a baby, or almost anyone for that matter, and the baby&#8217;s mirror neurons fire to trigger an automatic smile. That is why the age-old saying, “smiling causes the whole world to smile with you”, is true. Not only is emotional contagion a replication of another&#8217;s emotions, but it is a biological dance. It is an interlinking of mind and body.</p>
<p>The biological dance is an important part in group dynamics. Janice Kelly, a professor of psychological sciences at Purdue University, says emotional contagion causes people to converge into an affective homogeneous group. In other words, group members experience the same emotions overtime as their fellow members. Kelly says that people with highly expressive body language are more able to impose their emotions on others. The distinctive nonverbal signs allows individuals to pick up on the person&#8217;s emotions and become infected by their emotional state. Here we see another age-old saying, “monkey see, monkey do” proven.</p>
<h2>How to Be Great</h2>
<p>Another age-old theory of staying away from toxic people because they pull you down is now a physiological and psychological fact. Being around suppressing or uplifting people affects your body and mind. We were born for interaction and connection with one another. We are a social animal.</p>
<p>If you study self-help, you know the benefits of making friends with wealthy people if you want to be wealthy. If you want to be happy, you make friends with happy people. If you want to be confident, you make friends with confident people. If you want to be funny, you make friends with funny people. Observance creates transference.</p>
<blockquote class="alignleft" style="width: 30%;">Observance creates transference.</blockquote>
<p>Athletes often play their sport better after watching superior athletes excel in the same sport through the magic of transference. You come to pick the characteristics you see in others because they infect you with their style, knowledge, and emotions. <a href="https://www.towerofpower.com.au/on-achieving-goals-part-1-defining-what-you-truly-want">Being around people you want to be like</a> is a secret of self-transformation to stimulate that emotional desire needed for growth.</p>
<p>Whether you intend to be infected by someone or not is irrelevant to mirror neurons because they are responsible for imitating other people. You do not decide to take in the exposure – the adaption from mirror neurons is an automatic process. Our parents told us to avoid hanging out with the wrong people for a reason. “People are like dirt,” said the classical Greek philosopher Plato. “They can either nourish you and help you grow as a person or they can stunt your growth and make you wilt and die.” It is reality that you absorb the characteristics of people you observe.</p>
<p>Put yourself in a group where the individuals are depressed and you will become depressed. Put yourself in a group where the individuals blame others and you will blame others. Put yourself in a group where the individuals are prejudice against blacks and you will become prejudice against blacks. Or in my case: do something stupid on the road in front of a police officer to make him angry so you become angry.</p>
<blockquote class="alignright" style="width: 30%;">Really great people make you feel that you, too, can become great.</blockquote>
<p>Mirror neurons are not all bad news. In fact, they can be wonderful! Mirror neurons do not have to be the only source of influence on your mood or way of thinking. You can still be with depressed, blame-filled, or prejudiced individuals without taking on their characteristics. Therapists, social workers, and doctors are a few categories of professionals who need to work with people in the “don&#8217;t infect me with your emotional disease” category. Even so, people in such professions have a harder time making themselves immune from emotional diseases because mirror neurons are a part of the brain every moment of life.</p>
<p>Though you and I will always be around less-than-optimal people, we need to put ourselves around people who have the characteristics and emotions we want. We naturally gravitate towards these people. They have a <a href="https://www.towerofpower.com.au/secrets/">set of likable characteristics</a> that draw us to them to bring out the best in ourselves. As Mark Twain said, “Really great people make you feel that you, too, can become great.”</p>
<h2>The Brain&#8217;s Low Road and High Road: Brain Secrets to Smart Living</h2>
<p>While emotional contagion is an important variable of the formula to become who you want, it is also important you do not rely on other people to make you feel good. Letting the emotional parts of your brain (mostly the almond-shaped <a href="http://www.biopsychiatry.com/amygdala.htm" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">amygdala</a> located deeply beneath both sides of your temples) roam like a child on the street is dangerous. Neuroscientists say you can control emotional responses to a certain extent.</p>
<p>When our ancestors faced a dangerous predator, they had to make a quick decision, an emotional response void of time-consuming rationalization that puts the person&#8217;s life at risk. Their eyes would widen and pupils dilate to visually take in more information. They received a shot of adrenaline to increase the supply of oxygen and glucose to muscles for strength and speed. Unnecessary bodily functions like digestion became suppressed. In terms of brain functions, neurological signals detour the slow responding “high road” and take the “low road” to produce a quick response. (I recommend you grab Daniel Goleman&#8217;s <em><a href="https://www.towerofpower.com.au/review-of-social-intelligence-by-daniel-goleman">Social Intelligence</a></em> to better understand the neuroscience behind emotions).</p>
<p>In a low road response, the sensory signals bypass the cortex and go straight to the amygdala to produce a reflexive response. Going straight to the more primitive amygdala produces reflexive, unconscious decisions. Neuroscientists say these primitive parts of the brain are difficult to change.</p>
<p>One low road response could be your reaction to a loud bang. The ear-busting sound causes an adrenaline response like widened eyes, dilated pupils, and increased supply of oxygen all in the first few milliseconds you hear the sound. You quickly look towards the bang to rapidly calculate whether it signals danger. If you cannot see the source of the sound, you unconsciously resort to social proof by looking at people&#8217;s faces to see their reactions and how you should respond. These decisions take less than a second.</p>
<p>Babies are frightened by loud noises because they have yet to discover that loud noises can be safe. You would scream, cry, and sprint away from loud noises if your brain overtly emphasized the low road in everyday living. This is where the high road, a more analytical neurological path in your brain, comes in to better control your emotional responses.</p>
<p>The high road is a slower response path that uses the logical parts of the brain like the frontal cortex and the hippocampus (your memory) to respond appropriately to stimulus. These brain parts are vulnerable to neuroplasticity that describes physical change. The brain gradually shapes itself by learning that all loud bangs are not dangerous.</p>
<p>After the first seconds following a loud bang, your brain transitions over to the high road by analyzing the situation. While the low road is responsible for reflexive decisions beyond your control, the high road can jam a cognitive wedge in the low road to help you better adapt and survive. A cooking saucepan dropping on the hard kitchen floor does not trigger you to bash on a neighbor&#8217;s door for help.</p>
<h2>The Scientific Method to Be Happy and Likable</h2>
<p>Some neuroscientists say it is impossible to control all emotional responses due to the brain&#8217;s low road producing a quick response for survival. Researchers agree you can put your brain&#8217;s high road to better use. When you think about an emotional response, you use the logical prefrontal cortex to override the signals received by the emotional amygdala. This is where neuroscience meets personal development.</p>
<p>One of my favorite techniques that uses my high road to take me to happiness, stability, and understanding is <a href="https://www.towerofpower.com.au/review-of-mind-lines-by-michael-hall-and-bobby-bodenhamer">reframing</a>. In reframing, you manipulate your initial interpretation, often a quick-response, in a situation to produce a response that benefits you and your relationships.</p>
<p>A powerful reframe described in my <a href="https://www.towerofpower.com.au/secrets/">Communication Secrets of Powerful People</a> program is positive intention framing. In positive intention framing, you identify the positive intention relevant to the limiting situation. Let&#8217;s say you are in a serious argument with your spouse. Most people in such an argument let: 1) the low road control the argument as they react impulsively and later regret what they said during the heated disagreement and 2) emotional contagion infect themselves with a negative mood for hours following the argument. You can have a degree of control over impulsiveness and emotional infections by reframing.</p>
<p>A positive intention reframe could identify your spouse&#8217;s yelling as their need to be heard, understood, and received; instead of a personal attack. Alternatively, you could positively reframe your spouse&#8217;s yelling as a welcomed release of frustration so you can listen to what concerns him or her.</p>
<p>The purpose of positive intention reframing is to stop you from thinking your story is right and that hidden information exists. It does not directly manipulate your emotions, rather it opens your mind to empowering options, which alters your emotional state. Reframes use your prefrontal cortex to take the high road and interpret the situation in a way that lets you act resourcefully. Reframing is proven by research to be one of the most effective anger management techniques. (I give you six other specific, easy-to-use reframes for any situation in my program, which you can read about by <a href="https://www.towerofpower.com.au/secrets/">clicking here</a>.)</p>
<h2>The Shocking Truth About Happy People</h2>
<p>Happy people are experts at reframing initial interpretation (“He is a ****head for cutting me off in traffic!”) into empowerment (“He mustn&#8217;t have seen me”). They use their prefrontal cortex to take the brain&#8217;s high road. What happens outside does not matter because their mental attitude is what matters. “Happiness doesn&#8217;t depend on any external conditions,” said Dale Carnegie, “it is governed by our mental attitude.”</p>
<p>Contrary to what you may think when someone is angry, happy effective communicators do not think positively to stop themselves becoming angry. Let&#8217;s say an aggressive person talks to someone with effective communication skills. The effective communicator is able to defuse the aggression through their communication style even though the emotional aggression is still received. A good communicator feels the aggression, but they reframe their response, which enables them to control emotional contagion and a destructive low road reaction. They see it in frames such as, “He&#8217;s trying to get me to understand him.” or “I enjoy the problem coming to surface instead of it remaining hidden where it eats away the relationship.” These frames let the effective communicator efficiently respond.</p>
<p>The happy effective communicator does not avoid anger. The happiest people get angry, cry, and accept emotions. Happy effective communicators are so because they embrace all emotions and open their minds to other interpretations.</p>
<blockquote class="alignright" style="width: 30%;">Happy effective communicators embrace all emotions.</blockquote>
<p>Happy people express anger by owning it (“I am angry!”). The problem of emotional contagion in bad communication, therefore, is not the current emotion, but how it is expressed. Blaming someone for your anger (“You&#8217;re a ****en idiot!”) makes them angry. When you harmfully express anger, the emotional infection escalates. Alternatively, suppression of anger avoids reality as resentment builds and the relationship withers away to its death.</p>
<p>In terms of depression, emotional contagion and reframing is no different. Depressed individuals seek isolation to feel better about themselves. The isolation compounds their depression – an ironic effect. The solution to depression is too complex for discussion in this article, yet sufferers are better off interacting with happier people to beat depression than being in isolation. They need destructive interpretations (“I&#8217;m a loser”) reframed into ownership and empowerment (“I&#8217;m feeling down today”). Similarly, they should make mirror neurons benefit themselves by smiling – even if it feels artificial – as it forces the body to be happy.</p>
<p>Emotional contagion can work for you or against you. Its affect is decided by how you use the high road of your brain.</p>
<h2>The Best Technique to Change People&#8217;s Emotions: Emotional-Leveling</h2>
<p>We now see how reframing controls your responses to situations. What about other people&#8217;s responses? Should you let other people react in whatever way they happen to react? Can you use a technique to uplift other people and have emotional contagion help your relationships?</p>
<p>In general, do not worry about people&#8217;s responses because your response is what matters. Worrying over people&#8217;s responses is a powerless concern for the future. Trouble results the moment you try to directly manipulate a person&#8217;s emotions just like your own emotions.</p>
<blockquote class="alignleft" style="width: 30%;">Do not worry about people&#8217;s responses because your response is what matters.</blockquote>
<p>Forcing your happiness on someone unhappy, negative, or angry is counter-productive. When I was happy and smiling, the angry police officer became more infuriated.</p>
<p>The next time someone around you is angry, look them in the eye, smile, and tell them, “What a beautiful day!” The person will become more angry and say something like, “It&#8217;s a disgusting day.” At times your happy attitude may change someone&#8217;s unhappy perspective, but the technique is unreliable because it suppresses present emotions. What is an effective communicator to do when emotional contagion creates an ineffective, unproductive environment?</p>
<div class="bonusboxleft">
<p class="bonusboxheading">How Fights Escalate with Emotional Contagion</p>
<p>Emotionally out of control conversations (or monologues) start with one person injecting an emotion into their conversation partner. When the partner is a poor communicator who reacts impulsively, his mirror neurons mimic the person&#8217;s harmful state. The newly infected person becomes a carrier, reciprocating the infection to the original carrier who&#8217;s emotional disease worsens.</p>
<p>Once the emotional infection becomes too much for the individuals, they leave the conversation only to contaminate other people. An emotional infection outbreaks. A simple disagreement escalates into a large – sometimes life-threatening – conflict with innocent people.</p>
</div>
<p>On one level you need to prevent yourself from being a carrier. When you talk to a friend in need, you are faced with the challenge of empathizing with your friend&#8217;s pain. You draw yourself into your friend&#8217;s struggle and feel the same pain. (True empathy does not make you a carrier.) At another level you need to prevent other people from being carriers. Sometimes people go nowhere productive and you need to put them into an emotionally empowering state. These mood challenges exist when you want to bring the best out of people.</p>
<p>The technique of reframing minimizes the likelihood of you carrying a dangerous emotional virus, while a technique I call “emotional-leveling” helps you prevent people from remaining in states that do them and others harm. Doing these two things controls emotional contagion to build happiness, power, and healthy relationships.</p>
<p>The emotional-leveling technique firstly adjusts your emotions to reflect the other person&#8217;s emotional state. You then slowly raise your emotions and simultaneously theirs with emotional contagion and mirror neurons until the person enters the desired state. The technique does not try to manipulate the person&#8217;s emotions; it encourages them to feel one&#8217;s emotions and then move forward in healing. (I cannot emphasize enough that you must allow others to accept and express their emotions. Do not use the emotional-leveling technique to avoid emotions.)</p>
<p>Again, you firstly connect at their level. Do not fight anger with happiness nor should you reciprocate verbal aggression. If the person is aggressive or depressed, take on a similar emotional level to build empathy and understanding. If an aggressive person walks around, walk around with him or her. If someone talks fast, you should also talk fast. For a depressed person, show you are also feeling depressed without developing depression. Be slower in your movements, speak softer, and have similar facial expressions as the person. Your goal is to enter their state without escalating the problem.</p>
<p>Once you connect at the person&#8217;s level and let him or her process present emotions, you then raise your emotional state. Make a joke or use a reframe on the situation. How does the mindset of this technique differ to being an annoying happy person smiling at everyone? Instead of reaching down to pull the person out of their emotional hole only to have them reject your assistance, you jump in the hole and let them stand on your shoulders to climb out.</p>
<p>Your reframes get accepted because you are in the person&#8217;s emotional state! If you were happy and told an unhappy mate who recently broke up that he should lighten up, he will reject your reframe and dislike you. On the other hand – and this is where the power of emotional-leveling comes in – if you are also unhappy after communicating with him, such that he knows you share the same emotional state, he will accept a reframe like, “Break ups are painful, yet they allow you and I to meet future partners we will love.”</p>
<p>If you combine the reframing technique with the emotional-leveling technique, you control your emotions and thoughts and help other people control their emotions and thoughts. These two skills help you and others express, share, and manage emotions that otherwise harm relationships. You transform what would normally be a destructive emotional outbreak into a positive outbreak.</p>
<p>Emotional contagion is a fascinating topic. You can make the psychological and physiological phenomena work for you instead of feeling you are its victim. Interact with people you want to be like. Reframe situations to travel along the high road to happiness. Make people&#8217;s mirror neurons mimic your rising state and their biology will become like yours. It seems like magic, but it is science.</p>
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		<title>The Benefits of Communication Skills</title>
		<link>https://www.towerofpower.com.au/the-benefits-of-communication-skills</link>
					<comments>https://www.towerofpower.com.au/the-benefits-of-communication-skills#comments</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Joshua Uebergang aka "Tower of Power"]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 03 Oct 2008 09:05:29 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Emotional Intelligence]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Interpersonal Relationships]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[active listening skills]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[communication skills]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Happiness]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[intimacy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[law of attraction]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[love]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[pick-up artists]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[popularity]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[react and respond]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[self-control]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[stress]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[understanding]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[workplace communication]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.towerofpower.com.au/?p=39</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[What if I told you there was a secret to you being happy, attractive, popular, successful, in control, and loving? What if you could get these from one skill? You can. The benefits of communication are mind-boggling. It goes beyond what you&#8217;re about to discover here. Any interaction with people or lack of interaction from <!-- more-link -->[&#8230;] <a href="https://www.towerofpower.com.au/the-benefits-of-communication-skills" class="more more-link">Read more</a>]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><span class="dropcap">W</span>hat if I told you there was a secret to you being happy, attractive, popular, successful, in control, and loving? What if you could get these from one skill? You can. </p>
<p>The benefits of communication are mind-boggling. It goes beyond what you&#8217;re about to discover here. Any interaction with people or lack of interaction from things like shyness can improve with communication.</p>
<p>Rudyard Kipling said, “Words are, of course, the most powerful drug used by mankind.” Kipling&#8217;s quote fails to communication because it is far more than words – <a href="https://www.towerofpower.com.au/topic/nonverbal-communication">communication is also nonverbal</a>. Imagine the powerful benefits of communication now.</p>
<p>Here are a list of communication benefits that tell you the &#8220;what&#8221;, &#8220;why&#8221;, and &#8220;how&#8221; this amazing skill will change your life:<span id="more-39"></span></p>
<p>1. <em>Communication increases your happiness</em>. You&#8217;ve heard money cannot buy happiness. You become happy by taking the right actions. Think about it. Happiness is at the core of your actions because happiness is not conditional. You don&#8217;t become happy by getting a certain object or person in your life. When you learn communication, you take action to make yourself happy.</p>
<p>While developing your communication makes you happy, happiness also increases as you minimize destructive conflict. <a href="https://www.towerofpower.com.au">Effective communication</a> makes you happier by helping you: reduce verbal fights, manage anger, express yourself to “get things off your back”, and change other situations to increase relationship-enhancing feelings.</p>
<p>2. <em>Communication makes you one hot dude or chick</em>. You attract the people in your life. Get excited because you have invisible forces that draw and repel people. This is not mystical mumbo-jumbo. If you want to attract a fun, loving, positive, and caring person, you have to become a fun, loving, positive, and caring person.</p>
<p>When you improve how you talk and present yourself, you reap the benefits of communication. You boost your confidence, self-esteem, and social life &#8211; all universally attractive qualities.</p>
<blockquote class="alignright" style="width: 30%;">Communication is the relationship.</blockquote>
<p>Without communication, attraction dies. Physical appearance can only get you so far. Communication <a href="https://www.towerofpower.com.au/how-to-be-interesting-without-saying-a-word">makes you interesting</a>, connects you with people, builds friendships, and attracts a partner. <a href="https://www.towerofpower.com.au/review-of-the-game-by-neil-strauss">Pick-up artists</a> use communication to build attraction and get physically intimate with women in hours and sometimes minutes.</p>
<p>3. <em>Communication adds intimacy</em>. How do people become open in a relationship? Good communication, of course, because it is the only bridge between a relationship. Communication is the relationship. Poor communication in a relationship is like a plant without water. When communication dies, so does the relationship. Two persons connect only through good communication.</p>
<p>4. <em>Communication increases love</em>. This benefit of communication ties in with intimacy. <a href="https://www.towerofpower.com.au/the-heart-of-effective-communication-how-to-love-people">You can love people</a> more than you think by changing the way you talk and <a href="https://www.towerofpower.com.au/topic/listening-skills">actively listen</a>. These skills show respect and love to people. Giving love is the best way to receive love.</p>
<p>5. <em>Communication makes you more popular</em>. Though it&#8217;s a superficial goal to become the most liked person in school or a club, communication makes you more popular. Once you develop <a href="https://www.towerofpower.com.au/topic/conversation-skills">good conversation skills</a>, your number of friends is only limited by the time you talk with people. Subscribe to my <a href="https://www.youtube.com/user/towerofpower" title="YouTube channel">YouTube channel</a> if you&#8217;d like tips on how to win friends.</p>
<div class="bonusboxright">
<p class="bonusboxheading">Improve Your Workplace</p>
<p>Here&#8217;s what better communication can do for your workplace – who knows, you might actually begin to enjoy work:</p>
<ol>
<li>Increased productivity</li>
<li>Better feedback that enhances the quality of work</li>
<li>Less time is wasted resolving interpersonal problems between coworkers</li>
<li>Ideas flow smoothly through the organization</li>
<li>Effective problem-solving as teams work well together</li>
<li>Less absenteeism from increased workplace satisfaction</li>
<li>And much more</li>
</ol>
</div>
<p>6. <em>Communication increases your success</em>. John Johanson and Carrie Fried did a 2002 study published in the <em>Teaching of Psychology Journal</em> asked graduates what skill contributed the most to their success. The number one answer was <a href="https://www.towerofpower.com.au/topic/interpersonal-relationships">interpersonal skills</a>. Drew Appleby in a well-known psychology magazine “Eye on Psi Chi” asked 39 employers what job skills they want in job candidates. Interpersonal skills was number one again.</p>
<p>World renowned personal business consultant Brian Tracy in <em><a href="https://www.towerofpower.com.au/review-of-change-your-thinking-change-your-life-by-brian-tracy">Change Your Thinking, Change Your Life</a></em> says the highest paid intelligence in the United States is interpersonal intelligence. A person with such intelligence understands people&#8217;s feelings and desires – and employers pay big bucks for someone with these skills. Success is yet another benefit of communication.</p>
<p>7. <em>Communication makes you relaxed</em>. Stress relates to how we manage ourselves with the world. You become relaxed by <a href="https://www.towerofpower.com.au/how-to-say-no">assertively telling someone “no”</a> if they ask you to do what you don&#8217;t want. You no longer worry over the world&#8217;s reactions if you respond from control within yourself. (Checkout another article of mine, where you learn <a href="https://www.towerofpower.com.au/how-to-manage-stress-in-relationship-communication">effective stress management techniques</a> in communication.)</p>
<p>8. <em>Communication makes you satisfied</em>. You&#8217;re satisfied when you meet a need or desire. To get what you want, either someone gives it to you or you get it yourself. You cannot control what someone gives you (although you can influence them), which means you must learn how to get what you want to be satisfied. You do this by improving your <a href="https://www.towerofpower.com.au/topic/negotiation">persuasion, negotiation, and influence skills</a>.</p>
<p>9. <em>Communication gives you self-control</em>. Think of the times you said something you later regretted. Maybe you even slapped someone. Communication skills helps self-control to manage impulsive behavior. Self-control is beyond not doing actions; it also involves doing the right things.</p>
<p>10. <em>Communication helps self-understanding</em>. Do you know why you feel bad when someone gives you criticism? Why do you feel surges of anger towards someone you love? How do you <a href="https://www.towerofpower.com.au/topic/confidence-and-fear">overcome fear</a> that stops you from talking with that hot chick?</p>
<p>If you&#8217;re like most people, you don&#8217;t understand your behavior. This hurts you everyday. Not even I fully understand myself in a way that lets me use my mental, emotional, physical, and spiritual resources to my potential. No one ever will. You will never have the complete answers to these questions &#8211; and you don&#8217;t need them. Perfect communication is unnecessary.</p>
<p>11. <em>Communication helps you understand people</em>. Rarely do we understand people to the level they want. Effective communication helps you see someone&#8217;s emotions, understand their emotions, and communicate at the level of emotions to connect the two of you in a way people rarely experience.</p>
<p>Understanding happens at two levels. Firstly, good communication helps you understand human behavior as it relates to everyone. Secondly, it helps you understand people you talk with as you explore what really matters to them. This my friend, is the real benefit of communication. Let it empower your life.</p>
<blockquote class="alignleft" style="width: 30%;">There is an abundance of additional benefits effective communication creates&#8230;</blockquote>
<p>This is a small list of the benefits communication skills can give you. There are many other benefits of communication such as getting that job promotion, better teamwork, and connecting with children, but hopefully the list gives you a great idea of the impact this glorious skill can have on your life. Experience the power of communication. Let it supercharge your life today by signing up to <a href="https://www.towerofpower.com.au/free/">my free newsletter here</a> to improve your communication.</p>
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